The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 23, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 28, 1941 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
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Trip
ins the democrats for a fumble—they
hope to set possession oil the 10*5
inaugural t U."
THE ORANGE LEADER
r ■ ^-'Piy r., m ?■ ■■-
OBANOg TRXAS, TTESDAY, JANUARY 28.-1041
*. > 4. 4c-
%
Rosa Battered by East Coast Storm
People «nd Things.
King Levinsky has been
*7trft.
found
I^-p-
7t
The first half standings In the Ou!f
Coast Cage League may get hjiul
tonight when the undefeqf
. ry's Rams of Port Arthur «*!
Tiger Jungle to meet Cea
Quinn's Grange high eager*. Th* Ti-
gers have lost but one gjune ahd
—lonlgfirana r ip .
-Thursday night toil Id lift them int..
a tie for. first place. * •■
* The Bengal Guards will op$n th,e
program tonight at 7:19 o'clock «-
gainst Sulphur, f^e doon *fiU
at 6:30 o'clock.and with
crowd anticipated fi
come-'early in order
seat in the comfortably
Tommie Trigg, lei _
er with 64 points to data w
fwwt,./! tr. f)« trr gmm,
McFarland, Butter, Smith an# H-
Stark will probably start "for thg Ti-
gers. .
■IP ' ■> J
KM ■
IflKAf?SAVED HUM
NEW YORK. Jan. 27. (APV
an automobile windpw 4 during
snowball fight receiygjj, a bu J"
sentence when ne told the . _
was being inducted inio the amy-
That's.one,..thing tfae dcitUM-M
me," said Bill Daly.'' •" <
NEW YORK, Jan. 28. (AP) —Ace
wttl 4inM •*> two weeks
Whrthtr bp foott^Uor basebaU
t*!£pteyww0*k in Red Wur-
man's fcomer against Joe -Louis Fri-
day nigKl because he Would be "too
nervou], (R$d will like that, since
D^P^ontl<WD&AimL.butJflck
piefcs Red to win if the light goes
w
over th* site
of*" ttuit Boston College
oV^r Fordham's eoromit-
1942-43
may
mints
const!
the backs arrange
the forwardr
The White Sox
the froolf of their
Charlie O'Rourke, the Boston College
grid ace, hasn't developed a very,
very' swelled head, as some of the
papers reported. )1 ' h
i 'Headline Headliner. -
Over a story about Gene England
of Wisconsin leading the Big Ten
baskftbaU BQOFer#, Keith Brehm of
the Racine Journal-Times wrote this
caption: "There'll Always Be an En-
gkjnd —Wisconsin . Hopesi'-' -So say
we all.
Now Champ.
By an almost unanimous vpte of
the New York baseball writers. Bill
Terry has succeeded Wes Ferrell as
the bad humor man of baseball.
FIGHT
you feel It-with
view vapqsHI
C
Lyons on
ter.rtr
1
aufihnesay. International
esidept, toured the At
ejus plant yesterday. Told
play-off System hid been adopted b
the)Philadelphia public school bas-
ketball league, he 'said "I am thrill-
.... I ' I '.jUUHl
Henry Clay vfras known as "The
Millboy of the Slashes."
Each large railway locomotive con-
tains nearly 8000 pounds of copper.
A single banyan tree, in the botan*
ical gardens of Calcutta, India; cov-
ers three acres of ground.
► . • <;
%'G
7o Relieve
Misery of
Y<
Jftij
UOUtatAltE SW.Vt.MOSt l 0?S
IffiSfttftSt I.OIHIB NW: «•
A; K. A, H.
STATED JIKI5TKGS
iHt anil ard Mondays
MASONIC TKMI'UC—411 Fifth-St.
Sojourning hrethem and compa
lms are cordially invAM'd- _ JLi-*—i-
W. P. SEXTO V, W. M.
H. A. UKCK. Secretary _
■
a> i .i.u . 1 ■■ "!■
farter's Shell Station, 1401 Gree
• Radio Service
Laboratory |
Service On All Makes
•frfPrl
PHONE 170
TH 4 irangCt-Tena —
ear
side of thfc tracks, no<v travels with,
the Ptttsbutgh .upper crust Correc-
•tfcn: The Osage (la) grapplers
hstve won only. SI meets (Hot 58)
gj.ve uii another error. ■
I republicai
are watch
' ■
W
W
p.,
t
WHAT DO
5
from 9 to 20 cents.
*mm*. *ou
•t, stylea and the DIFP-7
What does g&so
LIKE gasoline, *
getdifferentqnalijties
ERENCE IN PBIjO* that you pay.
Aov dootor ^ P,
another, so if yon
glasses, request your doctor to get them for you. He may
TTOTT
done by
a doctor
best materials,
1936 models—1
sire' $5.00,
the same price as
, 110.00 or 112.00
orW. .. .k . JL...
in seeing his patent with the
and ito to date frames—not with
can get them iqt you.
When in need of eye work think of the best for the only
pair of eyes you will ever hare «4 in 1M1 styles.
Consult us today about your eye comforts and needs.
St
DR. QUS EVANS, JR.
OPTOMETRIST
Located over Orange Drug ShU^—PlMiae MM
rrw—
Bi
IIW" 'g'"
m
TEXARKANA, Ark., Jan.'28. (AP)
—Mrs. Dorothy Crawford Garner, 19-
year old DeQueen, Ark., woman,
charged
Jesse Williams Miller forced her to
pick cotton and beat her when she
coujd not make a quota of 250 pounds
a day.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams, of near
McKinney, Texas, are on trial in
federal court on charges of kidnaping
Mrs. Garner and holding her several
months.
Testifying as the trial opened yes-
terday, Mrs. Garner said, she was
lured from her home on the pretext
of going to the bedside of her grand-
father, reported by the Millers as
being seriously ill at Trenton, Texas.
But, she testified, they took her
to a farm near McKinney and forced
her to work in Ihe cotton field.
o
Snyder, Texas. Rosweil, N. M., and
Sherman, Texas, but that she escap-
ed <at the latter place and hitch-
hiked back' to DeQueen with her in-
fant daughter.
Mrs. Garner, daughter of Mrs.
Miller by a previous marriage, said
she Weighed 18(i pounds when she
rnccompantedthe^l
her home but when she returned to
DeQueen she weighed only 113 1-2
poitnds. ' •
" -U'li ."'"i
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Interpreter
Convinces Judge
Something Wrong
DETROIT. Jan. 28. (AP) — In the
esteemed court of the HonorabJe_JRe-
corder's Judge Joseph-A. Gillis (here
appeared yesterday 30 Chinese.
The charge was gambling.
One evening recently Police Lieut.
Kennedy Lawrpnce and a raiding
party Ijad dropped in at a store
basement. The Chinese, said Law-
rence, were playing fan tan and
hout gow. ' *
To be sure, said the defendants,
but it Was not for money, it Was for
-buttons , .■
On a table were two gallons of red
liquor, described by the lieutenant as
"something to drink."
"The esteemed police officer is
mistaken," said an interpreter. "It
, • , M l4m. . . ,
The Santa Rota arrived jn New York two days.late tb complete a Caribbean cruise, and here is one of
the reasons for the delay. This general^ view ^>f the^storm sweat deck was mailt- a&the,lip£E divivi- t hrnngh
the terrific storm' which played hob with shipping-!'along the Atlantic coast.
is ink used by laundry men for laun-
dry slips."
"It is paint,"/ said a second inter-
preter.
At the head of the basement stairs.
Lawrence testified, was a sign in
Chinese "characters saying "gambling
downstairs." • ,
"Error,"asaid the firsts interpreter.
"It says 'Pay Yotir Relief Funds
Downstairs'."
"My friend, you are wrong again,"
put in the second Interpreter. "It
says 'Gifts for China Downstairs'."
The lieutenant's men seized $408.74
in cash. That, said the Chinese, was
for the relief fund. <
to;
the lieutenant saying that gambling
was to be conducted at the premises.
There was a map showing location o(
the tables.
"Obviously," said the first interpre-
ter, "thiS* is the work of a Japanese
fifth columnist."
Judge Gillis here halted testimony.
pending sentence, asked them to pro-
duce their available cash.
He collected $28. He directed that
this, along with the $408.74, be sent
to the Detroit Council for Chinese
Relief. *\~
Military Visitor
. r
Male Typists May
Apply For Civil
Service Examination
The United States QJivil Service
Commission announces open competi-
tive examinations for the positions of
Senior Stenographer, $1620 a year,
Junior Stenographer, $1440 a year,
Senior Typist. $1440 a year^jind ^Ju-
nior Typist, $1260 a year, for em-
ployment in the Tenth United States
C ivil Service District, comprisi ng
;urcl- Tr\;w. Thrw -
[nation are open to men only, as
there are adequate registers of fe-
male eligibles. Applications may be
filed continuously with the Mana-
ger, Tenth U. S. Civil Service Dis-
At Your ORANGE THEATRES' Today
NEW
lingular Price**!
10c & 15c *
'ltO<J!t.\M TODAY
r
APPLIANCES
be your front line defense
egeinst drudferr—
—.\dd«-d Kitjoyment—
t'olor I nrt(M il "1JTKV ntTK"
—Novelty—
"HKBIXd IM IIKI.IKVIVG'
Keep house electrically in '41.
Switch to switches and let Reddy
J J t « v ' 4-' -*
Kilowatt do the dirty work. |t's not
expensive. The qppliancee you
(WITH! STR
TOXPI'H!
ANY SKAT*
ANY TtMK!
nmaUKt
priced so low. Moat" of them can
be bought on very easy terms. So
resolve to save time, and effort, !
and yourself, .tartoj nowl Sav.
money, too, by taking advantage
of present low prices.
"KK
WKDKK8IMV and THUKSDAV
UHttlfrfWHW I
«—..4 ■.
Watch For
1M!
I.AST TIMKM TDlJAV
—K«ur Sisirrs . . ,
—Imhii; Wlvi's . .
—K« ur S wt
anil Now
Mamas!
ON ALASKA RUN
VICTORIA, B. C .'Jan. 28. (Cana-
dian Press) — Battered, by tall seas,
the U. S. army steamer Kvichak wf?nt
aground on Sisters Rocks hear Prince
Rupert late last night, and shortly
gers and crew" were abandoning her.
Then followed a report that the-
ship was in, no immediate danger of
sinking, unless heavier wether
should break. The Kvichak was be-
ing used to take supplies to defense
projects in Alaska.
An urgent call for assistance, stat-
p, m. (Pacific 'STanaaH~Time}~serif
the U. S. coast guard cutter Nemaha,
some 120 miles away, toward the
scene, but poor weather reduced her
speed to 10 knots and she did not ex-
pect to reach' the Kvichak until a-
bout 1 p. m.
These reports of the Kvichak's fight
against the sea were flashed by the
ship's wireless operator.
At 11:27 p. m. he radioed the 23
passengers were taking to lifeboats.
He added that one lifeboat had cap-
sized but did not say whether it car-
ried passengers.
At 11:50 p. rn. he advised that all
aboard were leaving the vessel, which
was settling on rocks in weather so
rough one wave came up to the
wireless cabin.
Shortly afterward the operator,
explaining he was working his emer-
gency set,, said all watertight doors
were closed an dthe vessel would be
-safe unless heavier weather should
break1
trict, Customhouse, New Orleans, ' .
Louisiana, until further notice.
Persons whose applications are ae- j
cepted will be' notified when to ap- i
pear for the assembled written ex- |
animation, which will be given at |
intervals.
.Additional information and appli- [
cation blanks may be obtained from |
the local i?ost Oflflce.
* 1 l
Carl Jewel h '\
Moved To Jail s
Carl Jewel w+io has been under
it
I t. Tomas Mcndoza
Lieutenant Tomas Mendoza, mem-,
ber of the Venezuelan military mis-|
sion to the United States, arrives at'
jNew York. Many South American'
(military observers have been in-'
Ivited to this country since the
iUnited States began its great pre-
/' paredness program.
" I,. J. LTnHTS Xt!R«KBV
OAM«i''A A s
Palms, Kril lluds. Ppar Tree*,
St.i Augustine Grass
BKAUTIFV ORANGE
DR. J. H. SHEFFIELD
Dentist '
112 HOIJ.AXl) ItUIl.nlNG
Over A. At 1'. Hi'OHK
(.(•tieral I'rarllee of Ikntl^lfy
norns I to* B P. M.
PttOXK 775
OKAXGK TYI'K\V^ITKR&
Al l>l\fJ M U HINK SEftVICB"
tOWPANV
fltl Front Ht.
Repairs for nil makes of type-
writers and adding machines,
fall 004 for Her vice
Agents Fry:
Remington typewriters, portables
^mTdTVoM^ste-Tvddln^-tnatiite
T
Leads Revolt
ij
PROVOST BROTHERS
TEXAS AWNING CO.
Auto Tops and Seat Correra
Auto «lass, \wiling*, Venltloa
IUIikLs ' and Window Shailea
Phono 41
403 Eleventh St.
EHTIMATICS FREE
V.
, ^ ^
w?
'
mir-
Waterproofing, Calking,
Weather Stripping
On llrick and Htone Walls.
STOP dampness from I'oining
tltri'iiul1 ,v« ur walls.
Fine Wurkmanshlp and
.Materials
A si> liiHeXirle HWUia
l)r< « ard*< r letter For,
DAVIS ROOFING 00.
Port Arthur, Texas
teoe Seventh Plione
Haile Selassie
/I
SIGNS "O" LIFE
Oommercial — Builetins -
a Sho Cards
Geo. H. Dunham, Sole Owner
Wild Ethiopian tribesmen led by
treatment; at 'the- Kc'iuu't's Aim. i-nt- ■ lia-iip-S" 1: ^^i'^ iuid -'tidC'd b.V^Briti.^ir
cher hospital for-a sell-inllicted gun- | bombers are reported to be hurling
shot wound in the head, was trans-.[ thebwelvcs upun th« UaHftns; de-—
£ ..
-Ad N Featuretie*—
Cok« Cartoon
"SHOP, MMIK and LISTEN"
I., a
—stIHN'WI .>ovOIf> —
:i *1e\ ti
OX PAR ARID"
WHO'S HERE WERNKHOAV!
is®
ferred from the hospital to the.eoun
ty jail Tuesday morning.
Jewel's condition was reported to
be satisfactory. The transfer was
made in a fuller ambulance.
termincd to,chase the'invaders from
their country. The "Conquering
Lion of Judah" was forced to flee
ir*iAn«
SALES and SERVICE
CAU,
Ethiopia in 1936.
01
Greco
•WW"
f^igiliijiil
SPINUP
PRINCE ALBERT %MAKIN'S'SMOK£3
QUICK AS SLIPIN' DOWN
A POLE - AND THEY'RE ALWAYS
NEAT, STRAIGHT, FIRM. P.A. IS
MSLLOW, RICH-TASTIWj
EASY ON THE T0H6VI!
TKY P. A. IN A HK, TOO I
*Mbw.
sHj^umw
WM
0 I %>
^®al
TMI NATIONAL JOY 8M0KK I
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 23, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 28, 1941, newspaper, January 28, 1941; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth308041/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.