The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 85, Ed. 1 Monday, April 10, 1933 Page: 1 of 4
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1
RESOURCE TO
BE DEVELOPED
WASHINGTON, April 10. (AP)-
Presldent Roosevelt put his Tennes-
see valley progrom before congi-ci,*
today In a inesnnge asking rehabili-
tation of th<> ifusde Mhoals, Alabama.
puwM and nitrate plant.
He A«keil Creation of a Tennosscs
valley authority to supervise the
development of power, flood control,
forest conservation and Improvement
of agriculture.
"It >"'time," the president wrote,
"to efctenrt planning to a wider field,
in. this Instance comprehending In
owe great project mnhy state* direct-
ly concerned with the bnsin of onF"
of our greatest rivers-
"If. we arc successful here we can
mnrcli Oh, step tyy wt*p. in a like de
velopniffli of other great natural ter-
ritory within our border#."
STORM CAUSES
MUCH DAMAGE
OF PROPERTY
CORSIGANA, Tex., April 10. —
Considerable property damage was
caused by a violent windstorm, ac-
companied by hall an<l rain, which
struck several towns in 1 H1k port ion.
No' loss- of life was reported.
Moving la a northeasterly direc-
tion, the disturbance wrecked muner-
- ous buildings, put electric power, lines
out of commission, temporarily dis-
rupted rural telephone service and
daiuftBad r—weu orapa Jq<;...i)jj;ht.
At It lee, ten miles north*of
alcana, tie steeple of a negro Meth-
odist church was ripped off while
some t>0 Members of the congrega-
tion were. holding iwrvlees. The ne-
groes fled from the building, a
frame structure, and none of them
, was injured. The wind, then tore the
building into wreckage.
At Rice, Bmbocse, Tupelo, and
other town* lu Nu v a it o county barns
were demolished, residences unroot-
ed anil garages torn down by the
high wind.
The only person reported injured
was Antonio Oongalex, a section wor-
ker, wlio wan caught out in the
hail storm and painfully bruised
about the shoulders before he reach-
ed shelter.
Reports of damage to buildings
cam© from Penelope and Birone, In
Hill county. At Midlothian, in Ki-
lls . county, a negr ochurch where
services were being 'conducted wis
blown from Its foundation blocks.
The. school at Midlothian also wait
damaged. . "
High winds asd rain swept other
parts of northeast Texas, in the
storm, which developed suddenly and
was of brief duration.
Rotary Club to •
Elect Directors at
Tue&, Luncheon
* One of the principal items to re*
celve attention. at the weekly R4-
tary luncheon and ending tomorrow
will be election of six membeis to
the new board of director* from ti
"flat of twelve candidates nominated
at*'" the weekly meeting held la t
week, it was announced today by
President-Raymond T. Wright.
Following the ejection <if six mem
her* this groap, lusting with the re-
tiring president, Will hold an execu-
tive session and elect a new club
president. „ ' * \..
wm
Self-Sustaining
Farm Colonies For
Unemployed Urged
; WASHINGTON, April 10, <AP>—
George T. Pickett of Newllnno, I/a.,
today coulerred . with-. Senators Brat-
ton and Cutting about •elf-sustnlnlng
farm ooionins for unemployed, such
as he has established ou the Cilia
1M rivet near Silver City.
He aa id the New Mexico colopy,
one of sever*! with the main one "in
Louisiana, tuis about forty oocupdJiU
on .tr 00 acres tljero and he wuttts
to expand It.
^ City Commission
Will Meet Tonight
The city commissioners will hold
a regular monthly session Monday
night at the city hall. Nothing out-
side of regular monthly reports and
nu tine business is scheduled for
' this f mJ'Wm'y i M
VON PAPEN -
AND GORING
VISIT POPE
BOMB, April 10. (AP—Vice Chan-"
tailor Franz Von Pa pep of Germany
called on Cardinal Paeottt, secretsty
Of state of tile Holy See today, arid
discussed relations among Chancellor
Hitler and his hails, the German
Catholic center party and the Vat I*
can. Baron Von Papon, a Catholic,
formerly belonged to the center party.
Pope Pius probably will receive
the German government leader Wed-
nesday.
Capt. Herman Ooerlng, lending naiti
morttbei''* wf "the littler cabinet, was
joining Baron Von' Pa pen hero t J"
day.
Prelates said Cardinal Pacelli, who
knows Germany well because he Was
papal nuncio" there before he was
made cardinal, and Baron Von Pa-*
pen, who is' a papal knight of the
cape and sword. Intended to entef
thoroughly into the situation In Ger-
many. «.
.sua>viuiv **v
CHIEFS BODY
IS RECOVERED
WARHISOTON. Aril 10. (AP)—
The, house agreed imaulmously today,
that joint congressional committee
should attempt to fix r«sp<(iwtliilky
jfor all army 'itott havy airship acci-
dents, including that last week in-
volving tb Akron.
NEW YORK, April 10. (AP)—.
Recovery of''the body of Rear Ad-
miral William A. Moffett, chief ctf
the navy bureau of aeronautlt* who
^ras lost with the nirsbyf Akron, was
reported to naval heaikiusrters hero
today.
The admiral's body was the fifth
to be recovered from the sea since
the Akron crashed off the, Jersey
coast last Tuesday moraiug. one
member of the crew taken alive from
the sea shortly after the <<ra*h died
on the rescue ship. There art' only
three survivors of. the 76 men who
salient on the airship's last voyage.
The wlrelss to district naval aeid-
quarters said th« admiral's body
was recovered by the Daphne, one of
the more than two - iloseen craft which
liuve been search nig the sea siin'o
the crash of tho Akron.
ORANGEMAN
STABBED IN
FIGHT ON BOAT
A Inter messuge, received at naval
headquarters here from the cos si.
guard destroyer Senines, said tho
boily of Admiral Molfet, was aboard
that vessel and was beityt taken to
Absecon Inlet, N. J. Tho Semnes
will transfer the body to a patrol
boat to be taken to shore.
The bodies of Commander Frank
C, MeCord, skipper of the Akron,
and Commander Fred T. Berry, head
of the naval uir statioir at XakehurM,
N. J„ were found yestenlay by tli'e
coast guurd destroyer Tucker, litey
Were aeut to Atlantic City, Wheie .if-
ll|HM^lM..^iewt<d . by veinitivaa, . aad.
friends to<my, thejt wore to be sent
to Washington for burial.
TUe other bodies recovered were
of Lieut. Commander Harold E. Mc-
Clellan and Lelut. Coi. A. F. Ram-
sey. Robert Copelaml, an enlisted
man, was takeu from the sea alive
but died shortly after.
Sam Skurlock, an Orange man, re-
ceived a dangerous stab wound 1H
the abdomen Sunday night as a re-
sult of a fight with Joe Williams,
also an Orange\man, occurring on
one of the dredgos\of the Pacific
Dredging company, located on the
liOcislana side of Sabine river, oppo-
site Orange.
Williams surrendered to Slierlff
Pat Brown following the stabbing
and was held in the county j^U.
Skurlotk was brought to the Frftftccs
Ann Lutchcr hospital for •treatment.
Physicians in charge do not regard
the wound as belng a fatal one.
This morning Williams Waived
ills right, to demand extradition pa-
pers and was transferred to the Cal-
casieu parish jail at Lake Charles, la
custody of Deputy Sheriff* Jerry
Carruthere and G, C. Keiley, LMm
Cliarie*.
Williams admitted the stabbing but
declared that he acted in self defense
as Skurlock was attacking--him W^tit
a piece of Iron.
l'S~
. M';'M 8WOI*T I>AUA<m
-V The Orange volunteer fire company
responded to an alarm At 12: So dun-
day afternoon u i result of a small
bluas at UOG First street, with both
chemical and >
building Is owned by the- Orange tn-
vestment company anil was occupied
by, « teimnt.
. m rt mail '
POTATOKM j ,
of the Oratife
' Red Cross Sfl,
in tracks tor
C*'
• #H*
of
Murphy Named For
Plulippines Job
WASHINGTON, Apjrll It. (AP)
—-President Roosevelt, sent to the sen-
ate today tho nominations of Mayo*
Frank Murphy Of Detroit to lie gov-
ernor general of the Philippines aud
L. W. Robert Jr., ot Atlanta to be
assistant secretary of the treasury..
25 Start RF.C
Work Monday
Tweaty-flve meh reported Monuay
morning at tho City hall and were
put to work by the local R. F. C.
committee. A bulletin posted Mon-
day directed Xi negroes ito repott
Tuesday morning, With shovels, hoes
and rakes,. •, ?>1
Carl Hickey Better
v.Csrt ttlckey, who has been seri-
ously III at th« Pranceir.AM Lutuber,
hospital tor sereesl. we^ks, IS report-
ed somewhat Unproved fellow|i|plon<l
transfusions administered ) during the
past *eek. Three young men of Or
siige, James HesdHck, Sidney HnlU-
nwtn and Thorton Urltfm,' contributed
lii for the transfusions* V ,
Mrs. J. It. Oatlla,
Plans Spring
Festival Thurs,
Tile Bancroft - school will have a
spring festival Thursday afternoon at
6 o'clock.
Miss Jean Masseugale was elected
queen of the festival ot, a benefit
party given Friday evening at «h
MUoat The public Is cordially *U"
vited to attend.
COMPLIMENTS
HIGH SCHOOL
A very high compliment, was paid
tho Ornngn city schools br Dr. J. t".
Hanly, president of the Texas bap-
tist convention, also president ot
Haylor College for Girls, of Bolton,
in «n address delivered at the First
Baptist church Sunday morning, A
group . of about ,4o members of the
city high schoof senior class attended
In a b«dy by special Invitation. ,-Dr,
Manly said that, one of the field
workers of Baylor collego after hav-
ing made a tour of Texas " high
schools had reported to him that this
Orange high school was In her opin-
ion of tho host that slie had visited
in two years.
Last night Dr .' Hardy spoke at
the church to a large congregation
on "Christian Edecntlq ."
Chevrolet Will
Display New
< Model Sedan
A ncy body type known as the
"Masted Six Town Sedan", has been
ftddfd to the passenger car line by
the "Chevrolet Motor company for the
spring and summer motoring season.
Listing at $5-15 f. o. b„ Flint,
Mich., the new model is said to be
the loWe t priced of Its type now ou
the market. It features a built-in
trunlc aiui combines tho comfort of
a flve-pJwscuger body model with the
intimacy arid, individuality of a
Hose-coupled saltan.
Thettaodel has new colors and Is
designed primarily for the tourist
market, the butit-in trunk affordli.g
sufficient luggage space for ioi ex-
tensive journey. \...
Addition ot tho Town sedan, which
Is now displayed by tliti national
dealer organisation, brings the num-
ber of models in the Master «#Met.
to eight, while three additional types
are built on the standard series
wheellmsf.
Henry I>crr, 24, of Beaumont, who
together with Fred Loflsnd, SS, lost
his life In ah airplane crash aeir
Heaumont, Was well known In Or-
ange where he had frequently visited
for the past two or three years. He.
was a brother to Mrs. Audio I.ov
lip of Orange. The airplane was
owned by Grey brothers, a firm com-
posed of (kirdan, J one and Ike Grt^y,
formerly pf orange,
•Funeral rites were held In Beau-
mont today.
RF.AUMONT, Tex., April 10,; (AP)
—An airplane crash hud brought
death today of Fred Loflaiid, 28, hol-
der of a prvlate pilot's license, and
'Henry Derr, 24.
Those who saw the ship before tho
accident said It was cruising at a
low elevation, around 100 feet, and
at a low rate of speed. The pilot
attempted a steep back acros the
road and'Went, into a spin. '
The ship came down across the
road from the Beaumont municipal
airport yesterday*, Both I/ofland and
Derr were' dead when aid Waehsd
them. The plane belonged to a fly-
ing service here. Lofland was pilot.
OU Refining Plant
to Be Dismantled
Joe H, Spector, who for the pjut
several weeks with a force of 15 t>
80 men has been engaged In salva-
lng a largo saw mill plant at Gray-'
burg, has purchased the Southwest-
ern Oil Refining company plant at
Sour Lake and beginning today will
dismantle It, The ■ machinery and
materials will be Rold.
Armadillo Caught1
A large armadillo Is behlsd tho
rs of the mlnlatnre goo of the Lag
ibln service station today. His
curiosity proved bis undoiug. lie
was captured la he attempted to
break his way Into the Western Un-
ion telegraph office late Saturday
night, by forcing his way under the
front door. Milton Lotig, a messen-
ger boy, made the capture.
HBTDKLBERO. — The Atlas u/ed
by GustAyus Ailolphus of Sweden In
the thirty year* war has been dla-
ftoverey In the llhtury m the Unl-
^ of, . Heldell erg. Sto author
Was Gerard Mercator of Amsterdam,
and It was printed in MOT..
The atlas Is well preserved except
tor the maps of Germany which nbflw
alum .<
wmm
tmmmmms
CRASH VICTIM
WEL KNOWN
ADVANCES ON
C0NVANGTAQ
By the Associated Pre*e ,
Close Upon foreign reports from
Tientsin, China, that a Manchuk t.a
army aiVvancliMr into north Chlua
proper irnri been thrown buck from
chinwnuiilato came Japanese clulms
that It ^a ndvanclac on that city
toiluy.
A gener ul drive to end Chinese
c<winter-offensivos on Japanese pasl-
tlons along .the great wall of Cbl iu
was announced at the Jupauesn mil
Itary headipiarters . to Muuchuria."
Japanese forces attacked from all
the mala passes along the 20# mile
stretch of the wall formiag tine
southern bonier i f Jehol,
Despite a Japanese war office dis-
avowal of responsibility , for ; the
Munchcktian Invasion of undisputed
chnlese territory In the Cb!nwangt*o
area, a Slmuhalkwan d|spstcb said
Japanese soldiers were ^nt to uM
tho Manchuhuuiitis. <; r
On that front, the Chinese c'.iiim-
ed they had recaptured Mblmonehni,
Ibst April J; and shauhalkwop, to-
ken "Janitafy 1 hy tile, Japanese, was
reported threatened.
The Japanese war office paid It
was absurd to think the Japanese
were, going on to the cities of l'elp-
inB and Tientsin. There are about
3000 Americans, including 1IU0 ma-
rines and soldiers, lh the Polplug-
Tiontsln^area.
British J. marines have landed $t
ChiiiwaiiRtao, British naval authori-
ties at Shanghai announced. The
British legation at l'elplng Saturday
denied * earlier reports tfiey toad
landed but It warned the Japanese
of the danger threatening Brltlshmliyi
tug and other Interests In thn Chltjf'
wangtuo area.
Oencral H Chu-Kuo, who lost
Hhauhnigwan to the Jaihinese, wits
reported sending reinforcements north
ami 8000 members of th* Cbliuve
l9tM route army, which put up a
brilliant fight against the Japanese
at Shanghai a year ago, were said to
bo mobilising ,at Hankow for scllori-'
10 Complaints
Are Fi
Past Week*
Ten complaints were filed In-Jus-
tice o( the Peace Grady Watson'^
court this morning as it reeult of ac-
tlt-ltles of ' tlm sheriff's department
through Hathrday nlgliv and Sunday.
Fj ur negr omen and one negro
woman were each chaffed with ns-
turhlng the pence. One negro man
w^s charged . with simple Assault.
Twq white men and two. white, women
. we re >■ held on- charges*!^ vagrahej.
SUSPECTED
aitstin,
(AP) : •
KILLS SELF
Search for t'M suspected slayer of
four person# living near liberty, end-
ed when Dallas Bnrkndale, 65,'wai
found deed an s bank of the Trinity
rivers with a bullet wound in his
tojMa4L
Officers had been hunting blm In
connection with the shooting of Mrs.
Laura Franklin, 45, estranged wife
of Barksdalc; H. M. Hastings, SO.
her son-in-law; Mrs. Hastings, III,
daughter of Mrs, Franklin, and H. M.
Hastings Jr., S months old.
Clutched in Burksdale's hand W*s
the 4* enllber rifle • with which be
was believed to. have slala the four.
Officers learned from neighbors
that Ilurksdale went to the Hastings
home ' from Ban Jadno county last
Friday anil <iUurre|ed with Mrs.
Franklin and the Hustings family-
Frances Franklin. 11, daughter of
u—yrsnklln and sister Of Mrs.
^stings, told Sheriff W. A, McGee
of Liberty; count|r that Barksdal. had
' trouble lh the family before.
NEGRO YOUTH
IS SENTENCED
Capitol Building
to Get New Be
er
WASHINGTON, April 10. (AP)--
The lious© accounts committee to-
day decided the new 3.2 tier fieut
beer could be sold In tile euldtoi
building.
The brew will he sold In tile house
restaurant, but no date was set tor
the beginning of sale,
It was decided that lieer could be
sold only in bottles.
Frank Verdi, manager of the bouse
restaurant, was empowered to apply
to local authorities for a license.
Fifty Injured As
Trains Collide
T>A>TV1LLH, Ind., April ,10. (UP)
Seven perepns were in an In^lana' -lls
hospital today, the only ones re-
quiring more than incidental treat-
ment of nearly fifty who wore Injured
when big four passenger train No. 40
rammed Ittto' the rear of passenge*
train no: 20 of the aame line here
last night.
Meanwhile, trainmen refused to plate
responsibility for the crash, whkb
from St, Louis, Mo,, to Cleveland,
Ohio, mad« an unscheduled stop to
discharge a passenger. Tho other
train, bourn) from St. Louis to New
York usually runs about five min-
utes behind no. 20.
One baggage car o( train no. ti
was derailed aud traffic on the lias
was delayed aeveral boura.
. MKRT fc
Tho county commisaiohers court
wss tn session this morning tor tl«
' ' * l#«ly oi p.
DKCATUR, a Is,, April 10. tAP>—
The first of a group of negro'.^ work-
ers sentenced to die for attaoklhg
tWd white girls in the Hcottsboro c.isc
ami granted new trials on appeal
again has been condemned to death.
Defease lawyera said the fight to
save the accused would be contin-
ued.
Hey wood Patterson, 19 year old
Chattanooga hegr« was re-convlcled
yesterday with a recommendation that
he bo electrocuted Juat two years
after his original sentence was pro-
nounced. The Jury deliberated twea-
ty-one hours.
The verdict was branded a "mU
carriago of justice" by flamuel B.
Llebowltx of New York, chief 0( the
defenae counsel.
"This verdict," Lelbowltx charged,
"Is an act of bigots, "spittlhg upon
tlie tomb of the immortal Abraham
Lincoln,"
He Scored flolicltor Warte Wrljlit,
one of the prosecutors, for asserting
that defense witnesses had been
"bought with Jew -money" ntld added
"we will fight with every drop ot
blood In our veins to frOe these men
bccacsfi tbey are Innocent," He In-
dicated an appeal wilt ho taken.
There were fewer than 100 paradn*
tn the court room as the verdict was
read yeaterilay and It wa« received
without demonstration.
Stocks Rally
v -■ . ..
; NRW York, April 10. (AP)—Th«
spring rally In the share markrt
bloomed with fresk bullishness vo
day. : '
Week-end business news iraa gen-
erally encouraging, including1 reports
of quickened activity In stoel nod
automotive industries, apd indica-
tions that the approach )rf Bsster
had given retail trade a real boost
U. 8. -atoel's unfilled tonnage report
waa better than expected.
Stock ahares , generally advanced 1
to •* points, including Vijjt. Bt*rl
common and preferred, Bethlehem
*®land, Nation*
ai Meei and Crucible. But the ml*
vance broadened to Include all the
I groups, apd «
RAYMONTXVILLH, Ter., April 10
(AP)—The sendiiig of threntenln*
letters to more than 100 prominent
Willacy county cltlnens demanding
mini* of money varying between $100
and $6000 precipitated a sweepi'ig
investigation today by feileral ai«d
statu officer*.
The letters were .received in yes-
tehlajHs mall. Several of them
threatened tlm destruction of business
e , while others mentioned that chil-
dren Wottld he kidnaped li the mon-
ey was not left lit places to be des-
ignsted Inter. r~, Home of the letters
contained obscene statements)
Investigating officers were, some-
what pu *led whether a crsnk or
some criminal trying to operate op a
large scale was the source,
. Nearly every county und prenl.net
official received one of the lctyrs
addressed In pencil and sealed In
plain envelopes.
SO Acres to Be
Planted In Beans
Tn cohaeetlon with tlvn geneial
project of the local It. F, C., com-
mittee, m tract of a little more than
so acres of land situated about three
miles west of this place in the vi-
cinity of the railroad tower house,
is being planted In beans. The work
is being supervised by fJ. 11. Heard,
a farmer of the Little Cypress com.
munltf.
The lands being planted by the H
F, C. workers was leased some time
ago from the T. & N. O. Ball road
company, from Dr, M. E. Maior and
Orange county.
Vtajtt; house *f representatives to
eattrossed a bill to levy a gr
to* on all production but
; ot immediate final
when its sponsors were unable II
aU peful the ruW re<tulrln* bills to
be- read on three days.
The Mil wsa engrossed without ■
rdcoril. voMi:..- Supporters of tho
rolled up .* substantial majority
the two-thlrd« neeessary to
the motion. Tbe Vo Was SO ay<
to -47 noes,
Tbe hill would provide it tifri
one cent per barrel on dally per
production of from one v to
barrels; two cents per barrel Ob pro-
duction from Id to 160 barrel*; five
cents per barrel from ISO to 2be
barrels and 80 cents per barrel
production to excess Of 250
daily.
amendmotlfe, proposing to
tute a coudiinntion graduated
and natural resource c'ommissloii
for the graduated hill was wlth-
ilrawn. Tli«> combination bill carried
the same scale of taxes *s the sep-
arate tax bill, but provided, la addi-
tion, for tbe establishment Of a "nat-
ural resource commission to rcllsve
the Texas, railroad commission of IU
oil and fas conservation duties.
BfttMors - of combination MIT
Imped to force a vote on ttie new
commission proposition yet today.
Tha bill waa well up on the hoiiae
oateada,
The house, howoyer, voted to ad-
journ from 11 til to 11:46 a- m., and
took Itself ottittMi' calendar
for today and a voU> on the natt
source commission proposal :
,«. ^ .
./.The •hoaa^ibWWi^.. .
' tomorrow,-1 a .'WI - ;
Hep. .Tohn W. Laird of Lufkin
would abolish the present appoint ,
highway commission an ^d<ub*titute
la Its stead an elective commission.
The motion to ast the bill'for special
consideration received 70 ayes to
noes, lacking several votes of the
fild two-thirds. .,
Tho present commission would , ha
abolished as soon n the proposed
act became effeetfye, and five com-
missioner* would be appointed b?
the governor to sfctVe until the next
general election, When the commia*
Minn would l>c clected hy districts.
The senate substituted its depart-
mental appropriation hill for the oae
passed by the house, ond fre 'confer-
ence committee, work on that propo-
sal probably will b« started within
the next few days, There was a
difference of approximately 11,700,000
between the totals la the two bills,
with the senate proposal carrying tho
larger appropriations,
A bill to permit the state honking
commissioner to pledge the assets ot
a closed state bank with the recon-
struction finance corporation in or-
der to obtain a loon waa approved
by the senate.
The joint legislative committee on
organisation and economy made its
final report. Tho report ahowed
that expenses ' (if the committe'a ,
Work totaled 176,787.82 ot which
I2,50o wa spaid hy the Laura SpM*1
man Foundation of. New York. Mem-
bers of the committe said that re-
forms / Instituted a* a result ot tho
committee's recommendstlans already
had saved the state moire mou f
thuu the cost of tho survey.
Senator Ben O, O'Neal of Wichita
Falls Introduced a resolution to ta-
nnest tho federal government to with-
draw from the gasoline taxation field.
The resolution was sent to commitree, -
Wheat and Silver
to Be Discussed
WAflHINOTON. APr" <AP)
Secretary ' flwtl Indicated today that
among the aubjecta to be taken up
In the Wnshlnfton conversatlous
With leading statesmen of other
countries in preparation for tho
world economic conference wOoId be
restoration ot the price of allver a nil
control of wheat supplies. '
NEW HI« INSTALLED
Work of installing a standard rig
by the Birmingham Petroleum com-
pany over well No. 1 on tbe W. P
MeOuIre lease waa completed Satur-
day aOd since that time the well bss
' lieen «a the pump. The well which
had stood for a prolonged period «t
time before ' It was pumped, waa not
iu much today *a h«d
ro wwruini w
mm
|J9
■'-I
Mustard Crop Good
, —
_ Orange county truck farmers are
beginning to harvest what promise*
to be one of the best cropa of mus-
tard greens groWn In this seetlou
for some time. The early mustard
crop Is much In demand and those
handling tbe commodity . in bulk era
making extensive inquiries here. A
much bettor price Is offered tor tha
early mustard erop new than last
year, it la understood.
.vi
A PAINTER'S DERBY
CHICAGO, — A pistol's crafrk$ta
to stort A group, of painters on «
three hour race aeit Thursday ta
sea Which can de*lfi| tbe beat klad
of decorations for a modem cafe hi
tbe world's fair, jfcieb I- to keep his
idea n secret, dreating his design In-
dependently of the others.
ij.'j' i n iSipysiljil;',' ■ ffiaiij
barge rkPairrp
Thb Urge Onytoa, one of the larg-
est operated in this
ahd operatej D- M.
company of jiwBf
out today at tha
te be overbattled a
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McBeath, J. S. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 85, Ed. 1 Monday, April 10, 1933, newspaper, April 10, 1933; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth289361/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.