The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. [143], Ed. 1 Sunday, June 19, 1938 Page: 4 of 4
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On The Diamond \ Traveling Around America
.All game* scheduled for Friday
night were callfcd oft b*efc«uic of wet'
grounds. The L§ffM« will f-ntBi- fte
third week of play Monday night
WUft the tjulf Mtul.-c lend ill* Ihe «'"! •
lum-cial league, tfii> Weaver*' Whip
WMr# )«xu«iinic the Industrial laajcue
arttf SoI.Jdi- uijfl Texas t'reosut# t| d.
KM iilftcV In the Amateur !« ■
gu«*.
P.inxli for .\. It. C. Is leading the-
Uiitlftg in "hutii tiu> major leaaues
wits furl for Weavers lead in* the
JjiaM*tri«i league rMh .«< () over.
u e. MceieUftttd for (iulf Ktates is
M'Ufolii for <Oraxtjc« Furniture is
getting' hfs share of tin- hit ,
UATTIN'fJ STANDI N'fiS FOfi TWR
rOMMJCHflAT.
«I R H I#«?.
^Ks;
1,. parish, AH<'
rinjrion/ $$? •
rmm:
Hteele
B, Adinin^. IV
J. MazinlnV OF
McOlellanU «i«
GufUot. OK
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7
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2 It .Hon
Sellers, 0- -X i't 6". It .5011
Andrews. O <. .... 10 7 5 ,500
barber. OS ...0, s 8 .5)>«
Xunce, AIU' . fi s 3 ,Mt
LedcauJ;, QC . !• 0 ] .51/n
JIATTT^O STANDJN'IsS tf/>lt thio
" INWOTKIAI.
I,. IJonnln. TC . 3 o 2 ft"
Cmi. w . ■ . I 2 r. .«25
K. Morris. W . ..« C a U(K „
Hi Galliot, TC . •: 5 I 3 .Ufi<l
WjeJJ.V. 1/ .6 2 a .fill!)
Taylor, MT . 7 4 4 .572
Newman. L . 4 0 1 MO
Randjft*, L .8 ? \ SM>
0. Terry. L . ,2 0 1
B. tfeott. W .......... .'ft 2 2 .4|M
Ki-llv. TO .' 1 2 .400
Bofloln. TC 5 1 2 .400
OTIJJRR J,KADKlt8
Rims Scored—Andrews O. 7, E
.-VVrrtH W
Htt*—Andrevi'n 0. and M^-riclIand
OH 5. Curl W. «.
Vf WouWwi—Andrews O. 3, Taylor
W. 1.
Home It)in —Olnylon QC /. Shel-
ly. U. A. Oulllot TO and ti. Pciohu-
ea TO 1.
Runs liattprt In—AimIppw.i O. 7,
Cr ft Id. 8.
All standlnK* "W of legal I.eagitf
Contents of thla wcfek.
Standing Through First Week of
Play: ■< '
LBA^CK STANDI Not*
/ OOMM.EROIAD
w. r.
Photo Grace li**
Man About
MANHATTAN
By GEORGE TUCKER
KIEW YORK—Notes on the Big
Town, jotted here and there
SUNDAY, JUNE 19. I'
t
Bethlehem Completes $332,000,000 Expansion Drive:
Diversification of Products Stressed in Prograi
on a roynd-up:
dr
£1
, . . „
Royal Romance, and,(
Manhattan" has many, fsscinat-
g drinks, but the m< ' ' "
urveyed
(h) The
now bein
in Smi
Punch;
■Ml triguing
purveyed are (a) Ro-
ir. lc)
aitian
Bob Burns"ls on a shopping
spree.... He bought lfl blue shirts
has first day in New Yprk.... Bob's
namo sticks with you, do«an't4tt
. . You never have to «*k hin>
* h t it Is. . . . Lum Font is an-
other. •... Mr. Fong is on* ©J Man-
hattan's most noted restaurateurs.
Rattle 61 Broad v
Nurse ti
from Brooklyn
Alfred. Vt, MtCann, the food
commentator, likes to take pho-
tographic hegiras, his best feat be-
KING OF THE WOOL-BEARERS
no amount of coddling has been a!>!«•**
K'. '
li
Gulf' States . ...
iVeyer .
B. O. .
nitty Cleanors
'/■ I'renbyterlona . . .
Orange Furniture
■■ti 1NDU8TRIAL
Weavers Ship Vord
Lions Club . .,
Texas Creosote '. ^.0
A M A TBI' I{
Hahine Supply •••!
Tesas Creosttte • . . t
Knt. k Jour,. tr i
Hlfcman Wj
Pr. Pepper .
..yltpirier ®
8 0
. .2 I
.1 1
0 1
■0 i
J.,.0 2
Pet.
1.000
-«07
.600
.000
.000
.000
0 l ooo
1 .600
2 .000
•V-
0 1.
0oo
004
.500
.500
.500
/T*HIS stately, hlgb-stopplng and
A very snobbish creattlfe Is the
ricuna. most aristocratic member of
the guahamieo-llaraa-alpaca-vicuna
family a family which has. been
tfermn&and multiplying In the high-
lands of Pern, Bollvfa and Ecuador
since many centuries before the
white man arrived in the New
World.
The vicuna of this family has the
finest wool—-on especially fine speci-
mens the fiber Is fine as silk, being
only a two-thousandths of an Inch in
diameter and generally elx or eight
leches long. Both the vicuna and al-
paca grow best at an altitude of
from twelve thousand to sixteen
thousand feet. Many live at an alti-
tude: of ^17,000 feet—far too high
(or the average human being—and
although they seem to thrive on
practically nothing In their own hab-
itat, when transplanted to the ihoun-
taln districts of other countries such
M 8cotland, Europe and Australia,
to keep them alive. The wool was
first used for clothing by the pre-
face peoples; and beautiful textiles
estimated to be two or three thou-
sand years old, vlelng in beauty end
excellence of workmanship with the
textiles found In the sarcophagi of
Egypt, bare been unearthed in the
tombs of Pern and Bolivia and are
on view In tb museums of Lima
which are included in the sightsee-
ing tours offered In connection with
the weekly cruises to Peru.
Pe£ atone has about million
and a half alpacas, and la a recent
year the harvest netted 18,800,000.
Bolivia In an average ysar markets
two hundred tons. Most of (be flocks
dtUJ are tended by the Indians. They
clip the animals about once to two
years—obtaining about ten pounds
of wool from each—many of them >
(till using broken glass or knives for
the shearing Just ap did their tore-
fathers countless centuries ago.
roadway
Brooklyi
Jann, Jh
a to tak
—s..K...v ..v0.. , his best feni wr-
ing a complete photographic rec-
ord of the Alaskan salmqn run.
• • Walter Flciachnwnn, writing
from Hollywood, says New York
is soon to have a glimpse of that
strenuous Latin gmne. jai-alai.
□talced per
which will be ihtroi
Anthony Quinn, the actor who
ooks like Valentino.:.. The simi-
arity is so noticeable that Para-
ere by
r who
. The simi-
mount will remake "The Sheik'
vvitij Quinn iii the Valentino role.
Miriam Hopkins, blond and
sassy, is back in town Erin
O'Brien-Moore, ba<?k from a
week's whirl at the Providence
playhouse, is off for Maine, where
she. will guest-star for six weeks
at leading summer theaters,... It
will be interesting to analyse Pro-
fessor Ferde Grofe's musical in-
terpretation of the Kentucky
Derby after it blossoms into sonata
form. ., . In it he will attempt to
depict the subtlety of a mint ju-
lep. ...
Personal note to Lorayne Mc-
Gune, Iowa City, Iowa: Don't wor-
ry, Honey, I'll write you a story
about Alexander Gray.
Recommended: The dazzling ice
show in the Summer Terrace 'at
the New Yorker.
* •
FOR our better-late-than-never
dept.: Yesterday Charles Atlas,
the strong man, was hurrying down
mm
A mill for the cold-rolling of sheets which will be used In tin plate for the vefletable and fruit can]
America's pantry shelves. This is only one of the new units in Bethlehem Steel Company's bolltlina L
gram to round out its facilities for supplying goods to the general consumer. The scene Is at Bethlehd
Maryland Plant, Sparrows Point, Md. Inset: The customer of the steel "mill, Mrs. U. S. Housekeeper I
Is the one who judges the quality of the tinned container, whether it I* sanitary, easy to open. Because of 1
great Increase in the popular use of tinned goods and other demands for flat-rolled steel, Bethlehem Steel
now completing a vast new aeries of milla devoted to consumers' goods.
A 15-YEAR program of additions
and improvement, involving the
expendjture of 1332.000,000, has
just been completed by Bethlehem
Steel Company.
Capital expenditure^ ovftr the
period from 1923 through 1937 cov-
ered fevery phase of the company's
activities, with lemphasls upon mod- employes, described the expansion
ernization, increase in capacity,
economy of operation, and especi-
ally upon diversification of products,
so as to stabilize operation and to
reftch every field of steel consump-
tion.
The second largest steel producer
in the worldrin its ann\ial report to
program as one which bespealJ
desire-to more efficiently Serve!
public and to "fortify both emphl
nnd the company with modern J
titles to meet competition and inf
for .proRxegs and. prosperity,"
f'.rv'u it.v for Ingot production!
ov. ■< < from 7,fioo,ooo totis in
'.>.000 tons in 1938.
Nationwide Acclaim
Given Strand Film
In Old Chicago'
Nationwide aceJrtlm for Dnlrryl >*.
2&>nurk's motion picture masterpiece.
"In Old Chicago," lias bestowed a
veritable landslide of applause lipon
producers, cast mid director alike. ,
Astonishln -as Iiiih been' polVJle-
I'oaotloti to the Oxceflent work of
[Al|ce Faye, Tyrone .Power, Don
'A^eehd. Alice Bvady, And.v Devine lca"1 of Livingston
inmyinn ssiii. hhimi — iiiwuimmi iiiumn
Indian Celebration
Scheduled For June
23rd In Livingston
An Indian Pow Wow on June 23
is being sponsored by Livingston bus- ,
Iness me,n and the people of TJvins- j
ston solely for the purpose of ac- ]
<1 tainting the people of Texas with ,I
the only remalnliiK tribe of Indians in
the state, the Alahamjfi-Ceushattas,
who live on the reservation .17 miles
being reshown at one of the neigh*
borhood houses," he confessed. "I
want to catch up on niy cinema."
"Whicli movie is that#" I in-
quired.
"One I missed," he replied. "One
I missed when I was a boy—The
Birth of a Nation."
Which reminds me that this pic-
ture really is around.,.. It's still
being shown, and making -lonev-
1 ■; ■'
V H. A. WHEKLBK, l>. G.
- " ■ ■' <r' *" -•
Chiropractic Health Service t
Graduate National. College Qf
Chiropractio
Chiroiprnctio Spinal and Pedal Ad-
justments. Massage, Radio Therm,
Ultra Violet and Infrared Bays
Wis Orange Ave - Orange. Texas
Office Hour#—#-18 and 2-5
II ill III
Ml
m3>
mm ■
"is" GEM ^
Starts Today
'Start Chawing*
The Diwlest. Whitest Gala Gal-
orious Comedy Musical!
THK STOOGK8 "
40AN PKBHY
JIMMV Dt ltANTK -
JOHNNY GRKKN
and HI8 OltCHBWTHA ,
Andjr C*|yde In Koul of( A Heel
I-11"11 K , . .
uiul Brian' Donlevy, the public has
been, no less lavish In Uh pl-<«i«e "of
tth^'. directorial .)wock --* f Henry' King,
(Who wove a beautiful love theme in-
|to the tbrliUnii tale, of his ,'grea't Chi-
cago fire. -■— ,
tfollj'WoOfl rbM been quick to ap-
preciate tblw fine touch,
The lonjr awaited flhn Opens a two
day showing at the Strand theiUet-
to<lay.
Some of the fire engines, still char-,
red from the original Chicago fire of
1871. take pat't in the motion pic-
ture yer Wn of the catastrophe* A
Complete reproduction v>f the nine,
teepth century Chicago was lntElt and
Aegtroyed by fire to obtain the re-
markable production
While tho flames roared skyward
0|) the llO-aere 20 th <'cntury-I*'ox
studio hit, modem I .On Angeles city
fire apparatus and the Wudlo's own
eompletely etiuippei) fire laddies "an-
pervined" the blaze to prevent an
aolnal repetition of tho old-timer.
This Was jieoescary because moire
than 1000 persons and hundreds of
hiwd of cattle were practically "on
their own" among the blazing build-
ings. '
35
s
The Oulf States of Orange, lead
era of the Commercial lea§ (#,—^Wtl1
play the Oulf Htates of- Beaumont
Monday evening at 5:3o o'clock in
the Itftignulla Hall Park, it was an-
nounced Hnturday, 4?.
An interesting program, includes:
Opening parade 10 a. m,
Indians,, cowboys, pioneers driving
ox teams will march in Livingston as
they did in East Tegas 100 yetvrs
ago.
Afternoon ...
Indian Camp
See the Indian encampment with
all its colorful activities . - . Itodeo
With plenty, of thrills, chills and
spills . . . Indian ball Bnmo—Tola,
the game only the strongest and
bravest dare -play.
Nlsht . i ,
Tribal ceremonies ... tribal dances"
. . , a beautiful Indian princess will
pe selected f£6m }0-maidens , . .
an Indian wedding performed as It
was 100 years ago , . Rodeo—a real,
wild west rodeo, 105 performers, In-
cluding many Indian riders.
College Musical
At Gem Has All
Star Comedy Cast
BTjIND stcdents SHOW
1-rtOMlSE IVITH MC8IO
BOtrLDBR, Colo. f.\P) — Melvln
King, blind student, has shown so
much, promise in a year at the Uni-
versity of Colorado College of Music
llnnSi
that his teachers helieve^he had yn
"excellent change to achieve his am.
bltlon to tie a ,concert pianist or
composer " .
I- jKrtng Is dependent on a student
t~hvho kpows no music in learning dlf- I justXctunrpleted an important role in
flotjlt eofnpoMtfon*. 1 "Tlie Adventures of MaW>(> "Polo"!
!■■ 0«ni^ llrandt, his "seeing eye." Vlrglniax Dale, Columbia's' new 'find'
roads the notes and King piayg I who ha«v lately been seen In "No
t ail
A college musical with a star-name
cast of unusual proportions will op.
en today at the Gem theater. It is
called "Start Cheering,' 'and Is liter-
ally packed full of comedians and
musicians, Columbia produced itr..
First, of all, there is. Jimmy
"Sohnoziie" Durante, the wild-eyed
Was of stftge, screen and radio fame.
Then there's Walter Connolly, ap-
parently as good aas new .after his
harrowing experiences as Fredric
.March's MunaKlriK edtlor in "Noth-
ing Sacred." , Further examination
of the caSt. discloses the lovely Joan
Perry: popular Charles Stnrrett; ra-
dio's <|ue*tlon-nn<l-answer king. Pro-
fessor tihI*: Gertrude Nlesen, husky,
toned singing star of radio and the
musical stage; , ttaymond AVailburn,
comedian, extraordinary; The Three
Stooges, the screen's premier mad-
men : Droderlck Crawford, Who Is
now astounding Broadway audiences
with his performance as I.enWe' In
"Of M^ce and Men." and Hal I.eHoy,
craekerjack tap-dancer.',
.loihnny Green, who also wrote mu-
sic. for the picture. Is present, With,
his radio network orchestra. John-
ny, however, does not carry the en-
tire musical • burden of the film.
I -on l« Prima,'] a royal prince of tho
realm of- swing, "sends .if with h|«
hand. '
In addition; the east Includes • Kr-
nest (True*. Broadway star, who has
natloirnl king of gaatronomlcal feats, !
and Jimmy Wnlllngrton, ■ notpjl radiq
announcer. '
There is alHo an evtniyaganti.v pro-
duced "H'g Apple", sequence.
End of Training
Nears For Louis-
Schmeling Fight
NUW Y«UtK, ^jmie' is. (AP) _
Joe Louis and 5ia\" Schmoling have
almost finished thelrN^rainiog t'or
Wednesday's heavy wo|gtu\,tltle fight
at the Yankee stadium. The.v have
| been going through their paces for
nearly a month, watched and. dis-
,cussed drtjly by the keenest observ-
ers of boxing. The- opt}' certain con-
ciuslo'n reached Is thnt all hands, es-
pecially Mike Jacobs, ape due to malje
some money.
The financial pi-ospects are down
In blaelt and . wJiite—not red. Jacobs
announced yesterday that he had
approximately $5Bt).Ot|0 in the till,
and from that he estimated the gate
Would pass a million dollars. He's
nevec touched that,, mark in pro-
motlng, • having reached his highest
level when 83,4(12 cUStoinei's paid
$958,352 to see Louis fight* Mav
Baer in 1935.
■WT
TYPEWRITING PAPER
_ White News Print
Standard Letterhead
Size, 8V2xll inches
500 SHEETS
To A Package '
Cash and Carry
M ORANGE LEADER
503 Front Street
MIXES SCENT WITH INK
AND PBRFI'ME AD'
LONGVIF.W. Wash. fAP) : Af-
ter all. thought .MorrU" J. Molln.
I.ongvlew drujjgist. the best adver-
tisement for a pet-fu^ne Is Its scent.
To ls>ost perfume sn'leS, he ran . a
large newspaper tidvcrtiscnient --
and mixed quantities of the adver-
tised perfume with the*-Ink used for,
the ad.
.Perfume sales, he reported, went
up 800 per cent the next week.
jl
«.■-i 1 > ••
H'M
them I slowly on a piano.
Time tojdarry"; CKas. Chase, Inter-
|®l|
iSalfl
VI •
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"j«"v
jfej
■iHft *1
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'kfmv
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'It !*■♦' ' 1
■ ife
mm
yP'
' 'A'' -t'
■..M
mmm
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T
X
stands for SILENCE and SPEED
OT THE MEW
KEfRIGERATORS
NOW ON DISPLAY
■w
For all 'round, year
m* ti
.
etiam, switch to tl
i ■ ' K''
Electrie rotrj
STAfl
STRAND
Today - Monday
"Tops Them All"
The greatest spectacle
brought to the screen
since motion pictures
were born !
Something you will
never forget!
'In Old Chicago'
—With—
TYRONNE POWER
ALICE FAYE
L«-, AMEOHE
—Just Por Pun-
Donald Duck
, ;. ' —In—
"Donald's Better Self"
—And—
Strand News
M
Tuesday Only
Cheste* Morris
—In-
"Law Of The
/ '
TYPEWRn*ER BARGAINS
Used Corona Portable in good condition,
with case, Cash $11
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Rebuilt Woodstock, perfect shape, cash $30
or terms $r
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or terms ..........I.,......— ....
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or terms $5
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cash, with $5 additional carrying charges fc
term sales.
We Also Rent Typewriters and Sell Addin
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A. F. BURNS
Phones 904 and 452
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Bus Station, 505 Green- Phone 252
Open 24 Hours
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. [143], Ed. 1 Sunday, June 19, 1938, newspaper, June 19, 1938; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth303308/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.