The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 169, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 17, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
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Are
0^ Lightning
piifi*r flpT ■ • yvraw iV '". A'; '•
KBiORADB, VhhorImvI.i. July 17
<APJ—ilwf than 10 pfniwn were
reported kill*>il by lightning nnd
or .Carrier, } month
Md.y'SSl
rates
mt rrnoon except
and Sunday morning at
t Street by the Orange
ahlng Conuanj
4t Orange, Texas P. O. ss
aa Mali Matter, Under Aft
llnih II, 1«T .
IATKL) PRKS8 M KM UK It
whoift flocks of" sheep were wlnugh- '
lered last night li> enormous hai!-
stonr* during a triple, cloudburst In
the Mnwivlts vnlley and by "the;
h crm* ln^ various sections of Yugo-
slavia, Th«* crops wore seriously
damaged.
MONTREAL, July 11. (AP)—«
persons warn killed and iff Injured
in n collision today',1 betweeh a
street car and a'rUefc.
Th« accident occurred On tit. Law-
rence houlwviird, r Homo of tli<>-<-
hurt Wtfm believed to be In • criti-
cal condition. v .V'BSHf?
P An Airplane Hunt for New Types of Dinosaurs
r*V* r -
HUNT'for remain* of dino-
saurs, the weirdest and molt
form of life ever -pro-
mtura on land, is being
..is summer in the "Bad
Landi" and Black HilU of north-
rn United State*. The search
■
m:
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ratal—Tath |n Advance
Mfv ]Matri«i
For Hiker District off lew t**f
ft •• OtuntjT Offices I*.«0
. Except aa Wkwis
Kor County Commissioner IIMIO
of the p®aec IO.M
.Hw/or* |i|^Nl
City Commlaaloner.,
The Orange lender la authorised
to ahiauiince the following candidate*
stibje*". to the action of the Demo-
cratic primailen In July SI. 1 *4'
For County Commissioner. pet. No. I
J, TOM SOfLJCAU
9, V. JHUFFINOTON
i, B, 11BARD
For County Com«llaaliMH>r, Pet. No.
, jf J.' L WE
'' W. It. PATNE :vV;:!^
DAVE foreman .
, ■
For Ccpfity Crawmlsskmer, Pet No.
K. C HE114KK >
i£: fc holliBxU -
> EMHLE CAROfT
be conducted by tile American
" ' tat B:
■HHip
Brown, Curator of Fotail
useum-Sinclair dinosaur Exac-
tion under the leadership
Barnum Brown, Curator of
lie*, American Museum of
Nltural History, New York. The
fund* are provided by the Sinclair
Reflninjf Company.
Tracking the dinosaurs to their
' iff places by airplane is a
ttire of this expedition.
Observers hiffh up in a plane can
identify by color the peculiar geo-
3.00 logical formations In which fosjil
dinosaurs are uaually found. Hav-
located these spots, the scien-
Prt, No. 4
^eaeasar and
; • wt 'il sitet'rtERU
CflARLBS COTTLE
can. make later excavations
promise of immediate dis-
df dinosaur skeletons.
re Is reason to believe that
new types of dinosaurs hitherto
unknown, may be found. In fact
one of the purposes of the expedi-
tion is to excavate two ffiant skele-
tons already located and thought,
to be different from the remains of
•ay known dinosaur. These two
fantastic brutes are estimated to
have been 60 feet in length and to
have lived 120,000,000 years ago
when Nature was mellowing the
crude! from which motor oils are
refined today.
Tlrtt expedition mav unearth
other .monsters equally strange
sWfr'
For County iy
'^mmm
HELTON
^ pll*.
For Ilrprcsontative l.",th District, Of-
• ■iK. and Jeffcraon Couutlea
A: ,E, JOHKFHSON
: H-1 'ium"
#fr. A-
KOr ■County t'lerk '
A. OUNX1NO
t; " *: : '?.?}:■■■ •; -*
Far. County Attorney
NEE*,:.
f %, i. HUCHBN8
W. l\ BROWN
IW COMty «ehoel Buperlntcndcnt
. - 1IAMMBRS k
roe.dtmstaWA M>rMinrt No. 1
IvI'ALVA OBIFBim
Ft>f Jastica of Uia Peacf, Pet. No,-
*. "DEPW*^. V ■ ; ■ • ■
OUAOV MfATBON
For :f*at« Sonata
♦LfcAN 8HIVER8
, -*f, R. COUMMB^h E -f.'
For MsWet Chirk '
.WILLIAM KHXTOX
[■"<% M DOD0
'f,r .
; ' ■< Oasrified
nr. iyxfi, I. IT
- iPir^vTlOR SALB Si ■
1
FliR it A LB: At bargain, Now Pro-
whs' giK. range with h^iit con rol, lot
I
■ .lUmkMmmjmmlMUmfffl w* 11 ' -
wpyi .
xj verly Post Office, 25 miles north-
east of Graybull, Wyoming.
(Upper Right) Dr. Batoum Brown,
who htads the Amtrican Museum-
Sinclair Dinouur Expedition, examin-
ing skeleton of Tyrannosaurux Rax at
. the Museum. Tyrannosaurus Rex w—
thr*?f~*t oi the Mesh-eating din«•
Gardens Glow With New Beauty When Lighted At
■ t
Even the modeat garden may become a picture ef beauty at aigkt wkas discreetly lighted.
By Helen G. Toland
(Right) Meas-
uring the leg
bone oi Bron-
tosaur.us. one
of the largest
and best known
of all dino'
••rs.
T F half the fun of making a garden
x is watching it grow, then cer-
tainly the other half is showing it
off after it is fully grown and in
bloom. ,
But you must have light to enter
into either of these method* of en-
joying the garden, and since the
hours of daylight are all too short
for the gardener who spend* his
days in an office or shop, the new art
of garden, lighting has developed.
ISight Sources Concealed
Light for the garden does not aim
to paint the lily or gild the rose.
Rather, it aims to show them after
dark in their true colors, for all to
enjoy. As for the lighting itself, if
it is correctly done, it will pas* al-"
most unnoticed; "for tho first rule tn
garden illumination is that all light
cpurces in the garden should be con-
cealed.
. In most gardens it is not difficult
J to follow, this rule. Small handy
floodlights can be concealed in a
tree-crotch or under th« eaves of
the garage. Compact little reflectors
may be discreetly hidden under a
shrub or bush and trained on some
center of interest in the garden,
such as a beautiful tree or planting,
flower-bed, arbor, pool or bird bath.
Indeed, many practical and inex-
pensive lighting units hide them-
selves. For the pool there is a lily
pad of aluminum so artfully de-
signed tbbt it resemblee one of Na-
ture's own as it floats on the surface
of the pool. Clipped beneath its
metal skirts is a lamp bulb of the
regular household variety in a wa-
ter-tight socket, which will provide
million-dollar underwater lighting
effects in a pool from six to ten feet,
in diameter. For the rock garden, or
to illuminate garden steps and
paths, there is a real rock, open at
the back, permitting the lamp in-
side to brighten the corner where-
it is placed.
To light flower beds and borders,
a set of seven small shields has been
designed, for use with the Christ-
mas tree string of lights Thesa
shields are mounted on spikes, and
may be inserted along bordera or
in flower bods, to preserve them to
view after dark.
Use Clear, Not Colored Light*
In this connection, it is well to
mention that white or clear lamp
bulb* should be substituted for the
colored bulbs found in the Christ-
mas tree string. Colored light does
strange things to objects, seen under
it, while clear or white lilght reveals
them in their true color*. Hence,
clear or inside-froxted lamp bulbs
—often the regular household types
—are recommended for use with all
garden lighting equipment.
Each of the units
keap some beauty spot
ing into oblivion with
of darkness. The. practical
will be glad to know too
comes complete with a Wate.-proof
socket and several fe$rbf heavy wa-
terproof cord—all ready to
good its promise of a tt
of the garden that may
but will certainly be quite as beau-
HSp;
FOR WALK: . A'few second-hand ice
boxes, cheat* - Median's.
a ■ Filn REN
Old',gold. je*e?iy/ silver
nuns will • , r hfetH-*'
of- (Wchartjce -tor* dew ji
COHBNOUR, Jeweler and Optomet
rwtf .;; ,
I WAXT'TUlES for~lo*fl~Te7 &
C( ffee' RliUtyn pnylUK Up t® 0
PETER PEN
£
DON'T
LBT
THBM
OBT
IT
X)reKscr , Beds, Tn-
404 Orange
PETER PEN
y our quality., day
^ chicks, i VINTON
VWton, La.
UKE TWI9
WE'LL. GET
HSR COQMEQBD
oki TME.
VAP.D ARM.
Watermelons
tmi stuwo
CAT, 19
TRYING TO
SAVIOUR
MAGIC
CARPBT
FROM TH E
HANDS OP
THE
DON'T -
r
ARt), 602 Fourth St
To Btrir
rt)t« tor dew jewelry. H L
JUST WUA.T
TOLD
vou.
weeks.- No *t or experience re
qutred but moat l>'.< willing to give
prompt service to «ll |irOs. ifOO nteady
t'Onsiimern. Brunrt new Kord «lv
en us bonu^ Write Albert Mills,
lloute Mgr.. 6(47 r Monmouth, Cin
.•innutl, tT. .^
r r f.'fir
SIMPLE SIMON
WHEW. * M
Almost roasted
,, A^A/si.
^on\E; wAV TD
^EAT1 T^e
<\0
1 WONDERED
WHY I WAS GETTIN6
so Mot:
shadows moved::
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McBeath, J. S. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 169, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 17, 1934, newspaper, July 17, 1934; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth289725/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.