The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 214, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1938 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Hr
mm
'' ..;■ '■■''''I';-'. $!<)'££'■ V- ?''■• f ".'* ■ ^■"''3"''":,ai' ' "' 'V''" '■ . ' " '■T.'-.'iyi' '' ' ' "' ...,/*"!v':';
' 1 :^; ' " ■' " ' : - "
uri
••' - • <m
■ vS ^fS*™
Wffl
DELIVERED To Y|
10c
Mostly cloudy, probably local show-
ers tolnght and Tuesdu/; moderate
southeast und sou/ii winds r,n the
coast.
Door For
Per Week
ORANGE, TEXAS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1938
VOLUME XXV
NUMBER 2141
p
i
In Europe s Swiftly Moving Military Drama
LET S DO
SOMETHING
Schools
ABOUT IT
W" TS
WINN ,
Sabine district, tini
most f .ntstandiiiB ar-
us a "(invention dis-
now tin
Son1 h's
o sihltK
Th« fsIlewMff article
EnlTOE'B
NOTE:
piibllnhrd bfcauw of IU in'ctfir tnr Intw
prr( tlon nf thr n«w at th« lUy. It c«n
■ tltutn the Individual opinion* of the >u
thor and la net to b« romtrurd im an mil
lo'rlal or a> an cxprttalon of Ibe editorial
policy or oinvlcilom of tbla n«w |iAper
CIS,
wny
—JM
••
. ^rr.
mm
"■F: ■
convention hcju
tin* (U^tKict. th<* ot>
Been by .thou© \v1
II
FULL PAYMENT
OF PENSIONS TO
BE STRESSED
ON
FOREIGN POLICY
IS WAR THREAT
BEAUMONT ' Sept. 12'. (A I') --
Sources closc'.. tji W. Dee O'Danlpj in-
dicated * I* 'day the platform tu bp
adopted by tin, state detm> raile
convention tomorrow would be short
and simple,- I
Several 'thousand delegate's milled
about flag-bedei'hi'd hotel lobbies and
eity streets while the |Tarty nxceu-
live ■ commit tee met to canVrias re-
sults of the > eeond ileii'i cratfc pri-
mary August 27 and f=et'tbe .pouveu-
tlon machinery In motion.
The demo- i n tie suiiorpatoiiaj^. nom-
luo'V who arrived in "Beaumont list
night for the first political conven-
tion of his life, Himself «*>,snred he
regarded the , platform • writing as
■the busiiiofW , f the deicua tes. but- in
-other quarters the intimation -vvnw.
* Kl rone n thlA«"JPK£Koratj>v- was prole
able, .
One report' w n the platform
would be i'onflned, if wiKlrcs of
O'Daniel's friends prevailed, to sub-
jects which the Fort Worth' flour
merchant discussed in his sensa-
tional camjiHlRii, and conti. ■verslal
matters would" be, sternly excluded-
To accomplish this end hotel btie
by tall; was a resolution would lie
Introduced early in the convention
Instructing the committee on plat-
form and resolut!. -ns to' consider on-
ly the issues raised by O'Daniel. '
Should this course bo followed po-
lential bombs of controversy such it*
leiuiliJiaUoh of horse race betting and
Hotter sale b'v the drink, which some
delegates had threatened to t> •* ,■ in
the eiilKientton windows, possibly
would not uppt-ur.
TJnSo'ng"niiitth^s which O'Daniel fa-
vored during his .successful quest./of
the gfivernnrHhiii fhtd which tKere-
f6re might be rnciitioiWl in the7 plat-
form were payment of thc. full a-
luotint r f old "So penai«i;s allitwed
by the law to (!vci\voite,><p|?r^tW years
of age and abolition ptitK tax
ns a prerequisite to voUiftjf.
Soon, after O'Daniel's 'afl'tvel
HivuMiijg l>y several
and
enthustasth
thousand persoulj co-ngresated at " t'uo
railroad statyfi — ho had journeyed,
by special /u;ain from his home in
Fort Worth — he said it looked as if
the convention would be a \ "love
least."
En roOto, the nominee, was accom-
panied by Mrs; O'Daniel, his sons.
Pat .and Mike, and his daughter,
Molly, made several rear platform ap-
pearances t> talk and shi t'se hands
with numbers of large crowds. In
Houston he was entertained at a
dinner. *
trlct, fort Arthur lwvifig just entHc-
talned a state., eonvontiori. of tho
Junior ChutnbciM of C'oinmerce with
I'Scamnont now entertaining the .state
iiemocratie cuiventi. ~i , and. Orange to
lake care of the South Texrt t'oun-
ty .iudgeS and Coinmisfiioners con-
vention to be held in January <>f
the coming year. In practically: e".'«
try imtnt- e
at niiy point
lire area will
attend.
' Without a doubt Orange- county
'democrats will function at the state
conventioi'i now going on in l!e:ni-
mojit where the chief spirit of the
state party may boast of the fact
that Orange county gave him an oy-
er whelming majority in the first pri-
mary and where the voters eqercis-
ert a will of their own a km In in the
second primary by supporting their
! candidates 'regardless < f ■ indorse-
I ments- By no means did the voters
of this se tion display any disposi-
tion to lose their spirit of loyalty.
Orange's greatest asset, whether
fully realized . r not, was brought
into the .limeji'ght. today as in'ijrVtt-
faced boys ftnji girls registered f. 1'
Ihe . li 3(i-S§/ iieh'0'>l term by many
•hundreds./Hertlth and happiness to
a greater degree than ever before
beamed urnm 4he fuoe.i of the Or-
angey school children today as they
relinquished the vacation period ^for
that, of study and delightful aslo'cia-
/tion with both old and new;' friends,
Throiljfh the agencies of Inunurilrn-
tion, and other jirecautlons. diseaseit
are less to be feared than ever be-
fore. All, those interested in schools
and the youth did Komethtng abnutit.
Orange's juni. r group, , within x the
ranks of the .lunior fiianibej- of Com*
niei'ce seems destined to start the
hall to rtilltng With majpr improve-
ment proje ts under federal aid. By
the latter pifl't'" bt/this week, it Is
.hoped that actual wotk on the side-'
walk project will he started. It Is:
I planned to augment, the fofebs grnd-;
j uall.v. until the maximum number of
'about ltif> men is employed on the
| more than JKHl.OOti project that will
iaffcrd perfect.walk ways -to K^hool
j children and thousands of «W 1">
! destrlnns. Anotiier example \if do-
1 Ing something al /tit it.
As Europe tights to stave off war in the
£ir John Simon, English chancellor of the exchi
rman-CJieeh crisis, these scenes highlight the situation: (1)
fquer (left) and Lord Halifax, British foreign minister, leave
the London foreign office after a conference; (2) Italian troops, certain to help Ocrmany, "goose-step" before
jPretnier Mussolini; (3) Hcrr Frank, one of the Sudeten German leaders, attends a harvest festival and 1st
greeted with the Nazi salute.
LOUISIANA GIRL
SEEKS REFUGE
FROM PARENTS
Among problems brought to (>r:itv;e
COjmty officials to be untiiyelcd today
wuh that of a '20-year old tjouisiatia
girl 'Vfbt,' appeared before offi litis to
find out Whether or not she would
b|. forced by law to return to the
home of her parent* residing on a
farm oyer iu Louisiana. The gittf.
aeeoinpiieled by ,na elder lady friend
and her hrhther one , year her senior,
told Why she left hx'tte. "They
made me wort< too bard every day
on the farm; made me work before
I h'td fully rcetivered from. an oper-
ation," the girl told bounty Attofney
W. V. (BUI) Sexton. Hhe assured
the o tin ty at torn O.v that she was
with good peojile and hnd a job
that would suataln1 her fairly well
and thnt she did not wish Co return
hrtme. The brother explained that
he hftd been seht after his sister
beoatise he hud brought her here anrl
that his pafents had placed the re-
sponsibility of getting her back upon
his shoulders. lie had no further
Interest in the tnj>«ter after he had
been legally, tlefired, he said.
Discarded Doctors
Display Worries
Local Negro Boy
A gruesome find of the heads of
four negroes, apparently boys, made
at the. municipal incinerator yustet
1 day, resulted in tho wlldt st j'Unvrs
j (hat have prevailed here ■ for 'htuiy
years-
i A small negro boy with u troubled
I face reported to the sheriff's dopart-
j merit yesterday of having seen se\J-
] oral negro beads roll from a gtir-
buge .waiton a* the. melhei'a*<*r. "I.
jes' vcoul<Tn't sleep any rnoab aftci
Keetfi' dat sight," the hoy said, ...its
he endeavored to convince the otll-
cers (hat # hi* was not trying to
| "spoof' anybody.
j. An investiKMjtlon n ndej>y the Hliet'-
j Id's department revealed that the
! heads had been used foi; scientific
| pttrj. ses and were r.lmply being diK*
GERALD MANN
IS HONORED BY
DEMO LEADERS
.UEAUMONT, ,J2..;.<A.U)
rr-d«rald C. Mann, Tt-xas' next at-
torney general,, was I'lay in g, second
fiddle to (lovcvnor-nominate W, Lee
O'DanicI yt the state democratic par-
ley here t, da'y but was far from
being lofit, in the shuffle.
"The Bed' Arrow" of Southern
Methodist CniveSsjity "fOrttbull fame
was showered with congratulations,
on liia smashing.'- •,triumph in the, at*
torney ,general's race despite 'O'Oan-
tel'S active opposition. .
Aftet- being lY.ii.ored at a ditrher
last night attended by several
state offi i.Clt), Jfanft held open house
today tif. (-no of the hotels.
The yuui.sg Dallas attorney said he
would tal<e no active part in st tie
'Convention , deliberations and cer>
tainly ii.ni ri,; intention of causing
fvietion. ' '
The former all-Nont.fivyest cojifcr-
| once (tridsfer was left off the official.
{Dallas 'county dr. legatea' list.. lie
said, however, that Ilia old home
county of Hopkins arid "about BO
other eoniitios i-atn r>to my rescue
trjid ofi'cred to placy me on their dei-
egatiotiB."
Among jiurty leaders (it the Maim
dinner were ' State Comptroller
jOeorge 11. Klif'ppwr'l, Slate Alidlto.-
Tom King, 'fax (:omntisH|oner AHier1
K. llMib.-l, District, Judge Baiph W.
YarbtH'ough, i"f Austin and Fverett.
I 00,1 c.x. state democratic executive
committeeman from Austin.
<nt
South Texas County
Judges Convention
Will Be Held Here
The South 'l'ex«V County Jjtdgei"
and Conimii Hioners \iH8oi;iat,!. n 'in
sehji-atihUitl session Friday and Sat-
urday at ItniwuHville, s\it,H:tod < iv
.ango. for .Sufe.jitiijt-t, ptnec tvf"iioid' it's
t mvention aeeprfUilg to (\\ineHsage
received by Cbttnty Judge l\ Ijpo
Davis, a former ; secretary.trea>Hirer,
who has bifetr elected vice preshh
of the asf, -i-lation.
- '
The message canie from Judge o.
C. Daticey, of Hrownsvllle, <vho
stated that other officers of tho
convention elected at this time were
Judge Oscar Barber, of Bay City,
president; and Judge Jackson of
Brownsville, secretary-treasurer, —
Judge Davis. had resigned the
place as. seci^jtttry-ti'easurer' of the
association due t,f the fact that, there
w-as. more work connected with the
office than he- was aide to handle in
cont'i tion with bis duties aa coun-
ty judge.
The next convent Ion will be held
some time in January lHitSI. It 18.
expected that |h"ero will be fi.om ~30'i
to 500 attend.
LEA RETURNS
FROMPARLEY
ON P W A JOBS
be/
1 tlwy
/heir-.,
I
JimmieFalboIs
Visitor In Orange
ii
' I
J imitile Fallm, of the Fnlbo fc Ful-
bo O natructlon comp«ny, the pen-
traettng film that built the Orange
couhty cotht house, wns here today
with a small group of nier\ijsinaklna
minor repairs on the
bull<Hp#. •« * remflt M
-mwM I
erlor
carded. 1 The heads were in . HPlem j
did state.. of preservat'. -h With tho |
results thut the features easily blen- j
lifted the race from whence they .
Mrfiie. The fourth head found had j
been sawn through the -enter. The ,
gruesome find was kept in the
basement of the court h. use pettd-
ng an investigation, which wis
completed dining the day, after
which plans were made for dlsu^f;
Ina of ihe remains fn a different
manner. A description of
on, hoi*e and driver of the garbalie.
facilities used In transporting
heads furnished by the negro bov
Informer, made tt. sn en*y matter t.-
the origin b( the heads.
truce
1
Membership Is
Increased 29 By
; Baptist Revival
Appro*imn eijr 3* new mwrnbe^
had been msc 1v<WI Into the McDomtld
Memorial jttapUnt church since fce-
ginning of tl e .revival ten days ago
hv the pastor. R f, W. W. ||&nertjr,
The revival will be continued thrnugh
this wo;*. bentnnlng
Major E. Pickering
Speaks At Baptist
Church Service
Mn.ji.vr Ernes' I'lckci lng, of the
Texas stale divisional .atft.ff of the
SxilvailOn Army, ivlti) with til* wife,
acioinpMt led Brlgnfltcr Oenoral Oeo,
William (iijks, .'sitAle commander to
Ot'Orge for , pW;jlMi «r rvi- ..^ with the
local post i t the 'Salvation "Army
Hundn.y; tn< ming. spoke to n Jat.w
croH'rl' «t the First Baptist church..
He wa;; presented by the pastor, Itev.
IjCsJie W, Brfgers vhoWas unable to
preach owing to the eondltion of his
threat foty wing tin overittlon fov
removal- i f his tonnllrt a few days
,'jgo- "jtuisi 11 Athlnsvn. a member
«r tit#- high school faulty, led £he
stPUing and gave > vocal solo t fill
No. 1 Cormier Flows
Pipeline Oil At
16 Bbls. An Hour
The Ite,i Bank oil company's Xi .
I Cormier well where a re test li'-rTr.
iieen in progress for the past two or
three days, was flowing pipe line. o)i
at the rale , .f I (J barrels an In itr
through a quartc*r*luv!i choker,
shown under a potential test. Tills
well was. suteessfiilly liroiight in
from a new d'-ptli of 5571; feet. It
is, expected that the Ftsnnngan Dili-
lltig corporation -drilling rig will lie
nex,t.moved onto the .First Naliohal
bank lease where- another weji is to
be put' ivn.
The Thompson lied -'Bank Oil com
pXny's X'i. 2 Duhon well tested at
fee!, was i tld to be very slow
In coming In today. The tubltie
was being withdrawn during the day
v/lth the view of obtaining a eause
for the delay of the well which, was
«xcei?diiigly proinlslng lit the bcgiit-
nlng.
.Maj'i v \V. K. Lea- -watt |i\ ills bf
flee today after having returned
from Ft Worth where on (Saturday
he conferred with district 1'WA Offi-
etals With reference to the applica-
tion of this city for federal grant.a
to go with t.ho; :¥l7u;ti(>o municipal
irirtn'ovoripnt. botf'ti issue voted so
ovenviielmlnKl.V'' ten days ttf*i \
. Ma yi>r-Lea expressed himself as be-
ing verV well iiU'ttsetl with all mat-
ters portiHiiIng to the application
which Is tnNnattb it possible for near-
ly a million \lollai'M worth of Im-
provements to Nre made In thte city
under a progtanv that will Include
extensive street liurtdlrig, tt new city
hall and atiditotiumN^ndl wharf and
dock constructl. n.
•It ' i.t cMieeted that \Sfayor Lea
will be (jolto bi,t ty In shaping; the
lirogram for the In tare for the next
several day*.
BISHOP SMITH
HERE SEPT 25
Local M
I (Iflltbp A
I.oiil.-'.lana.
Conference
South, when, he
on Bprtdliy, S< -pt
tl. dlsts will
i'iank Hltiith,
Texas, and
of the Af.
irrlves
mbi'r
be hosts to
.head of the
Went Texas
K. Church.
In the city
251 h. to con-
duct a Series of services' at the First
Methodist, church.
I! v. IM Barettp, pastor of the
' "hurt'h. anrnainced yestwduy Blshep
j Hmiiirs aeceptatif e of, the; iiivltat!' it
| to-' visit the .local church.
I' Bishop s?niith la ri well known,
j greatly beloved prelate of his chureH
; a rid bl.'j ovesi afteH Will be Itighly fn*
| spiraliortt,tl to thUsO :WhW attend. -The
j pul lie is Invited to attend the. er-
j '. lees, tVhleH .will iie jondueted night-
|ly during the week Uiiglniiing Sep-
St 'IIOOI.H have opened and chl-
dren. thousands of them, will, thlfl
wook. begin the march to the class
rooms.
It la a problem no less for the
parents than Ihe tefuhers, to ponder
the system and purpose , f schools,
Kvery parent and teacher will "do
well to remember that the new ways
of living: lias necessitated lmpo>t;rtit
revaluations, new orm of social
eontii 1, restatement of many of the
alms of culture, " The rapid change
In Anierican life, caused by the
swift Induction of an Industrial ago,
has caused tragic blundering.
In many schci is the board of trus-
tees who exercise authority oyer the
system of education are made up
| largely of persons who' do not know/
what education is nor what Is be^t
jfot* the students. In many eases
have been chosen because of
success In business or p. litieaf pre-
ferment, rather than their, attain
ments of learning. It is natural tljat
such men, although honest and «tn*
cere, are more, ihterestofi in estib-
(lshea convention than In scholar-
ship. I should ilke.ythitl week, to
ask every teacher ^<tnd trustee the
question: What ijt an educated per-
son 1
The pursuit/of wisdom Is mora
than Immediate practicability ~ It
may mean smashing tradition and
hlttce befiM-o the human intellect the
issue not f personal advni)tagc V uf;
rather tho functlo'i and necessity
of wisdom. Wo have too much tra-
dition which holds us aloof from
contemporary reality. We heed a
<iue t for the meaning and value of
u . world mude new, One Important
Step 111 this quest is the canting off
Of a great portion of the neeimui-
la ted widom of the ages —- modern
bran must beeotno a creature of his
( Wn day and generation-. I do not
suggest that we ignore af) the men
and wisdom of, the past, but I do be-
lieve thai? we have been carrying
Kttcli- a load of it, th'aft'lX'f' have clut-
tered and hampered progress. '
We have found oursehves in a new
world and In a whirlpool, find we"!
must be master of, the situation, Our
anecstrAl rnythd will no longer suf-
ficiently guide otir behavior. Hduca-
tlon is a voyage of discovery, sea re 11
for1 knowledge and understanding j>f
what will constitute a f. od life. Bop
ular opinion, old beliefs, superf.titi-
ti'O', und supposition may have us
cncNnibercd ~ It Is our duty to find*
Whether ,«• not this Is true,
We are wrapped more In mediev-
rillsm thihr we will admit. Wo itre
afraid of dlM'every because It Is
startling nndXofteti, rcvidutlonay and
reriiiires revaluation of ideas, Ideals,
and cdlt'dtlon. Discovery will.- I^e n«
revolutionary today as It was wh<*n
Hocrntes was forccdvto drink the
hem!i < k.
Too tunny pr< iple w antXcomfort and
security—they do not w\nt edtlca-
tion to ask new questlon \iiut an-
swer the old ones.
I Our schools have been woefully
Kuo pe, at Uh i.tont. anxious hotrp
since the world vi?nr, waited today for I
Kelehsfuehrer A-dolf Hitter to tell j
whether^, Germany would M&tu forcw
against Cwn'hcmlovnJBa.
There were none who could pro-
dipt whut the fuehrer would any
whether ho might steer a <otir#o off
pence, or war or, by silence, ptv long;
Kurope's dread, ^
•..Massive army domonstratlons m
.Nurnberg, Oermany, set the stago
for Hitler's speech against the back-
ground of fervent patriotism at th
annual na l party congress,/ _
In advance of the fuehrer's speeety
on foreign policy, high nasi offl-?i«lH |
declared the fate of 3.5JIO.OOO Sude-
ten Germans In CueolieaUvakla
whose demands for autonomy Hitler
lias backed — have become a matter
of national honor to nar.l Germany.
Two signs that Hitler wits likely
■to itet soon wero seen by veteran
observers, . ••!*(
I'trat, limy regarded his doel^ra- v
ttoh jeHterday that r.;n\c German*
arc denied "for the time being" th" .
'igVit"|o five In Goruutny ns a stronie : |
the Sudeten
satisfy nail ]
Amt miiioxiitlotv of
■nan area alone (.-an
hint
Germ
umblilonH. ^ —
econd, they said. It
typical of Hitler's career
has been
that he >
/has been most silent about his plana |
until, the moment for action Is about
to be reoched; :_
Sudeten Oi-riVian/i Hn Cxech ^lova-
tVlu, mounwhlle, - demonstrated with
renewed, fervor In many towns n,nd
ctlies. They demanded a pleblneltttV
and appearing to he raising nn Utstto
of "snvlllK <3««ehoslovakia from oom-
inulsm-"
A government broadcast appealed
again to t
Cwwtaoslo
warned,
W pl
-th
tvinber 2a.tl ,
Orange Democrats
To Beaumont For
State Convention
A '<•«■;!;> delegation . f Orange iiottti-
ty. HemoeVais Headed by \V. M. Him
■jMOtlK, 1. <!h8lrm«tt, & JourneytMl
to Beaumont today to pirticlpntc In
the' advance caucuses of the state
demrtei-atle eomentlon to be held
during today and thl evening- With-
out a doubt the number attending
the #tate' ityvnvetytlon from Grange
eounty wilt b egreatly augmented to-
morrow when the convention opens
Orange county delegates will he priv-
liKod to n st the total strcnith of S
delegates as a unit on questions to
Road Is Planked,
Drilling Resumed
At New Sun Well
Included in: the program of im-
provements being made by the Kun
Oil company at the present time If
that of building plank road* a :ro*«
low plai-e* oh the road Into ihe
wiid-eui well whieh is now golnw'
down in the .lack's Island vicinity,
three miles f* rfh of ' town. The
rofld to the w«ll I# also being graded
in places in order to nnntatn the
lieavy huullnit that must go ovar It
during all kinds of weather.
In the meantime, drilling Is going
ahead now after tht crews stood idle
for172 hour* while cement In which
the string of SOW) feet of 13 1-J Inch
rasing: was set,
den. . 1
" allowed to har-
fMwiS
Former Orange
Citizen Drowns
Near Los Angeles
! Ncwa vV.t* received here today that
j Geo rite fieiuntlne. 57, formerly of
• Orange, w«« drowned while In bath*
' Ih* drt the f'aciflc > ttst beach nevr
his home in I-os Angeles. Hunday.
Gttly a few weeks itifo , Mr. Merun-
llne. H' cornpanled by his wife, vis-
ited and in New Otlenn*. He
made ills home here *>r many year*,
his Jast employment hero lielng at
tho ixut factory, Ho and his wife
Moved to Ivos Angeles atwut 1* yenrn
ago. Burial will lake place Wednes-
day In ifa Angeles. .
Hurviviti* him ar<5 his wife, Jlra."
Gertie ^eruntlne. four brothers. Al-
bert and l. Ails fjeruntlne of Los An-
gela#. Fred Scrunttne of New Or-
leans and Oliver Seruntlne of Or-
atige; a sister, Mr*, Louis Charbon-
qf New Orleans.
A,
i-Wlf
«pfi
tacking In their understand lng'\6f
what true values really are, Wheii
teariiers. In schools and colleges grasp
the deeper me!it l lJt-~ f. values thf-v
Will understand, as have all jtreat
philosophers, that the only true
lvalues ui-e physical'ifn'T mental, oth-
er* are all artificial
The wot Id Is III u v, hii lpool of
despair and uncertainty. The uncer-
tainty will continue «« long as we
fall to understand what true values
are. The teacher' who si'eks to/
ror.ognlze true values und tinpni"; It
to the pupils will have made « <-.■
trlbutlon to clyillxatlcii equal to that
Of Socrates. The leai-her who helps
to dispell gloom and uncertainty, in
this present ■' worlH' of 1 despair, -will
be one , that understands true vul-
ues.
The great task of the teacher is
to free the mltid fr. m herd oplnl hi,
to train habits of judgment and ap-
preciation" of value, to carry ori I be
struggle for the supremacy Of the
Intellect, to. temper passion with
wisdom, to dispel prejudl.-e, and to
enlist all men in the aehtevetneut of
eivlllxatton; to see that education
la not diverted from thla true aim.
My suggestion to the parents Is,
leave the teaihers alone and If your
boy or girl cornea home disturbed
over something the teacher aald, re-
member disturbance is what they
need. Only the disturbed mind be-
come* a er«atl*« mind. Tou should
n .<t be aonding your -child to school
ie people to remain twtrrtf
ami maiut ith order.
Officials reiterated
desire fof peace but
forts are mannod," , ' " -
tlabinot meoiliwS were -oftlled In
l.ondon and Fari|. TIW British niiu-. l
laters werW"trt~a a ion at Ten Dow- |
nltiif stree* for try.re than two hotirs.
They were said to teal they h:td
taken every possible step to con-
vince Germany that Urltaliv' would,
fight If France's integrity were men-
aced. - A , ' '
The Froneh felt thjey had done ntl
within their posyer to preserve |
pence but were ready f> r whatever;
might come. /-
British and Frenth military ex-
perts ere believed to he In clone
consultation'. wide piecautlOiiory |
meitmu'es were believed to have been
taken In Knghtnd with customary Of-
ficial ' wecrecy ahd prrmarednesa w'a
understood to have concernetl the
cabliicta of both nni;ions. Franco
already Is on a virtual war f. i tln*.
The - critical Buropenit situation
bnujjttit"' the" leaitue i r nal ions' 'Ihat-
He of sanction*" t(V ah end liefora
the assembly opened its tftth session.
Tile neutral imtlotrt —- the 'K-nndl-
nnvitiu "o*ytliiei, the Netberhindit.
and Belgium — fhkided they would
be satisfied with a. neili.'H ( f decim*. :
a lions that, inch, league member
i, uld decide lndltiduillly whether to
join punitive mci* iure« against att;
aggresapr.
Thus, left rrl inched, the league'g-
punltlve machinery would remain
a potent weapon in the event of K.Uf
ronean hoatlUtles*
in China J ip«n eotitlnued to eou-
centrate efforts in hw new overland
drivr.s toward the Fi'lplng-Hankovtr
railroad, whloh 'would tjlve. Iier armsr;
a dlrei't. approjbch to Hankow. Chi-
na's provlslonaij capital. Htroot: Chi-;
j.e«e rclstiinci^ held s up the .thpan-
eso drive on bofth banks of tin; Vang*
t*o river.
In Spain insurgent fotrees fdrtlfled
positions vi -ti ■ from tfie government ]
\in the Wiro :front while mnngUllrd*
sttll fought a%itiB a ten-tWlle front
frofn Galen, aorth of Gnndesa. ti> j
the foothills . i the Sierra de les On-
halloa. «
\;
Rain and Traffic 1 11
D {images Road
■i-u-ie
The road between
pew bridge is aald
t>,day aa'. ,a :restilt of
fie y«uttejjdny by
cr is ed the new
bridge. Th
Orange .'in<b
Orange and th#j
to be roughwrj
tho Nav.v truf-l
sightseers who |
I?wt Arthu r-Orang |
unpaved gaps liet<v«>ol |
Orangefield and betwe
Orangefteld and the bridge gave waS
cotislderubtp aa a result of the con-
tinued 'slow) rains prevailing 8atur!|ftjg|
night and Stmday.
to be taught what you already
lieve. Yo*i can do that much teach-1
ing your 4elf. Truih will ultimate
win—let 'your Child Itnow the
NOW.
Much of our trouble tod-iy la
to ou*.abate* of culttifal tradlllon. \
ne#d a imiest for meaning ahd 1
In a We Hd made new. Unless
derstand ihe problem we <j*n
solve tt. yswfit-
mbHA|
i l ;«?S'S
,
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 214, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1938, newspaper, September 12, 1938; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth303354/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.