The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 219, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1945 Page: 1 of 4
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MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
volume xxxn
PICTURES BY CENTRAL PRESS
ORANGE, TEXAS,' MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, lt|45
INDUSTRIAL CENTER OF SOUTHEAST TEXAS
NUMBER 218
—-i
700 Families Move From Riverside,
Majority Return To Business Abandoned
For Duration; Others Hope To Stay Here
'V, i
sii's
-CH
I
V#
Approximately 700 families
have moved from the Riverside
addition of (he Federal Housing
Authority since the day 'before
V-J Day, according to Ross D. E-
vahn, general housing manager.
Vacancies in .Riverside now
nupraber 930 where only 211 ex-
isted before V-J Day,Evahn
said.
Typical of those moving from
Riverside baekhome is Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Liishue of 619 Pope
• Courts. The Lushutes came to
Orange about 18 months ago
from Molville, Louisiana when
the war caused an extra shortage
of material needed to carry on
the Lushute plumbing and elec-
tric shop. Mr. and Mrs. Lushute
plan to move home very soon and
reopen the business.
Just next door to the Lushute
family, J, W. Brooks prepared to
move his wife and daughter back
to their, home in.. Hope, Arkansas.
Brooks who works for Consoli-
dated plans to go to Hope him-
self soon and open his own gar-
age. This is the same type of
work he did' before coming to
Orange fourteen months ago but
Brooks explained that time he
would be working jfor himself in-
stead of the other fellow.
Proof that all of the movers
from Riverside Were not leaving
Orange was evidenced by
Mrs. W. E. Humphreys, when she
was. iht'erviewed while standing
side a truck loaded with house-
hold effects. She happily stated
Mwfshir was'not leaving Orange
but just moving to the county
where her small grandchild would
have more freedom and where
they could have their own chick-
ens. The Humphreys' are moving
out on the Beaumont highway
near Pinehurst. They have lived
in Riverside 18 months. Hum-
phreys is a sheetmetal worker
at Consolidated. They plan to
stay in Orange for some time.
The W. H. Eason family of 605
East Park Avenue also plan to
remain in Orange. The Eason's
came to Orange from Many,
Louisiana. They have lived in
Riverside only three months, hav-
ing first lived at Pine Grove.
Like many other residents of
Riverside the R. T. Rcaux fam-
ily at Set" East Park Avenue have
no definite plans now. They
may move soon but think it
hardly likciy that they will move
back to thpir home town,' Lafay
.Cttc. Louisiana. They have lived
Ifj Riverside for seven months
during which time Reaux has
Worked for. Consolidated.
Another family not permanent
but with no definite plans for the
future is that of Mr. and Mrs. O.
H. Holiman who moved here
from Dallas. The Holimans have
Used in Orange for four years
and Holiman is a tank 'tester
Sarterman for Consolidated,
rprisingly few of those inter-
viewed hove expressed any de-
sire whatsoever, uJ return to their
former homes. Several hope 10
live in Orange but most stated
that they would /build their own
homes or m6ve,/ irOiri 'Riverside
when the housing situation was
not so serious. One of those was
Mrs. Arsand Havens who lives
With her husband and ten year
old, son at 290 Destroyer Drive.
The Havens family still own
their own home in Singer, Louis-
iana where they lived before
moving to Riverside two years
ago. A riveter and chipper at
Consolidated, Havens was form-
erly employed by a lumber com-
pany.
Mr. and Mrs. £. M. May and
daughter are from Vllle Platte,
Louisiana. Resldent*_ol River-
side for two years, the Mays def-
initely will not return to their
former home. May is employed
by the Levingston Shipbuilding
Company.
formerly of McKinney, Texas,
Mrs. Louise Sanders who works
in the time department of Con-
, solidated, says her plans are
still indefinite but she will not
return to McKinney. Mrs. San-
ders lives at 356 Claxton Courts
with her small son and her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. O., L. Eady.
She has lived in Riverside for
two years and her father, an
electrician at Consolidated,
has lived here almost three years.
At present her father is planning
to buy a farm when his job here
is completed, Mrs. Sanders said.
The T. C. Ford, family of 437
Claxton Courts were formerly, of
Bronson, Texas but while they do
not plan to remain in Orange
they definitely will not return to
Bronson. They have lived in
Jtivcrside two years and Ford was
employed by Consolidated until
an accident about six months
ago.
Mr. and Mrs. William Klein-
schmidt of 616 Moreell Courts
came here from MQjy.pe, Louis-
iana in February 1944. BilPfor-
merly a salesman, is an outfitter
at Consolidated Steel . and has
been with the company since May
of 1942. Before they moved into
Riverside he commuted f«j>m
Lake "■ Charles. The Klcin-
schmidts hope to stay in Orange.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Blevins and
their three year old" son are new
comers to Orange. They moved
into an apartment at 454 East
Dewey just befpre V-J Day. Mrs.
Blevins is one of the newest mem-
bers of the junior High School-
faculty and Blevins is a ship-
wright at Consolidated Therr
son will enter nursery school.
The Blevins family moved" here
from Port Neches where Mrs.
Blevins taught school and Mr.
Blevins was with the Pennsylva-
nia-Shipyard. After the war start-
ed they moved several times but
they originally came from Paps,
Texas where they have a farm,
Mrs. Blevins. said they they would
eventually go back to the farm
but they were in no hurry to do
ao.
When the job here is finished,
Mr. and Mrs. Max R. Pehler and
small daughter Mazine plan to
travel for a while and then he
will open his own electric shop
in Austin. 1W Oehlers camc
here from Chicago, Illinois but
their home ts.at Burnet near Aus-
tin. They haVe lived at 617 Pope
Courts for eight months. Oehler
is an electrician for Consolidated.
HOUSTON SURVIVORS IN U. S.
CAR JUNIOR
HIGH FACULTY
IS ANNOUNCED
'Butcher Boy"
Faculty members of the Carr
Junior High School were an-
nounced today by J. W. Edgar,
superintendent of the Orange
City School^.
They are as follows:
Wartda Acosta, Anna Bell Ad-
ams, LolaJWel Adorns, Latanac
T. Blevins, Virginia Lee Chancy,
Marion L. Clark, Aim Crutch-
field, Haifa G. Davis, Lucy Lee
Dickson, Myrta Mae Force, Estel-
le Fort, Laura E, Fox, Celeste E.
Grayson, Maixia Green, Sarah
Lula Gunn, Yvonne Hartsell,
Peto L. Hehcl. Van D. IJerrin,
~lfno Mayi- mirtffilTst; Ethel
Johnson, Julia M. Lewis, Yvonne
Martin, Pauline. M. Merrill, Eliz-
abeth Morgan, C. L." MeCarson,
•^"H. McKenzie, Marie J. Mc-
Lean, Paul B. Newhall, Edna M.
Oakes, Glenodino S. Pippcn, Ge-
neva K. Ramsey. Betty Rittimar.,
Norma E Scott, Ora A. Sexton,
L. H. Skinner, TUlie Smith, Clyde
S. Strucel, Alicia C. Tilley, Gui-
nelle Wicks, and Ruth Wilder.
Plans For Rice
_ Crop Harvest -
SURVIVORS of the sinking of the cruiser U. S. S. Houston early 1M £ ... . .
the war, these Navy men now are back in the United States follow- J I III I nCOmplete
ing their.rescue from a prisoner of war camp in Japan. Left to right, p]iins fol. harvesting the Or-
arriving in Washington, are Comdr. W. A. Epstein of Denver, Lt. e L.0,,nlv rice crap j,ave not
; H. S. Hamlin of Or^nJb, Fla.. Ensign John Hamlll of Tulsa, Ensign been fu„ ^ lh,s timU(
t John Nelson of prang., Tex., F 1/c Valdon Roberts of Smiley, Tex,, due ((J (hu fucl thc Bn,8ram of
I Ensign Charles D. Smith of Memphis, S 1/c Wm. Weissinger of Cor- prison0l. of WU1. WOrk has not
pus Christ!, Tex., GM 1/c RobertYarboro of Marathon, Tex., Charles been u)together workcd oUt'. it
L. Thomas of Seagrave, Tex., SP 3/c Col Back of Mansfield, Tex„ was gfat|}(j MolUlav
^ Matthew Marinos j)f_Brooklyn. ■ fn*t'OQijkti Harvesting of early rice was in
on four of the larger
Of Draftee Forces
COURT HOUSE
NEWS ;>
There were-'six persons held
for drunkenness, four for dis-
turbing the peace, one for carry-
ing concealed weapons, one for
wife - beating and one for
drunkenness and disturbing the
peace.
Gilmer Horyies
Defeats Riverside
Football Team
Only iwo persons appeared
Monday morning before City Re-
corder A. H. Print* for trial, both
persons- being charged .with .the
offense of drunkenness.
Marriage licenses issued- to
James Robert Jeffries and Miss
LaRue Petry, of Louisville, Ten-
nessee; Allan Mahathy and Mrs.
Bssie Moore, of Orange; Victor
Lamar Tray wick' and Mrs. Willie
Traywiek, -of Alexandria, La.;
were of record St the office of
the Orange county clerk Monday.
Gilmer Homes trampled the
Riverside No. 1 Assembly Hall
football team. 55 to 0, on the win-
ners' field Saturday morning in
the first contest of the playground
football season.
The ORC plans to formulate
teams at each of the community
centers int oa league with games
every Saturday. On the Gilmer
Homes roster were Jerry Guidry,
Wrogg, Owens, Harrington. Giar-
rata.no, McKelvey, Ray, Landry,
Howard and Eddie Marx and
Hogg, Riverside was represented
by J. C. Miller, Don Miller, John
and Jigi Williams, Bray, R.
Murray, E. Murray, Ferguson,
Bernard and House.
SPLASH
Today we salute Foreman's
Electric Shop for its contribution
of 110.00 to the Orange Swim-
ming Pool Fund. The current
drive to raise $15,000 as down
payment on a public swimming
pool in Orange is being sponsor-
ed by the Junior Chamber of
Commerce. Foreman's Electric
Shop is to be commended for par-
ticipating so generously in this
worthy drive.
Mrs. Grace Howard and Mrs.
Lillian Rogers were called to
Oakdale, La., Saturday because
of the death of their uncle, F. A.
(Beff) Canter.,
JUDGE ADAMS
OPENS ORANGE
mi. COURT*
Declaring that Orange county
possessed the best record for law
observance of any defense center
in the country, District Judge F.
P. Adams, charged the grand jury
in opening district court here at
>0 o'clock Monday morning.
Judge Adams stressed the im-
portance of obedience to law. He
said that quite like a wave of
crime would prevail after this
war as was the case following the
first world war, when service
men were falsely 'charged with
being the principal disturbing el-
ement, iic said that he was a
prosecuting' attorney after the
first world war and could recall
having prosecuted -but—one ex-
service man for crime. He said,
''It is the slackers, the law vio-
lators and stay-outs that cause
the, trouble and not the ex-ser- J
vice men".
Warning against drunken-driv- J
ing offenses, He said he would j
rather face a machine gun, that |
a drunk man in an automobile.
He pointed to the fact that under
the law, the first offense of
drunken driving did not consti-
tute a felony; but the second one
did.
On the score of gambling,
which ift; classified as a detest-
ible line of business, he said that
one of Ihe worst things that
could befall a community was
for some group to open a gamb-
ling house, entice citizens into it,
and fleece them of, tfie{r hard
earned moneyr -v
M. A. West was named foreman
of the gfandjury. Mr. West a/'Osc
when his name was called to de-
clare that he was unfamiliar, with
proceedings .of a. grundpjury.
whoreup on the district judge
said, "Now is a good time to
breSk you in".
Invocation upon,, opening -court
for the four weeks term^ was
given by Rev. llomerpavenport,
pastor of the West^Orunge Bap-
tist, church. y
Those who/WTli compose , the
grandjury/'arc: Delmer Portis,
Lawrence V. Smith, V. B. Dor-
rell, Ben E. Smith, Oscar T.
Beadle, M. A. West, W. L. Hutch-
ison, James Levingston, Kyle W.
Heath; and H. J. Dardeau.
The grand jury was handed a
list of hames of persons held in
the county jail, and inMi'ueted to
investigate those cases first.
progress
plantations of the county Mon-
day, two using ..combines while
two are using the thrasher.
According ,to reporUr"the job
of irrigating the rke is practically
over,, however water pumps in
some sections are being operated
about two hours out of each 24
hour day.
The situation in regard to rice
yield is regarded as being very
... ,,,stw rlI ..... favorable. It is pointed out that
WAS SOME BODY IO BLAME |)u whatever resulted
LET'S DO
SOMETHING
ABOUT IT!
> * **
for, the fact that it became ne-
cessary for a local concern to go {ew ^ccks UJ{0
to another • city in search of
homes in which to house families
of Orange workers? Of course
there are conditions over ..which
mankind has no Control ami this
may be one of those cases yet ;t
may be said in lamentation, it.is
an unfortunate day, indeed, for
Orange and the folks who can
not be procided with homes in
Orange, as well as for the people
who take pride in their homo
city. Orange workerB living in
Orange shouldv become a slogan
for those who would guide the
destiny of the community.
here from the.tropical storm of a
JAP NAGATO TO
DE USED IN
ATOMIC DOMO
EXPERIMENT"
JOSEPH AtBIRT MEISINGER, fies-
ta po chief of Warsaw known as
the "ButCher of Warsaw,"- is
shown above after his arrest by
Americana at Kawuguchl, Japan.
War Correspondent Clark Leo of
International News Service lo-
cated Meialngcr on a tip given
him by Tokyo secret police. Tho
hated German is aocusod of order-
ing murders of more than 100,00(1
Jews in Warsaw (International)
DISTRICT COURT
OPENS TODAY:
Court of the fii^-jtidieial dis-
trict will open ftjr the September
term of four weeks in district
court room at Orange at, 10 o'clock
Monday morning, when District
Judge F. P. Adams, of Jasper, on
the bench.
Other officers of the court are:
District Clerk, Tom Dodd; dis-
trict attorney, ,, Joe Fisher,
News Of Our Men
And Women In
Uniform
- > «> <♦♦ ♦ ♦ >
Captain Lonnie James of the
U. S. Army Air Corps arrived by
plane in Beaumont Thursday and
is how visiium here with Ins sis-
-jtir. Mr|.:_CM>jle Mash, at her
home. 1005 Moreell 'ijoulcVartl.
Captain James was in overseas!
service twenty - five months and |
has been awarded the bronze star
and Purple Heart medais.
Warrant Officer David O. Gid-
eon, Jr., left Sutulay night for
N*w Orleahs, La., where he ii
now stationed after spending the
weekend here with his parents,,
Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Gideon,
Cleo Briggs, son of Mis>JsT't*.
Brjggs of Bastrop, wl>r'fias • re-
cently returned to this country
after twenty^-^tour months ser-'
vice wUbHlie U. SI Army, was a
| visitwf here tliis weekend in the
Htotne of Mrs". John Fuller,- 10(111
j Park avenue. Also visiting-..in
' the Fuller home on Sunday were
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Holmes of
Port Arthui', Miss" Juanita Hext
of Beaumont and Mrs. Louis Nel-
son of Odessa.
of
L. G.
FATHER'S OF SERVICE MEN
and women who were unable to
render military service, during
the bloody conflict just ended,
are facing one of the greatest op-
portunities in the history of the
country for them to extend aid
and encouragement to the sons ,
and daughters of the land who '
have -Jiad a part in.the oidcalT-hcr m "" cx",er,ment lhat ,n"y
New York, Sept. 17. (AP) - The
New York Times says today in a
^dispatch from Tokyo that the
damaged -,15,00(1-ton Japanese bat-
tleship Nagato. 'which was taken
[over by thc'U. S navy at- the
Yokbsuka naval base, will be
towed 500 miles to sea' where an
of suffering and endurance, and
lire now returning home. Per-
haips no other organization at this
time offers a greater avenue of
service in behalf veteran* men
and Women than that of the
American War Dads, More ac-
tive and definite plans for llje
part that fathers as well as
mothers can have in helping their
sons and daughters hav e been
formulated. The' American War
Dads organization has an auxil-
iary for the women.
determine the future
world's navies.
foryi of the
KEEPING UP THE MORALE
after the War is almost as neces-
sary as it was during the war,
according to views of experts
and especially Is litis true in -Or-
ange where the importance ot
immediate action to db the great-
est job ever presented to the
people is beginning to assert It-
self. It . must be realized that\if
Orange " keeps step with sister
cities that the place must be re-
built almost from top to bottom.
Orange will be happier when the
building campaign materializes
and is carried to completion, ^and
business will reach a stage -never
before realized in this section.
New Setup In
Paper Campaign
Is Announced
New York, Sept. .17. (AP) —
Future collections of scrap paper
will be run by thc paper and
cardboard • industry and will be
known as the national paper sal-
vake program, ii was announced
by Edwin 8. Friendly, chairman
of the American Newspaper Pub-
lishers Association's victory waste
paper campaign.
Jasper; Sheriff,
Stan field.
Civil cases set for trial for tliiiv
week are as follows: W. L. Rob-
inson Vs. Star Taxi Et. A!.; John
C. Lee Et. A1 Vs. Star Taxi Et.
Al,; S. A. Kees Vs, The Travelers
Ins. Co.; Fannie Bland Thomas
Et. Vir. Vs. Walter Bland Et, Al
Louise Shaughnessy FemcsoJo Vs.
Star Taxi BtT'AI.; D. T. MeQUI
I Vs. Texas Indemnity Ins. Co.
No Word Received
Of Otis Anderson,
Missing In Action
Sgt. Otis E. Anderson, hus-
band of Mrs. DeWilda Anderson,
of Doucett, Texas and son of Mr.
and Mrs. O. E. Anderson, of 1512
Burton street. Orange, has been
reported missing in action in the
Pacific area- since July HI) of this
year, and up to the present time,
no word has been received as hi
whether or not be had been lo-
cated. Sgt, Anderson was a.mwn-
ber of an emergency rescue''air
force.
Local Student To
Appear In Play
Mary Lee Linscomb, drama stu-
dent at the University of Texas,
Is a, member of the east of the
University's first major "produc-
tion, "Right You Are", a comedy
which will bo presented Octo-
ber 10-13.
Chfinute Field, Illinois. — Pri-
vate Charles Jflnies, son of Mr.
and Mrs,. C. James of 106 Pine
Street, Orange, Texas, has eom-
(DickX_ pie ted (Yaihiug and has been
graduated"from this school of the
Army Air Forces Training Com-
mand. . -
Willis D. Lindsey, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Hay Lee Lindsey of 201
Tokyo, Sept. 17. (AP) —• His- ^
tory's greatest military girmble — M
the American landing In arme;l
Japan — has paid off so hand-
somely . lhat occupation Icu'ces
probably will be cut to no itiore
than 200,000 within six months,
General MaeArthur said today.
As' a result of the successful
penetration of lliis conciucVed na-
tion. he added in.u formal state-
ment, ta-oops will be returned
home as rapidly as ships "hre a-
vailuble. Regular army forces,
lie said, probably will be able to
maintain unaided the 200,000-
nuitt force — "which will permit _
complete demobilization of our ;
citizen (draftee) Pacific forces." ;
!■ . "There was probably no gre.it-
i er gamble taken itt history," his, <
statement explained, "than tiic
Initial landings" where ground
forces were outnumbered 1,000 to.
one by armed Japanese. BuL- lie
adtled, "the stakes wepr' worth
it."
MacArthur's slntement said that
file unknovvir'quantity at the out-
set'of ilrtfocCUpation was whether
a,«itlitary government would
bave to be established. This would
have involved several million ,
troops, lie said: but by working'
with the existing Japanese gov-
ernment, purposes of th* surren-
der terms cab be accomplished
with only a small fraction of Hit-
men, time and money originally
projected.
Questions involved in the
■Strength of occupation ifiice*. the
supreme"commander Explained, ,
are entirely independent of the
future Japanese - politico - gov-
ernmental structure. This prob-..
lem, he explained, is waiting
-completion of the military phase
of~ the surrender — and is one
that unquestionably will be de-
terminated "upon the highest dip-
loitillttlr'"tevei of the Urtlted
Nations."
U. S. Eighth irmy headquarters
* reported. th<;it roundup of the td
war - crimes suspects wanted by
MaeArthur wu$ proceeding with
equal smoothness •— with the
,j Sproston Courts, is now nnrollctl 'Japii<iene— -government making
at- the United States Maritime j the arrests.- Twenty - seven at-
Scrvlce -Training Station In St. ready were in custody; uuly. 17
Petersburg. Floridw Before the j remained at liberty. and . two
tering. the service he attended the others were dead by their own
Orange High School. hands. , i.
I On the Attack Transport USS"
Mellette, Olt Yokohama, (Delay- j
! ed) Jesse Hebert Hasley, Stev^- j
aids mate, second class, USNIt, j
1114 - 2nd Street, Orange, Tex- j
■as, was nne of - the> crew |
m e m b ii'v S of "this
ship that brought a battalion
of Marines lo the beaches of J«i-
pan after the Japanese surrender.
Organizations
Open New Quarters
The Orange Chamber of Com-
merce and Retail Merchants as-
sociation headquarters I in the
southeast corner ground floor of
Holland hotel on Fifth and
Division srteets were open Mon-
day horning following the trans-
fer of equipmctn from former
office headquarters on the second
'floor of the First National Bank
building Satui-
SKIIL
"tM,
Rabbit Show To Be
Held In Beaumont
The annual rabbit show, spon-
sored by the Gulf Coast Rabbit
Club, will lit" held In connection
with the YrM.B.L. Victory Fair in
Beaumont October 11 to 14.
. Catalog and entry blanks, may
be obtained from Mrs. C; II Wei-
scnfelder at 8545 Laurel Street,
Beaumont.
Hollywood fAP) — While fire-
men and others were fighting
flames in her home, Mrs- Nutalle
Enfson remembered her tuts.
She rushed to a closet, snatched
up*a ) 1,250 silver fox neckpiece
and a $2,600 mink coat and laid
thprn on a divan.
When the excitement was over,
she told police, the furs had dis-
appeared, _<•<
Joe Luther Dioddy.'son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Droddy of 435 Har-
rison Courts" Is noW enrolled at
the United States Maritime Train-
ing Station in St. Petersburg,
Florida.
On the Transport Meriwether
in Tokyo,Bay, (Delayed) --WII-
l>ui |-'. Grlnstead, motor machin-
• ist's. mate, third class,' 105 West-
ern avenue, Orange, Texas, was
aboard the Meriwether when
she sailed into Tokyo Bay and
landed the first occupation forces
j in Japan.
Headquarters, U.S. Naval i'or-
| cch in Europe, London, England
Paul II Thompson, machinist's
; mate, first class, USNIi, whose j
wile, Mary- Edith Thompson.-'
lives at 922 Fill qUtiar Conrtr, Or-
ange, Texas," is now aboard the
USS Kempt)vorne, following cer-
emonis In which six British built
Patrol Gunboats which had been
loaned to the. U. S. Navy in 1042
were exchanged for six Destroy!
er Escorts which had been oper-
ated by the Royal Navy under
lend lease since 1043.
Mr. and Mrs. Lance Wingtc
rived -here Sunday from .Brem-
erton, Washington whertf he has
Orange War Dads
Elect Officers
New officers of Orange'chapter..
No, 36, American War Dads, have
been elected and plans made
Whereby two meetings of the or-
ganization, arc to be held each
month. '
The meetings will be on Sep-
tembeK.J, except when the date
falls'on Sunday, and on the third
Sunday o/ each month, the lime
and placjf; for the Sunday meetn
ings tip be announced later,
1 Newly elected officers of tho
chapter are; David L Hottston,;;
president; T. .1. Amqld, vice presf-':
ideiit; B. M. Blansett, treasurer;
A. II. Prince, secretary and Louis
Payne, sergeant at aims. -
The Orange chapter of War
Dads has just completed its fir-it
yea.lL. since organization.
Judge Caillovet
Returns To Post
— County Judge.~Sictefrr£tUi^.
was buck iit-'4us post Mondu^-fu-
ter having attended a sexrtoii ft
the Texas State; Cotmfy Judges
and Commissioner^tissociatioii at
Abilene. >
" Judge CoJHJivct Is secretaiy-
treusurcr^f the association.
been , stationed
the U. S.
Navy. Mrs. Wipfhte, a^.membcr
of the WAVliS is to report for
duty at the Naval Air Station In
Dallas tomorrow, and Mr. Win*
gate Is to be here the remainder
pf the week for a visit with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Win-
gate, 1711 Fourteenth street.
WHAT. NO' DUS88INO"
Spvkane, WashT (PA) — A
woman testified hec husband I
carved Ihe Christmas turkey wttga
a hatchet. So Superior Judge 0.
W. Greeuough granted her a
voice. j
'"■lie had an ungovernable tMCM
per," she told the court. "I h«^J
fixed the -turkey without a
Ing and when my hiusband
home, he looked at the bird, _th«ii
took a hatchet and chopped
up."
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 219, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1945, newspaper, September 17, 1945; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth221670/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.