The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 42, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1927 Page: 1 of 8
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The Orange Leader
>
•e*eereptertteeteere
VOLUME XIV.
ORANGE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1927.
NUMBER 42
LEGIONPOST
RECORD AIR JAUNT THEIR PLANS
Rich Threshers
PORT PROGRAM
©
©
RENEWS PLAN
FOR GAS LINE
OUTLINED FOR
1NDON,
FORMENORIAL
CITY’S FUTURE
PROJECTHERE
land. Californin
Lowenstein- Wertheim
nlanwine
woman.
da
c
lit
tAmorrnw
END NEAR IN
PLANE SEARCH
will
♦
Mrs.
4
JONES BARELY
Mrs. Giffin
b a
COOLIDGEHFTS
UBS OPENER
heeth tafted.
d
FISHINGSPREE
of
He
the body
WIDHoR,
FRONT STREET
Wont
brother of Oar Wood,
The
governor conferred todny with
(‘ol
TRACK REPAIR
"Royal
people
hl
rearrang-
Ing the next leginiative
approprintion
Hal-
for the guards
*o that better fitting
Garig.
Btinnon-
hich
will try to best the Atlantic
city
to
RADICALSNOB
work-
mets laying pipe for
da ryotom
for
STATE NEWS BULLETINS
soon
Evans won
green by 2 up and
f
AUSTIN, Texas, Aug 24 —--- Beven
re-
Hotnans
i n
• head <4 Willing
uniforms
purchaned
culty
young
port director on
probably be ' in-
who
the
Begin Work For
Womack Ranches
Fred S« hulte,
aume his duties
(atling
proach
mohoplane,
prepare f<»r
Phil
note
Bo it
when
triends of the
day
experienced
inning from
1 1
IM
Mrs. Giffin Dies
In Galveston: to
Be Interred Here
her
she
her
local I
arouned
Mtinaoi
Windd
condition* permitting from he I‘nn-
von nerndrome Fne rial choire *mn
heen installed in the fneelage ~f the
plane for the nrincess, who will ride
as n passeneer.
married to
dihector.
OIBCO. — Bridge over Lake Cisco
dam dedicate
equalization fight in
paign."
Still another voice
they
on a
FARMERS OF SOUTHWEST URGED
TO ALLY INePOLITICAL UNION
WITH EASTERN LABOR BOARDS
roit
to
wtgp
the
th
I
Hundreds of Angry Mob
Storm Undertaking
Parlors
SALM’S DIVORCEE
WILL WED AGAIN
McCarthy Forces Bobby
To Eighteenth To
Win Match
New Pork Director Will
Outline Plans For
New Work
YOUTH HELD FOR
MATRICIDE LAYS
DEFENSE PLANS
Locates New Specie
Game Fish About
Yellowstone
Committees For Bridge
‘ Slab Report On
Plans
sped bomt racer, was to hop or to-
day either for New York or a“ca-
-
ko 1
A. .
Thursday is Time Limit
in Navy Hunt For
Dole Fliers
S. P. Appropriates Coin
To Patch Paving
Downtown
angry sympathizers of Nicola Sacco ■ than fa the welfare of any political
and -Bartolomeo Vanzetti thia after- pnrty or of any individual That the
I *
TYLER. — Corerstone laid
Eaet Tyler Methodint rhurrh
tre hole
PIPE ARRIVES
I it a
r ..PA
A44
born and reared
A flight from Long Beach. California, to Tokio. Japan, or to Meltwourue,
Australia, Ih the aim of Captain James L. cirin t right* and hi, navi-
gator, Theodore Lhndgren. The two men are shown inspecting one of
the twin motors of their giant triplane, it Australia finally is decided
upon, their flight over the 7000 mile route with a stop probably ut Guam
for fuel, would be a record Hawaiian islands would be first on to Japan.
-story home.
who is here to
governor Mated "wouid mproe
was rained to
venture to acvise aspirants for con-
gress and for the-presidency to in-
form themnelvea and he prepared
for intelligent disrussion There are
I several million voters on the farms
the seventeenth
1 to play
night-, to Windi
that work would begin
farmers have found anore profit
growing trucks than in rice.
H. Giffin, agea about C9
in political contest,- and
in the state of Illinoim but moved
with her family to Orange about 14
general, and Lieut -Col Dallas J
Mathews, questioning them closely
regarding the purchase of new show
•nd better uniforms
the Continental Divide
while Roland shot wall up
nn English j
tnday ‘n fiv |
FILM WEDDING
Survivors of the deceased are her
husband/ out daughter Mrs. N B
Eekman of Galveston and John Gif-
An. of Newton.
! * • —
WALKER GUARDED
ON BERLIN TRIP
ii% propos
Ir, Rngh
The cur
due tn hon
’ contributing to
I wholenome life
“Th® Welfare of agriculture Is of
far more importance in the nation
checks totalling $78,000
dash to Paris. They are satd to be
backed in Wheeling, W. Va
PRINCE WOUNDED
LONDON, Aug. 24 —Prince George,
brother of King Alexander ot Jugo-
Slavia, has been severely wounded
and there is little hope for bin re-
covery. according to a Central News
dispatch from Vienna today quoting
a telegram received in Vienna frem
Belgrade.
Interests of the Mouth and wear are
identical and the alliance so recently
formed between them must be con-
tinued and strengthened."
TUWIA. — Kev ora f hundred
was well within the expected
from Thomas, the latter
get home with - hin ap-
found, and Wtltiam
The governor proponed
stronger, more
"Work hi to begin in the near fu-
ture on repairing the Southern Pa-
rIAc tracks along the paved portion
of Front street." - =. —
This was th* reassuring mnesnge
given out today by E K Johnson, lo-
cal agent for the railway company
Johnson declared that he has just
been informed of action in the gen-
eral offices of the H P. lines allow-
ing an appropriation to cover the
cont of the project. and was advised
swI RMCORD
HONOLULU, T. H.. Aug. 14—A
new worid"* record for the sso-yara
"wimmine relay ns owned by the
tant Ilinota Athitie club mquaa to-
Competing In the national
oImmin« champtonehip here, the
Illinois team of Weimmutter. Hana-
So mna,Kigpbenpaaaiedithe
neconds from ths old E.CDia eisht
DETROIT, Aug z4.
deman and Miss kuth
etpected here today to t
Detroit monoplane- in
nndian point in
Dodge Brothers
Agency Reopens
Orange Offices
the next cam-
the theft of $365 frem th. shaw
Brothers creamery here last Bunday
Freed was employed there as a por-
ter Iocal police say the prisoner
was waived extradition.
The family lived here
STREATOR, 111., Aug 24.- Elab-
orate preparations for the defense of
Harry Hill, former Streator high
school cheer leader wanted for the
murder of his mother. Mrs. Eliza
WILIIAMSTOWN, Mam. Aug 24
—A political union of western and
southern farmers and eastern labor
wan advocated here today by Henry
A. Wallace, editor of Wallace’s Far-
mer. and son of the late Henry C.
Wallace, secretary of agriculture in
the Harding and Coolidge cainets.
Speuking at the Institute of Politfes,
Wallace said:
BOSTON, Aug 24 —Hundreds of
requested to outline
plans for the eoming
DALLAM, Texas. Aug. 2 4 —Already
under a fve year sentence lor em-
bezzlemeht, W. J. Meyers, former
business manager of Baylor hospital
here, must stand trial Bept. 11 be-
fore Judge C. i_ Pippens on the gec-
ond of 11 Inictments charging em-
bezzlement, tt was anmuneed today
for a farmers’ political-party.
sa id
“The president and those
hold with him cannot accept
Finlay came in
little difi-
Dolp, while
very much
FORT WORTH. Texas. Aug 24 —
Constahe Mann left for Bt Louls i
today to bring back Boy Freed, held |
at Ht Louls under orders from local
authorities. Freed is charged wit i
of nicer material can
Much equipment.
parry will drry a full line of models
in the Orange nalesrooms, with ser-
vice and parts department in con-
nection.
HAN ANTONIO. Texas, Aug 24 —
Min# Kuby Anzau was dead here
today as the result of injuries r*-
ceived last night when the automo-
bile in which she and two other
girls were riding overturned after
striking another rar Her two com-
panions were slightly injured but
the oceupant* of the other rar evin
to forecast the scope and perma-
nence which it’will achieve in the
future; and as this common effort
mnoves forward in an intelligent pro-
gram for a sounder agriculture. It is
September: 1.
troduced and
nome of his
year.
government oficizls, including Pres-
ident Hinderburg. Chancellor Marx
and foreign serretary Ntressemann.
are absent from the city and will not
meet Mr. Walker.
Mayor Walker will be entertained
at the United States embaeny. -Also,
he will be the guset of chief burgo-
master Boess and the American club
at honorary functions.
years ugo when
Shnee that time
The Aral car load of piping and
other materials to be used. In the
construction of a natural gas system
for Orange and vieinittes wae receiv-
ed here this morning from the fac-
tory at Youngstown, Pa.
An item of particular interest re-
garding, this shipment is the remark-
nhle record in the time, made. The
record shows that the car was load-
ed last Saturday and that it reachec
the niding st Orange on the follow-
Ing Wednesday morning.
LON ANOEES—Cat, Aug 24.—.
Dorothy Sebastian, motion picture
fessed oppositi@ to zovernment sub-
sidy Hence I "an conceive h>, pos-
sihle or honorable mompromise ■ of
TmI "
2’
7 a
2 V
ef te-ip ’
ggm- t t *
morale and interes of the guardu-
men."’
ducting violent demonhtrations of
protest over the execution nt the
two radicals in Boston
Mr and Mrs. Walker and the bal- • "I "ome t mhe, therefore, that
ance or the pary plan In -pena ! inevitahly the lsnu• muat *• te th.
three days in Berlin. Many high
the Philippines in 189° "vhil- "o"*inm
with the Spanish troops against the
United St~tes.
The princess took up flying dur-
ing the war ar? -ne the firat un-
man to make the Bichr from Fwvm*
tn France. She was re-admitted to
British notienolitv in She ns-
naliv files v-Re- her maiden name.
Lady Anne Saville.
The nrincess who I* • •• •
the Far of Mevhorono", •* 1
couple disclosed to.
old. In 1897
Prince Ludwig
< LKBURNK — Three more
ntreets to be paved.
just what our rapid exploitation of
natural resources growing industrial-
ism is meaning in terms of well*
distributed human hapvinem in the
long run.
Attacking the administration farm
relief plan promulgated from Rapid
City on Apguns 7 hr a "bald ami
shameless mubhidy"’ :in affront to
economic wfatesmanshp and an in-
au‘ to seif-respecting producers, col.
Clarence Ousley of Texas former
assistant secretary of agriculture and
for many years a farm ph per editor,
in effect endorsed Wallace’s proposal
DALIAS Texas. Aug if ~—J w.
Mitchell, 50. of Lisbon, was in a lo-
cal hospital today suffering from
probably fatal injuries as the result
of living hit try an automobile here
last night He is suffering from a
fractured skull and other injuries
Mrs Mitehell sustained minor injur-
ies at th® same line.
TRAIN DERAILS
IOONDON, Aug 24 —Ten personn
are known to have been killed and
others are believed to have been
killed or injured in a train wreck
on the Southern railway today ear
Seven Oaks
A local salesroom, service and
parta station for Dodge Brothers mo-
fur products has been re-opned in
Orange in the W L. ShepHerd build-
ing on Division and dhort Sixth
streets, under the local magement
of J. E Turpin.
The location in the same as for-
merly held by the Dodge agency be-
fun temporarily suspending the lo-
cal agency several months ago. The
building has undergone complete re-
modeling work for the formal open-
Ing.
Turpin has been connected with
the Dodge sales force for some tun,
in the paat having worked (orally
BERIN. Aug 24.—Mayor James
J. Walker’of New York <Tty. and his
party sliyped into Berlin almosr sa-
rretly tobay. Th*/ were taken from
the train at a suburban station tn
avoid demonstrations in connection
with the Nacco-Vanze1i execution*.
Elaborate police prerautions were
taken to prevent the mayor from
being annoyed or molested by Cer-
eman communists who have been « on-
Hill. was begun even before the dr _
compoge4 boly of.hia mother wat. MH otthe Benpmnt.ofies of ths
unearthed from its shallow grve in Jackon Motor company Theom-
the name tune, when De, H M Kil-
gore of North Carolina, chairman of
the board of trumees of the Ameri-
can Cotton Growers Exchange, de-
clared:
"The large scale cotton, tobacco
and rice cooperatives of the south
are supporting the MeNary-Haugen
equalization fee bill as one of the
outstanding means of establishing
equality for agriculture in compari-
son with other groups The economic
Dixie Officials Skate
Work Will Start
Next Week
Issue has become polit!cal is because
the administrations since the armin-
lice have refumed to recognize the
economic injustice being done the
farmer, and because the president
vetoed a non-politcial remedy passed
by a bl-partisan vote in congress
“If it rsuta in sectional strife the
responsibility likewise rests with the
administration and its agricultural
advisers There will be an equaliza-
lion fee in the next congress or an
M INNIKA H DA COUNTRY CLUB.
Minneapolis, Aug. 24 — Chi and
feyr ran rjot aereus the public- opine
this morning as Bobby Jone *, darl-
ing of all gallories. had to ga to the
eishteenth green t beat Maurice
Metrthy by 2 up fn the frsr round
of the national amateur golf cham-
pionnhip, after the tetter had car-
tied the king of the links to the six-
teehth before relinquishing a ieader-
ship of one hole
Two more victims ih the dust in
the frit round when Allen Moner,
the von Elm protege from Los An-
gslM. beat Dave Ward, Chicago, 1
up, and Arthur Yatos, Rochestr,
won by the same slim margin from
Paul Haviland, Bridgeport, Conn.
Harrison Johnston algo survived
the rund without undue difficulty
bnting Dick Jones, New York, by
4 up and I to play The tetter was
a semi-fnallst at Oakmont and car-
ried Bobhy himself to the eighteenth
green test year but he had no reply .
today to Johnston’s steady and con-
•latent - play
Mackenzie finally won on the ox-
14.— T’ndeterred
t By International News Herviee)
Reinforced by the light cruiser
. Omaha and fifteen destroyers the
naw search for the seven Inst Ha-
waiian flyers wa nearing the end
today All destrovers, aircraft ves.
Hvydges, from whose home in Chi-
cago HHI left . yesterday one hour
ahend of the police.
The police are eherking closely on
young Hill's pantimes in Ntreator.
They And that in two gambling
houses he lost large sumn of money
which will explain the checks, that
he forged his mothers name to.
had made her home among
children.
will function to a greater extent in
the future than heretofore.
Several Inspiring addresses were
made by visiting and local legion-
naires, among them being D. M.
Phillips of Port Arthur, who is vice
commander of the state' Legion or-
ganization. Rev. J. W. Winn, chap-
lain of the local post, made a very
interesting tik.
The committee composed of Geo.
D. Jones, Charles Cottle and Turner
T Wallis, appointed at a previous
meeting to look into ths proposition
of erecting a memorial slab on the
Sabine river bridge here when it is
complete, recommended, that all
names of soldi era be eliminated on
the alah to avoid complications.
Thia seemed to meet with thr gen-
eral approval of the Legionnaires,
due to the fact that it would he dif-
feult to decide what clasn of men
should go on the slab and that it
would be almost impossible to get
every name that rightfully belonged
on the slab.
The committee, to which ~was add-
ed Doug Pruter and W. E. Lea, was
requested to compile a suitable 1-
script ion to the memory of all men
in the service during the world war
from Orange county to be put on
the memorial slab. It was pointed
out that immediate action in thia
matter was necessary as putting the
slab on the bridge would be in order
within the next sixty days.
Hunter Huddle, commander of the
local poet,. preaided at this meeting,
which concluded with a luncheon
served in the bayuet haH.
years ago.
until a fet
Ont , Aug 24
W been thoroughly
that the organization
Fans regarding the future of the
port of Orunxe. will he given ut the
next weekly meeting of the Rotary
club on Tuesday noon of next week
when B. F Brown, chairman of the
municipal wharf and ilock commis-
aion will be in charge of the pro-
gram
A rousine meeting of Lloyd
Grubbe post No 41, of the American
Legion was held last njght in the
chamber of commerce banquet hall.
The meeting was attended by from
40 to SO ex-service men.
The Indications are now that the
The familiar- hum of the thresher
in the rice growing sectjons of Or-
ange county were heard for the first
time this peason today on the Archie
Womark lice plantation.
Threshing will be started in the
near future on other plantations and
in the mentime, rice ’ utting iar go-
ing on throughout the rice heit
Indications are that there will be
• yield better than the average in
Gia use county rice, although it is
predicted that there will be e slight
reductiun in thy rice - •< reage for
next year, dun to the fact that the
Taylor Nichols, acting adjutant
DEL Uln. Texas, Aug. 24.—Henry
July, 30, negro, is dead and Jamec
Logan is in a local hospital suffering
from serious , injuries as the result
of their true k overturning here yes-
terday The truck was loaded with
gravel at the time.
years, died at 2 o’clock thia morning
at the home of herwdaughter. Mrs.
N. B. Eckman. In Galveston. The
body war shipped by train to Orange
for interment, arriving at 10:24 dur-
ing the forenoon, being conveyed
from the Southern Pacific station to
the First Christian church where
funeral services will be held at 5
o'clock this afternoon.
Rev. J. W. Winn, pastor of the
Christian church, will conduct the
funeral service. lavement will Im*
in Evergreen cemetery:
the basement df thg HHI manson.
Th Im fact war disclosed today when
it was announced two attorneys have
been named by Dr Harry c Hill,
the boy’s father, to look out for hin
interest. Corvner d D. Howe an-
nounced he would reconvene the
Jury today and call as prineipnl wit-
nenaes Peter Buneh, the gardener,
to testify he was ordered by young
Hfll to smooth over the spot where
'There is a place for a party com-
posed of western and southern farm-
ers which will cooperate at times
with eastern laboring men to ask
Hawaii. P-inee
track preparatory to be unloaded at
the warehouse of the Dixie Gaa &
Fuel company, which is in the old
stucco building formerly occupied by
the Orange Printing company and
the Duliy Leader on Front street,
betwen First and Necond streets.
That actual work on the system
will start next week, was the infor-
mation given opt here today. As to
how many men it will be possible to
employ in the beginning, the con-
struction management was unable to
state today
Jt le understood that the piping
received this morning will be treated
before being put down This will,
of course, take quits a bit of time.
Other shipments of materials are ex-
pected to arrive from day to day.
The ditching machinery, shovels
and other equipment to be used in
putting in the system. have been
purchased through local dealers The
machinery on hand, when purchased
will be here in the next few days
The statement ha» been made re-
peatedly that the gus company will
use local men where it is poswible to
find men who can fulfill require-
ments. It la understood that there
have been many applications for em-
ployment made by local people.
; of the Untied States who will em-
brace the opportunity to -vote as
they think for the welfare of their
business and the well-being of their
children."
A further indrsement of the Wal.
lace propomal das voiced by George
N. Peck of Illinois, president or the’
American Council of {griculture
Beck said
“The progress that has been made
noon stormed the undertaking rooms
of Joseph Laangone in the West End.
where the hodies of the two men
have been held while unsuccessful
attempts were made to gecure a hall
where they could lie in state.
Police were called whan the
crowds threatened to break down
the doors to view all that is mortal
of Barco and Vanzetti.
While communist riots were occur-
ring in Paris and other European
cities were reporting pitched battles,
ympathizers of Harro and Vanzetti
were meeting opposition here today
in securing a hall In which to lay
the two bodies in state.
Carpenters, on orders from the
owner, put up a harrier at the de-
fense committee building The mo-
cieta Balernitani haH was also board-
ed up.
Plans for a funeral procession
unday—the bodies tn be kept un-
ler special health department per-
mits—were drawn up by the Sacco-
Vanzetti defense committee today.
repair erws engaged in similar work
Id other points of the syntem could
he conveniently moved to Orange
in making the announcement.
Johnson said that the company’s
strip along the tracks would be en-
tirely removed and replaced by rock
asphalt pavement
A "necond rail" I" also tn he laid
along Front street. Johnson smid. to
carry wheel flange* of railway cars
and prevent cutting of the pavement
in the future.
MOODY AROUSED
AT EQUIPMENTS
FOR GUARDSMEN
ceived today by W Gregory Hatcher,
state treasurer, from the federal de-
partment of agriculture’s bureau of
good roads, to be applied on high-
wy maintenance in Texas. During
the month, the government has con-
tributed nearly $z60,000 to Texas for
road work and about $2,500,000 nine®
1. 1927
MRARD — Construction of •
new $#00,000 hotel to start soon.
I A ----- •
COR#8 CHRI8TI. — Iocal Elks
to bulldW
to the pin Thomas Anally had a
20 foot putt fur a half tut he mtsa-
ed and so he loot.
Ho did Ellsworth Augustus of —
Cleveland, hut that was not alto-
tether surprising. He happened to
be playing Chirk Evans over th*
course where th® Utter won his
grand victory in the 1916 open and
from Enelapd to Ortawn. Canna ne-,
cordine tn dispatehes reachire Lon-
don this nfernoon from Upvon,
nepr here.
Princess Iowenstein - Wertheim
herself a ninne~r in nviatjnn plans
to nceomrarv f"aniain Leelin Hami‘-
Inn and Colorev F F Minchen i»
their Turite-- Fokler nlone which H
policies .of the MeNary-Haugen bill
in whatever form it may he refash-
ioned without politicai perfidy. Now
spokermen for the president present
another measure which the farmer
are asked to accept Thes cannot
accept it without reranting their prq
Francis Ouimet survived the first
round without the struggle that Ev-
ans ws forced to make Franci~
won easily from Billy Sixty. Aiiwau-
kee. py 4 up and 5 to play.
Th* same margin prevailed for Ed-
die Held. St louis,over Dezter Cum-
minge, Chicago, while Dave M irtin,
Los Angeles, disposed of Howard
Walton, Chicago, by 4 up and 2 in
play.
By GEOROE E. DURNO
(INS Staff Correspondent )
YELLOWNTONE NAT I <» N A I.
BARK. Wyo . Aug. 24.— Crossing and
recrossing the Continental Divide,
President Coolidge went his way
eastward across Yellowstone National
Park .today in quest of new thrily
• f the sport on angling
His -destination was Yellowstone
Mke where lurk euthroat trout? a
species new to the president, and
which promises o tax his skill as a
fsherman.
More scenic thrills, of which the
park holds an overabundance en- .
paged Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge and Aon
John en route.
First, was the initial crossing of
NEW YORK. Aug 24 — Millicent
Rogera the former Countess Halm
and $49,000,000 Standard Oil heiress,
and her, dance. Arturo Perlata Ra-
mok, after arriving today aboard the
Olympic, were endeavoring in their
nites at the Plaza to maintain a
barricade against reporters and cam-
eramen.
Dogged questioning About her
wedding plans Anally yielded the in-
formation that the wedding would
probably take place at the Plata in
october
AUNTIN, Texas, Aug. 24—Gover-
nor Dan Moody will do what he ran
to see that th* Texaa nattonat guard
is properly uniformed and equlpped
by the next annual eruipment. The
governor on hia return froin the
annual encampmnt at Palaejop last
week expressed himseif nu diupieased
with the present uniformn, partiu.
Inrly with the shoes worn hy f hh
guardamen. —
where the road Mta 4241 feet above
- the ma level. - - —‘
Here is located Ima lake, where
waters in apringtime now both into
the Atlantic and th« Pacinc.
Then came the second paaaage
where the great watershed of the
continent rune back acrosa the road
in a huge semt-cirete.
Prom the etupandoue molitua, of
8144 feet, the presidential pnrty wae
enabled to eaze out on a horizon far
past the park boundary lines and
embracing Shonhon- lake, sear Cody.
Wyoming.
Coming also as a atveraon was an
encounter with Jehale James, famou-
Yellowstone Trail bear who parks
himself in the middle of the road
and "holdn up’ paaming autoe for
• candy or other sweatt. Forem ran-
Eers with the party paid the ranwom
At West Thumb, Hr st poin reach,
ed on the huge lake, which has an
area of about 144 miles. Mr. Cool-
. M<r came up on another of nature's
fmka "The Vinhing ‘Cone" The
lake laps Ska Inst one side of the
road end on the other ie a bl* nat-
t oral cauldron HI led with boiling wa
ter-2» federal restrletions inter-
fer#isitorn uned to be entertained
hy Fhe spectacle of seeing a fish
caught in the lake, and while Mill
on the hook, whipped acroaa the
road into the cone end boiled
upon arrival at the lake, where
the Coolldges nin remain for the
night. It was planned to take , the
execative immediately to Peace Is-
land. Where he may ah in meetunton.
Sehulte has been here for the
past few daya endeavoring to secure
a suitable home and arranging to es-
tablish headquarters in connection
with the chamber of commeree
rooms on the second floor of thr
Lutcher building
Mr. and Mrs. Sehulte. although
former residents of Beaumont, come
tn Grunge direct from Kansan (‛ity
where Schulte wa# in charge of th*’
export department for the long-Bell
Lumber company for several yeara.
nels. nirnlanes and submiarines will
be eunled back from the hunt tomor-
row night
Three army planes and the Dole
fixht plane of Martin Jennen were
expected to return to Luke Field.
Honolulu, todav from the Inland of
Hawaii. The four ninnen flew there
yesterdav to investiuste report* of a
ureen flare supposely seen feker-
ine half wav un th* IS 444 foot
nlope of Mauna Idea. Hawll’u high-
eat mountain.
Other than the naval reintorce-
ments and the report of the ureen
flare, there have been no new devel-
opments in the 2400-mile hunt for
th® Mian Du ran Gulden Eagie and
Dallaw Spirit, the three minning
planes. Seven hundred miles at nea
the aircraft carrier Iangley and the
aircraft tender Aroostook swept
slowly toward Hawaii with the brood
of thirty airplanes. Th® careful
•earch, however, hns so far yielded
only floating candy boxes and old
potato crtpp. • w 1
Twept-nk ngHi veseel are now
menrchinK for the lost planes far at
nea in ndAlon to the Tangley and
Aroowtook t her .Are Die original
Bearching aquadrAn of elght dentroy-
era and th® erulhet Om«lui. ' Which,
with her complement of fifteen de-
Mroyer®. was diverted it the hunt
Erom thansuyer Ip Puget Round
THREE ATLANTIC
PLANES TUNE UP
cuurIs8 vzib.N, Y..,Aug 14
—With a hurkere reported noaring
New York, pilot® Lloyd Bertaud end
J D Hi fhced Another delay today
in their flight to Rome And return
ih the monoplane uld Glory
actress in engaged to be
Clarence Brown. Alm
- M ■■ ■■■m a v toward plltical cooperation of the
FUNERAL HOME: sew
• fort It require® no prophetic vision
DORAN FATE IS :
NO BUGABOO TO ’
ENGLISH FLIER.
hv th* vncertintv as te th* fete or i
Mis Mildred Doran, first woman to
attempt • azan4-oreanie ight whn
dizap nen redRie ht dv awe while rt-
temntirg n non-ston fiaht from Dak-
spetted on a spur
-*--*********-*-
WEArn "-48
Pavuy elamay romieh ana l
Thurnday. L4gha t frail nertfe- 4
enty to tanter» wtnda ' 3
*-**********************- ♦
she woe marrie, in
Who wae killed in
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 42, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1927, newspaper, August 24, 1927; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1529739/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.