The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 252, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 22, 1928 Page: 1 of 8
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pubDshed
*•• ***** •**t*****tert
VOLUME XIV.
NUMBER 252
CAUGHT IN LABRADOR FLOES
PHOTON IMPROVEMENTS
=
NECESSARY ON
NEWS
' 1
0. S. T. HERE
41
I
5
I
/
(
was internally injured, his
of commission
r -
4.
Charles
"Today in the court
G
were blown down while he and
but
t
DISTRICT COURT
«
OPENS MONDAY
■«
skillful hands and fingers applied
of
physica mm applied naturally In
heen
• nt term of court. are those of State
of
To Record Low
many kindly
are printing it in
"Hhe
"AUNTIF AXLEEF. f;h(F:
of -the sudden death of
last
In
tantly urging the
father
brave girl you would expect her to ! proud and happy to have been able
IF
The University Union
bide
a Reating ca-
considerahle
home
the inventor’s name an<l his
FRHCANT
will
was made by the men of the Station
Henry Ftunsell, of Orange
I
OFCONSPIRACY Trail of Deat_
IN OILLEASES In Three States
traffic
hour
First Marshall of
Orange is Dead at
Home in Sour Lake
CORPUS CHRISTI — Building per-
mita here for March totaled $774,773
father visited in Orange only a short
time ago.
the
the
room I
frienda
is the richer for her hav-
to us, and I am sure that
Diferent tones
pine hed rubher
he
J oe.
telegram
followe
miff err’d
Hinems,
three large buildings, (
torim-gymnasium with
wag the first city marshal for Or-
ange, died recently at his home In
Sour Lake.
eled
out
Houston,
ever held
I
Curry Has Rival
For First Curve
Honors in Texas
fact,
doc lor
bhut
I to
hla
all
Pan-
here
chanical
bers of
the
com-
Three Big Liners
Boost Dock Work
For Longshoremen
Stark Says Work
Will Begin Soon
On T. U. Project
of
hu
tage of the ideal weather and
planting rice at a rapid rate.
The
14
town
ticle.
J
Mrs
“Orange, Fastern gateway to the
most beutiful automobile seenie tour
place,
the
I sta-
thene
Orange is Named
Eastern Gateway
On Scenic Tours
CAR CRASH IS
FATAL TO TWO
to
he was
। who
। upon
deeply
real!
wn=
with
Evangelist Here
From Ft Worth
and
son,
Ing
resting I
I from
mission
I
Three Murder Cases Set
For Trial During
Present Term
Shelled Shoulders, and
Widened Corners
Suggested
Several Lives Claimed and Scores of Buildings
Destroyed in Twister Which Sweeps Thru
Tennessee, Arkansas and Texas
LASTING TRIBUTE TO MEMORY
OF MISS GERTRUDE CHAPMAN
PAID BY KOREANS AT RITES
MECHANICAL VOICE WITH AN
ENGLISH ACCENT SPEAKS FOR
SCIENTISTS IN WASHINGTON
DONKEY ELECTION VICTORY
FURNISHES THEME FOR NEW
SOUVENIR MADE IN ORANGE
wEAm6a
fet ted
more 1
"Ko
Jurors Acquit Oil Man
on Plot Charge in
Teapot Lease
an eity marshal here about 26 years
th«- diahetes with which she was in-
a
The Orange Leader
" ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 1928
Bnt the pneumonia comlined
a chrnic heart trouble arousod
While the nation is planning for
the monientous occasion of the na-
Wheeler, who was in Orange
Hon will answer
questions that w
full;
QVTTACHE —65,000 bonds for
waterworka and etty han carry (to t.
south of the Mason and
the GSR}
the result of
to us, zince "Auntie had heen ick
wind lasted for 45 minutes.
None was reported injured.
Physictans left Texarkana for In-
dex and Ogden to attend the injured.
LAnes of communicatlon were cut by
the wind and reports of the dawagS
were Incomplete.
of the
souvenir
2®, had a fractured right Jaw
A large number of visitors were
entertained here last night by Orient-
•I encampment No 109 T. O O. F.
Saturday night, the occasion being a
big initiation of candidates in the
Royal Purple degree.
miles in the Ford and spent severalling come
the first
residential sec tion made
a severe wind and rain storm that
swept Memphis early today.
Hounen Crumble
The wind centered its violence in
the eastern part of the city, travel-
Luc key and Kenneth Wallace, all for
murder, growing out of the murder
of Hoy Summerville, who was shot
to death in the Williamson settle-
ment more than a year ago.
luckey and Wallace are at liberty
under a $12,500 bond in eac h case,
while Jones is still an inmate of the
county jail here.
In t he
taking advan-
vention conformed
Ing the Korean language with this
hirtle seven-year-old American boy an
her teacher.
the inside.
are very encouraging
so many of
family of nix
on the end of a rod
are obtained with a
tube moistened n
t he la wa
"Saturday night while
my home I wax startled i
voice apokc to the mem-
ths American Physicial so-
their annual alinner Last
H Russell is a son of Mr. and
congratulatione
Sinclair was so
SINCLAIR FREE Tornado Leaves
and David, 13. suffered a fractured
ley and Internal Injuries.
More than fitly houses were dam-
aged. hundreds of shade trees lev-
Furlers home was demolished.
Forbes’ > wrist was frac tured
and the combination proved
than she could resint.
nusselI family in this mection
a third non
I
. . f.
In state highway
attached to each
man speech through control, by
movement of the tongue and lips, of
the resonance developed in the
mouth by the action of the vocal
cords.
night after a day devoted to the dlf
•cult business of canvasing re ent
85-foot smokestacks of
and many telephones reported
Hudson Hardwood Flooring
for trial during the pres-
Frank Perkins of
of two arts—the emotional
confer with Mr
Lea, prominent
from fjeorria
Operated by Foot
A bellows, operated by the foot,
tional democratic
The farmers
very little
This is the S. N. Kite, sister whip of the Montealm, in the icebouma Htraha
or Helle Iland, with nome of the erew atandling by. The MM. condition.
!eViI al the Junker's er W hartor or refuge that exinted when th), pic-
lure was taken. "
rails for
an audL
Enrometers here last night reglster-
ed the lowest read Inge that have
heen ohmerved in a numher of years
At the Goree drug store, the barom-
eter registered 29.3, whereas at the
luuras A Ron Jewelry store, the rec-
ord was 29 1 1-2.
older than the city of Orange and as
old and prominent In the minds of
those who know them, as east Tex-
as Russell was born, reared and
educated in the public schools of
orange, and received a later training
in Baybr university.
from southwest to northeast
on account
her aged
HOUSTON, Tex , April 21 —Two
men are dead as a result of injuries
received when their car overturned
on the Cleveland road ahout three
miles north of Dayton Friday night.
They were Sidney Lawrence, 13.
bacity of 1.0,000, another a general
unInn building where wtudent nr.
hendamarters will be located, and
th- third n woman', activitie- build-
Ing. Th. three will coat $1,100,000
of which $500,000 I. beine -,imed
• now by muhperiptiom
dur|na
o allow
did not
as she
l
-
y telephone and light pole in
town blown down Debrin in
HUGE DOLLAR DAY
BARGAIN FEAST IS
PLANNED THURSDAY
Mra. nichard’s
convention in
one of its kind
was only eight days before that she
had walked over tn the m sin part of
Mokpo to do some shopping arid en-
joyed the eights as she al ways did
। "I could not go tn Mokpo Satur-
day night since it win too lite, but
yesterday morning I drove th* pixty
sitting in
Hewson as
Here in the boat shopping
news broadcast in two months
by Orange merchants.
Another big DOLLAR DAY
jubilee will be staged here
Thursday. April 26.
Remmber the last one—-the
first for Orange- and the many
unusual bargains it brought
out? And the way everyone,
both shoppers and merchants,
were well pleased?
This next DOLLAR DAY
will be even better. Watch for
the special DOLLAR DAY edi-
tion of the Leader Wednaday.
the end of the reed makes the most
effective substitute for the natural
organs.
The device is the product of a
long study of the physics and me-
chanics of human speech, whh h, Sir
Fichard observed, is the combination
escaped injury
A heavy wind and electrical storm
at. Helena, Ark , caused damage en-
timated at $1500, princ ipally to plate
giasn windows in the business dis
trict.
In the nation." s us.emmg) ciqty
Thus will read the descriptfon on. rih“
facture our own coffins out here and
Jett was 84 years old It was it la always a labor of love that
•pore than 50 years ago that Jett I makes tnese evidences of the close
served Orange as the first marshal. | hound which exists between us out
He wan a counin of the late James
Jett, who was killed while serving
here so conmpicuous. The box itself
pany were blown down Reports
from the eaetern part of Shelby
county said some farm houses had
been damaged there and dispatchen
to the Illinois Central railroad told
of a heavy storm along the main line
to north Mississippi.
A dispatch to the Evening Appeal
from Holly Grove, Ark , said the
walls of the home of Lee Neely
"rhe eAly
PLAINVIEW First annual
Cloudy for Sunday, posibly lo-
cal rain, colder. Fresh to strong
pouthery winds.
hours with Georgia- Rhe la just the l yo
po, Korea, there were
inquiries to her last i
A letter just received
Kwangju Presbyterian
fair to give orange
national publicity, as
achievements in their active held of
resea rch.
"Arther!" is said, with the excess-
ively broad "A" attributed by Amer-
ican comedians to countrymen of Its
creator, Sir Richard Paget, noted
British inventor and physicist, who
was a guest of the society and mani-
pulated the device.
"Hello, London, are you there ?
It asked, a little later, and then ex-
claimed
"O Ulla, I love you!
RIr Richard explained that his in-
to get up nince she
ze that she was as ill
Busy seenes were enacted at the
municipal docks throughout Batur-
day by more than 200 longshoremen,
stevedores and others engaged In
the loading of three ocean liners for
both the Eastern and Western hem-
ispheres.
With the arrival of the Se Aimers
Lykes, an American vessel, the rec-
ord of three vessels daily maintain-
ed here for weeks, was restored.
The steamers Lovestakken aud
Aaro were the other two vessels re-
ceiving cargoes of lumber, timbesa,
and other commodities.
George M levingston ship yard and handle -Plains dairy chow held
put back into commission. recently.
killed when the
was a business visitor here Friday
Dr Shaw and Raymond Perry at-
tended the Shrine ceremonies in
Beaumont Saturday.
Luke Perry and Bob Walliams mo-
tored to Lake Charies.
East Tex *a: Runday * loudy, local
rains in extreme east portion; colder;
fresh t strong southerly winds on
the coast
Lonihiana Runday cloudy. occa-
sional rains; rolder west portion;
moderate » to fresh southerl winds
on the
With Judge V II Ntark of Orange
on the bench; Ralph Fourgard, dis-
trict attorney, of Ran Augustine; and
County Attorney H M Kinard, of
Orange, representing the state, court
of the first judicial district will hegin
here Monday morning at 9 o’clock
District ourt at Hemphill was closed
on Raturday.
Among the Capital cases that have
HAPPY .— First material arrives
for $30,000 new hotel.
According to Information received
here Saturday, Hance J. Jett, who
progress, said that maps of the fin-
inhed scenic route, with aide Inup
trips to every beautiful and histori-
cal spot in the state, would be pre-
pared for distribution by A H Dun-
lap, a member of the Mate board of
engineers and a man thoroughly ac-
quainted with highways and scenic
spots In the state.
Photographic pictures of the sce-
nery will dot the scenic route map,
Wheeler declared, from the Orange
Eastern gateway, around the loop to
cover the state and back again
through Orange Wheeler commend-
ed the cleanup and city beautirul
campaign now under way in Orange,
on the Old Spanish Trail.
On March 24. when the news
reached Orange that Miss Gertrude
Chapman had passed away in Mok-
Humble, and A Freshman, about 40 r) , m
of uinetta The men were on the barometers Drop
i i from Houston to • when I . . _ E
FALIS FROM DERRICK
Garfeld Malden, employed by the
Gulf Ref Co at Edgerly oll fleld,
was serfously injured yesterday while
placing a beam on the well Malden
was working In the derrick at the
time of the accident and in some
manner he lost his footing and fell
about 2® feet to the floor.
His left kneecap was knocked out
of place.
After receiving first aid treatment
by Dr. Forman, -Malden was rushed
to Iake Charles sanitarium where
X-ray picture was made Word re-
ceived from the hospital this morn-
ing stated Malden was resting easy
MEMPHIS, Tenn. April Jl—One
death and three Injuries were re-
ported in n heavy windstorm that
■truck at toka, Tenn, early today.
Ambulance drivers who bi ought c
B. Forbes, 56, H millwright, and his
two sons to a Memphis hospital, said
sen, Korea. March 26, 1928 —
SOUTHFHN PRESEYTERIAN MIK
SION IX KOIFA, Kwanrju.
Chosen (Korea) March 26, 1928
PERSONAL
S. J- Wakh and Lee Granger
transacted busness in Beaumont
yesterday
R C. Lyons and J C. Puckett
were in Iake Charles yesterday.
Miss Amy Decuir of Orange Is
visiting Miss Sadie Domingue here
TAFT Local hatchery has hatch-
ed more th.in 20,000 baby chicks go
far this season.
WASHIN(TON, April 11.—A me-
& od people of Orange feel
RASERALL GAMES
The Lnke Charles high school base
ball team defeated the Vinton high
school team here Thursday by a
score of 1® to 4.
The superior pitching for the Lake
Charles, duh and ineffective hitting
of the home team was the cause of
the defeat
The Hotagy club and the K P.
baneban teams will cross bats in a
baseball game Tuesday.
The ladies of the Baptist church
today served dinner down town to
members of business men and home
people. Money derived from the
dinner will be used for the beneft
of the church.
TEXARKANA, Ark., April 21--
An undetermined number of per-
Koreans whom she loved so much,
resting about her. Her interest In
the Koreans was wonderful and her
love for them was shown on all or-
casions
"An Intererting In* Ident was din-
closed yesterday when I learned that
the little seven-year-old non of Kev
Eruce Cumming had been in the
habit of going over to "Auntie’s*
room at the hospital almost daily,
and if any one came into the con-
necting hall they would close the
door it was not until yesterday that
we learned that "Auntie* was study
Dixon line, the keen wits of an Or-
ange man are at work on a plan to
provide a souvenir to play no little
part In the moulding of thought that
might change the destiny of the
party.
J. R. Rossel, a native Orange
man, has designed and executed a
model of the democratic donkey
"topping" the bucking republican el-
ephant in this souvenir, there is
embodled the paramount thought
nuggerted in the time and place
The model of the democratic em-
blem victoriously backing the well
pampered republican elephant, is be-
ing displayed in a glass case in the
Orange Drug company store at the
present time.
Will Manufacture
Plans for the manufacture of the
novelty, which is to be on an awer-
age of five inches in height, have
been perfected Moulds will be cast
by a well known American firm, the
moulds being distribuled throughout
OIL NOTFS
The Roxana Pet Co. seismograph
crew arrived here Friday and are
making preparations to dynamite
the Watkins dome, 7 miles south of
Vinton The crew while remaining
in Vinton will make their headquar-
ters at Hotel Shaw
The Rex Pet Co is making prep-
arations to (dace their Hunter No.
7 at Edgerly on the beam. This is
a work-over well. Mr. Sloan Em-
erson expects a fine pumper.
The Vinton ship c hannel has been
completed from the Intracoastal ca-
nal to one mile north of the Ged oil
feid. Both of the drag lines are now
working toward Vinton and are only
two miles from the incorporated
limits.
Reports from the Edgerly ull field
enthusiastic democrat, the
It la said that many people driv-
ing Into the city do nut observe the
sharp turn in the concrete and
numerous cars are thrown off their
route on that account
Another suggestion is that the
sharp turn on Park avenue and Fif-
teenth Mreet, which la also on the
Old Spaninh Trail route, be remedi-
ed A part of the trouble oh thin
corner has already been overcome.
GIA." This came as i great surprise her
CAW.FD TO MASON
Mrs H H ' Hie hard, manager of
the Arrowhead hatchery here, and
an employe of the Sabine Grain
ompany was called to Mason, Texas
be, and while this comen ax a great
shock, I do not think she is able
yet tn appreciate the full extent of
her loss an nhe will do later.
"I came home yesterday atternoon
and the funeral is to be held today
at Mokpo You would have been
pleamed to see the women of th* Sta-
tion at work on "Auntie's" coffin
You know It Is necesnary to manu
the car struck a soft
road and turned over
An amhulance brought Inwrenee
to an Infirmary here where he died
early Raturday Freshman was in-
stantly killed
to contribute a few months of her
life to the work here
"I am sending this little message
to you now knowing that Gjeorgia
will be too busy to write for some-
time
With very kindest regards. I re-
main. Faithfully yours,
M L HWINEHART,
Treasurer. Korean Presbyterian Mi»-
gions .
and the women lined it with beau-
tiful whits' Mik and I never saw a
more beautiful plece of work even
in the shopw of the most exclusive
morticlanm in America
"Following the funeral rervice to-
day the body will te « arrled neariy
two miles out to the Korean ceme-
tery and will be interred, with the
maps and folders to be distributed
throughout the United Btates If
plans now being formulated by high-
way boomers throughout the State
of Texas are carried to realisation
The scenie auto tour plan to be
mapped out by a committee, of
which H J. Lutcher Stark of Orange
is a member, in a meeting in Kerr-
ville Monday. April 10, was detailed
here yesterday by W T. Wheeler,
managing director of the Highway
dub of Texas, the organisation which
is sponsoring ths development
SHIP RRPAINS
The steam tug Texas (irl and a
large houseboat were repaired dur-
ing the past week for the Texas
company of Port Arthur at the
by his
vs Willie Jones, E W
grunting and Ilie intellectual art of
pantomine to convey the ideas by
movement of the tongue and lip*
For example, he enlled attention to
such root words as "up" and "down."
In the former, the tonge and < hln
move upward while the npeaker
grunts, while in enunciating the 1st
ter, the pantomine is reversed
Stark and W
WASHINGTON, April 21—Harry
F. Sinclair today was acquitted of
the charge that he conspired to de-
fraud the government In the leasing
of Teapot Dome.
A jury in the District of Columbia
supreme court aceepted his conten-
tion that when he paid Albert B
Fall $233,000 in liberay bonds and
$35,000 in cash it was for a part in
the ranch owned by the former sec-
retary of the interior, and was not a
part of a deal through which the
Wyoming naval ull reserve was turn-
ed over to him
The fury took the case from Jus-
tice Balky at 10 25 o’elock this
monring and returned its verdiet at
I® 24 p m . being out exactly one
hour and fifty-nine minutes.
Sinelair Talks
Immediately after the verdict was
rendered, Sinclair authorised thia
statement •
"I have felt since the inception of
the nil rases that I would be ac-
quitted nf any charge of conspiracy
to defraud the government when the
evidence went before a jury "
। sons were injured, one probably fa-
tally. and dozens of buildings were
wrecked when a tornado swept
through Index, Ark., and Ogdon,
Ark., communities about 1® miles
from Texarkana, at 3 a m today.
Mrs. W. L. Johnson, about 45, suf-
fered injuries which probably will
result In death when the twister
hurled a tree againat her home at
Ogden.
Many houses, barns and trees
were blown down or carried away,
and a plantation, owner at index re-
ported that 10 of his tenants were
homeless and that he feared live®
had be en lost
Corner of Texas
Inter reports were that the
storm swept across Leary, Texas,
and Hooks, Texas, west of Texar-
kana, before striking the Arkansas
communities. A church, business
building snd houses were unroofed
at Hooks, but no loan of life was re-
ported.
New Boston, Texas, 22 miles wst
of Texarkans. was struck by the
storm at 2 a m The roof of the
New Boston bank was carried away,
houses were unroofed, and virtually
the country among novelty mnnufac-
turers, and a set being made for the
author who will use them at Orange
The souvenir will probably be In-
troduced st the State democratie
convention to be held in Beaumont
beginning May 22, which promises |
to be one of the most important
state political conventions in the his
for)' of the nation. After It* intro
durtion at the state convention, then
it will come in for a plare at the
national convention to be held in
Houston
Orange Pwblicity
in addition to pleasing the vanity
Oil Co., has encountered a bit rieh
pay at a depth of 3300 feet This
well is being drilled by local peo-
ple if this well should come in
Edgerly will have another drilling
campaign as the location is over a
mile from production.
eu rrounded
poured their
him Mrs
Because of the rapid increase
which has developed in traffic over
the Old Spanish Trail between Or-
ange and Beaumont, it is predicted
that in addition to the necessity of
widening the right-of-way to 10® feet
or more, that it will eventually be
necessary to build shell surfaced
driveways on either side of the
paving
The problem of securing addition-
al lands on either side of the high-
way through Orange county, making
it possible to widen to 100 feet, is
being made the paramount issue hv
the Houston highway division of the
state highway department.
Since traffic has become so heavy
over the Old Spanish Trsll through
Orange, there has arisen the necessi-
ty of what is • thought to be im-
portant changes
it is suggested that the corner on
Green avenue and Fifteenth street,
where the Old Spanish Trail from
the west enters Green avenue, should
be widened considerably by taking
off a portion of the northeast corn-
takes the place nf the lungs, and an
organ reed serves as the vocal
corde. The function of she mouth
aud tongue is duplicated in several
ways A cardboard tube may be
used, With the tongue action sup-
plied by manipulation of a dAk fitted
in Orange county, heart of the
East Texas Lumber, Rice and
041 Empire
Impassable The 80-mile an
only seven or eight d ayn; in fart, it her
e
moved that she became hysterical
Friends led her into the corridor
snd as soon as Sinelair could force
his way through the crowd he walk-
ed out, put his arm around her
shoulders, then ■lipping her arm
through hla, walked out of the con -
ridur door
Before the jury filed Into the jury
room. Justice Bailey warned the
spectators that any sort of a dem-
onstration regardless of the verdict,
would be promptly punished
Two Chargen Fending
Sinelair, although freed uf the
conspiracy « harge today still is
faced with two contempt proceed-
Ing* One of these is fur his refusal
to answer questions of the senate oil
tommitfe, and he wks sentenced to
serve three months in jail for that
The other is for his hiring detectives
to shadow th* Fall-Sinelair trial
jury last August He was sentenced
to six months for that. Both are
(•ending in the circuit court of ap-
pea is
The conspiracy charge against Fall,
which was severed from that of Kin
einir, is still alive, hut what will he
done Ubout it by the government. In
view of today's acquittal. is proble-
matical
Sinelair was pared on trial on
April 9 tn answer the charge whic h
resulted In today's acquittal The
verdict marked the succesnful cul-
mination of his six years” fght to
prove he had not acted corruptly in
negotiating the lease from Fall in
April 1922.
E H. Curry. ■ veteran and ex-
profesaional baseball player, has a
rival for the honor of having pitch-
ed the first curved ball in Texas
W. V Simmons, a local business
man sarys that his father, W. H.
Smmons, now living in Austin, play-
ed professional ball jn the later 70 a
and that he pitched the first curved
ball In Williamson county. Ths se-
nlor Simmons is an Instructor in
charge of the Masonic cathedral at
Austin at the present time.
F H. Curry, who is an employs
of the city, played professional ball
in louislann and Texas more than
50 years ago Although he haa al-,
most lived his allotment of three
score and ten years, Curry is prac-
tically as active today as he was la
his balmiest daya pitching profas-
atonal baseball.
It is the present intention of the
board of regents of the University of
Texas tn Mart construction on the
three buildings of the University
Union as soon as posible after the
buildings are financed
While no definite date was set, the
belief was expressed that the prob-
lems of drafting final plans and start-
Ing construction will be worked out
with all speed immediately follow-
ing the successful conclusion of the
financial campaign
"Ruch matters as the exact loca-
tion. preparation of grounds, com-
pletion of plans, swarding of con-
> tract, etc., will naturally take mome
time, but It is our hope that these
will be worked out with all possible
* fpecd. and that the fall of the year
will see the beginning of construction
on these much needed buildings.’
said H J Lutcher Stark, chairman
of the board.
. "The regents will An evervthing
in their power to fnciltate the be.
Einning of conetruction and to peed
up all operation, in connection with
the vullding of the Union -
VINTON K. P LODGE
The Supreme Lodg» Knighta of
Pythias will meet In Milwaukee,
on Augunt 133, instead of De-
troit, Mich . the host city selected
by the last supreme convocation.
Announcement of the change In
place of meeting was made by a
proclamation issued by Supreme
Chancellor Richard s Witte and was
read before the local lodge last night
by H. L. Williams, keeper of records
and seal.
Rev. A. B. McReynolds, the Fort
Worth evangelist, accompanied by
his song leader and pianist, reached
hers last night preparatory to start-
ing a series of revival meetings st
the First Christian church. Main
■ nd .Ninth streets.
After Munday, services will be
held at night only, beginning at
7:45 o’clock
There will be two pianos and an
orchestra used in th* musical pro-
grams at esrh service
A very cordial invitation has been
extended to the public to attend
■ 11 services Especially has the ap-
peal been made urgent to the vari-
ous churehes of the city who par-
ticipated in the cooperative revival
held at the First Methodit church
by Rev. Burk Culpepper, of Mem-
phis.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 252, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 22, 1928, newspaper, April 22, 1928; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1529933/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.