The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 282, Ed. 1 Monday, November 24, 1952 Page: 1 of 10
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’'■’k'ijJiiS-
Billion Dollar Rain Falls on Wide Area of Drought-Stricken Texas
I
11
.
P
Year Siege
Dry Weather b
en as Moisture
Out oa State
By The Associated Press
The prettiest sight in the
vorld — slow, soaking rain
ag on millions of acres of
is’ drought-swept fields
pastures. That was the
picture today as prop savin* mois-
ture tell hour after hour over
ivuch of the state.
A hired rain-booster claimed at
sast part of the credit in North
Texas.
ti- The weather bureau said
Southeasterly circulation of moist
winds bumped against a low rid-
ing cold wave near the Cap Rock
and the showers slowly spread
»ck toward the Gulf.
Crop and livestock experts said
The Orange Leader
VOLUME XLIX
Member Associated Praia
ORANGE,’ .TEXAS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1952
ID Pages
NUMBER 2^2
#2,
*twi
Indictments Refused
In Orange Port Case
would take days and weeks pf
I moisture to erase the enormous
damage caused by the three-year
Siege pf dry weather.
K, RisSsifi. «.
sloppy, slushy rain—and it brought
ness to tamers* ranchers
gardeners alike. a \
oh boy. It’s ralnirtg ev-
from the Gulf clear
‘north to Kansas City,4 * usually
Bribery/ Counts Ignored
By Federal/ Grand Jury
WASHINGTON (AP)-A federal grand 'jury refused
Orange, Tea
today to return any indictment in the
case. The U. S. district attorney’s office
Texas, port
said the jury, after
nearing evidence concerning overseas shipments of defense
goods through the Orange port, decided to ignore complaints
brought against two Texas
4fy
Chandler Again To
Head Dimes Drive;
Eddleman To Hek
dSSS.
successful Search
fige county, again
1 when the an-
_ canipailigu gpts
erwaA early in 1853. v ,
Jj»mt time he carried the Y>ur-
ifdriisllt. R.mick) Eddleman. well
knpWfn.local busioes-'man. > * 1
^Af»p^ntiw‘nt„a< tli two
tp .steer the J85J
VU *n
CaitOr
men and<a former civilian em-
Army headquarters
> men; were identic
jseph P. Kerr TM03
Huisachc or Lone Star Bag Corp.,
Houston, Tex.; Abel Raymond
Sanders (220*/- Norwood), Or-
ange; and Harold Dolyyil, Wash*
’•^B&tetat Vl S.Ablst. A/liy. WU-j
teaflnBecker, in charge of the,
grand* jury investigation, -said It
wras made ,tr> determine if there
hpd ‘beep violation of con-
spiracy or,bribdrjr law*.
service committee report gtSgii-
eagsri
Stefas
HESS
<*rangaang
Orange.
Bruner Church Will
Move to New Site
!.V y 1-. j
On Western Avenue
And Get New Name
Brun<& Methodist church
will move to a new location J
on Western avenue in West k
Orange and change Hi’name 1
to St. John’s Methodist I
church,
ing a
It.
the membeA deci
called conrerpncc
decided 1
Sund
church
of land between Western avenue
and Austin street Just east Of
-• V ftrfrfilinn it will, h
GrStagevllievnddition. It, vMl have
a 200 that freUtage thi WMtprn
•venue.
“We hove tAen staining
proposal for the past
* mentta;”' Rev Seen <3 Waters said
;“and+ w« deeded we sfwte act
WORLD’S CHAMPION SH
Zcke Morttroy J
. ** - <*; 1
OStSUINEBOY
tops for iVinter
You Gotta Nate Plenty of Tn-ruh-gee’ ,, v
{ays World's Champion Shoe Shi« 'Boy' 1
► I sV V Stol-T/ Photo :kjf*ALP» RAMOS V - (VT ','\UV •*
is thisf * “'You gotthv have eiVnlb-ged ’1 -*.--1—f— x
2® 5'SKWtf.
"You gott!i\ have eiVrvXb-geV wit'this*
' “>ke Slontt-py says\ ‘'b "
flexes, hoi «4^year _r_
fiam wqdej*. U»e brjtn , Wm^ _
----rfbwn. grunts, and his ^hine elethjetarts singtait .
imfted xit
rtSfm Oum strqfetK"
will movc|ltg pftw-
the- laat «M*yaW*.~ C*r- n el,
-sSFSvt
its®*-
1
V W ti o o *v p f
qJE^SSk
r yorldlj chaniplo«*|hin«
ly » Wty <WK#
tV.y*v ya
Town
To Anuwcr
I w»* w»
! ty ’ hospital pr*V
ybedrt
-This question,
f nit b y others being
the hospital project Will Re
answered next Monday, Dec.
1. during a town hall meeting
—it
did
Thi
r
night
State
American
proposals. The
to find a .tjOsitlon which wc
please both Britain and the IT, S.
Feelings at the meeting were
tense and afterwards press offi-
cers ol^the British and American
delegations were hot even polite
to one snothkr—highly unusual in
diploma tlocihcles.
Eden stayed away from the
^Right-Of-Way. Matters
Are Aired by Court
Highway right-of-way problems
were in for another airing this
afternoon when county commis-
sioners, the Chamber Pf Com-
merce highway committee and
RIght-of-Way Agent George Mas
terson met this afternoon,
f'e Advance information said sev-
eral right-of-way problems would
be cleared up during the session.
No advance details were given.
^Students To Get Two
Days Off Thanksgiving
Orange county school children
take two days off this week for
t><« annual Thanksgiving holi-
^There will be no school Thurs-
day or Friday. ,
Meantime, city, county, state
aPH federal offices, banks and
ness houses la. the city are
nnins to shutdown in holiday
ance.
Anisine:
piannii
inwaunv/ ^awmiiiy {
'build Its hoiatnz. project in
[‘AenmuaRy. It srill bkaboyt
postpone the
_4t-breaklng
if diplomatic de
- °”WR
I on official Communist rq-
to the split between the
ajlies.
Material Is Ordered
For Work at Docks
Materials have been ordered
for the $5,000 dock work program
outlined by the Wharf and Dock
commission.
Port Director J. T. Arledge said
today he hoped to begin redeclcSng
and replacing joists,on a 100 foot
south central portion of the wharf
next week.
The construction work is to
be done ^ith port crews.
Orange!tc To Address
National Education Groui
WASHINGTON (Spl) —
mond Free, curriculum
oup
conVult-
sch<lols,
ant at the Orange public
will address one of the discussion
groups at the 32nd annual meet
ing of the National Council for
the Social Studies, a department
of the National Education associa-
tion (NEA), scheduled at Dallas
on Nov. 27-29.
Free's subject will be “Prior-
ities in the Elementary School.”
More than 1,000 social studies
teachers from various parts of the
nation are expected to attend the
three-day convention.
Marauder Bombers Bag 200 Communist
Trucks in Greatest Foray of the Year
■
I
TToHov's Weather |
«,i*.u jsi ^rssTb.
I 3"» «ns HUhwl UmpwmlSN H M
£»»-. *Mt ta |M
it i>ii« m h«ar.
n
te *•
•t w it
1:44 t. ■.
By ROBERT TI CKMAN
SEOUL (AP) — B26 Marauder
bombers Sunday night destroyed
200 Communist vehicles in their
greatest truck-busting foray of the
year.
The Marauders, ranging far and
wide over the Red highway net-
work. brought their nine-day bag
to 1,175 trucks. The ceate'css at-
tacks are designed to stem the flow
of supplies for frontline Commu-
nist troops.
Twelve B28 Superforts, the fly-
by-night partners of the Maraud-
ers, dropped 120 tons of high ex-
plosive* on a Bod communications
center naer Slnanju. The target
city Is on the west coast, 40 miles
north ot Pyongyang, tha North Ko-
^■£5'»-V a; h. • .*4 * m
Vi «V* a«i»W ■' •« M
*5 » 4* * M-i he ei 4 at * m »M *M
“ ““ ‘
- S' J ‘AenmuaRy. It wfll bevabov
Imperaonatioir | will teterseot v4(h WeA
a.*^ ifere-fwr ",K 4'
:re to- “her
land orderik 0
ice fouiifKon him
tte pist$V
urdav night
and/CherrV
'Met”. He toUHSr-
ihb h^. had been
Maintain
himte .25 cdll-
automat/t' pistgj. «e was
ransfCrtea /to the „ county,, this
morning. | v f )
O' ^
lI»S£zx£lBr»
Geo rm» Ilk Teddy Roo*^V»
Christmaa Toradt
Asked Ty Contact
A
EnlraiWs
MX*
' “ (Ot enter
(istmii#
taged .here
re aajeect loHay to.eon-
^in'gate, president at
8-4083'.- #/* AX
DaadUne for entri
set ter noon Tuesday, Dtsc
day before *the paratje.
Contact lay&ds
ons flplanning ti*. ent
wires
s beau
. 8. •the
/
Major Revisions Due for Taft-Hartley
* By B hi' LIVINGSTON th^ GGP-contrelled Congress, told the controversial^ tesociatioiv of
aSMt (Ap)
WASHjpKlTO
i Capitdi ‘ hill pointed
a major rewriting of the
labor tew by the new Rei
83rd Congress V possibly, even
today te l “We af-e
nation’s "changes in
‘publican relations l
.. / Iknm
the House
the chairmanship
/labor copphjttee
Sabres. Their score for the week
stands at 17 MIGs destroyed, two
probably destroyed and four dam-
aged.
Ground action Sunday was high-
lighted by a series of Red haras-
sing attacks all along the bleak
155-mile battlefront.
A U. S. Eighth army staff officer
said the Reds aopeared content to
feel out the Allied defenses. None
of their tentative jabs was aimed
at taking any UN positions.
The largest Red probe-in-force
was launched at Sniper ridge, war-
scarred hill mass on the Central
front. Allied rockets and artlllerv
shells broke up a thrust by 450
Chinate.
The cruiser Lot Angeles and the
destroyer Swenson poured a rail)
of firs on Red installations near
Kosung. At Wonsan the destroyers
City Zoning Changes
In CailUvet’t Hands
The city’s zoning changes were
In Mayor Sid Caillavet’s hands
today, map and all, but the mayor
didn’t know when action calling
a public hearing could be ex-
pected,. . . prpbably, he indicated,
not sooner than the Dec. 9 meet-
ing of citT commission.
The mayor, though, was con-
cerned somewhat over the map
he thought had a few errors on
it. Nevertheless, he Said he’d
await city commission action tell-
ing him what to do next regard-
ing zoning.
Mayor Caillavet did predict,
however, that there would be a
lot of argument stirred up over
re-zoning.
“I told you wa should fat
those storm sash la tbs Leader
want ads!”
ported
officia
thp GOP-cQUtrolltd Congress,
vpijsgpBX'' \
to certainly going to have
in the labor-management
law. I certainly/antici-
pate them, but how 'they will be
mad! 1 can’t yet *hy,” >
Sen. Taft <R-Ohk>) wants t<r| tee
keep the law that beats his name,
but revamp it through a series of
amendments. 1
Strong feefting is reported to
exist among ,lome GOP lawmakers
for completely rewriting basic
labor-martagement legislation —
and in so-doing, bury for good
told the controversial association, of
TafrtHarttey wltp the Republi-
can party,
ula
' Speculation Has alsd been re-
among some labor union
l on the prospect of an
lifePtfe
mmm
.f **
SEOUfc-rt
coveted her
mteit swb,P'
for U. N Presfe!
know wheh Hw! tei
Chopti
By «itk dHl»|N ’ I ’ \
owBS ;reiptal >Nt pqlpared * '
ihtlx Eistijhipwerafi'
lit eterylJSciy warf
“I
gllnj
4.4
M»k,%terk, z
. in4/ 4roca
______jla__ _____ -
entirely new ’Mrer emerging, from/'
the House labor committee under
McConacll.
As tljie. committee’s ranking m\-
iast Con-
Retailers To Discuss
Christinas Store Hour^
The merchants committee of
the Orange Chamber of Commerce
will hold an open meeting Tues-
day at 2:30 p. m. in the assembly
room of the Orange National bank.
The meeting was called by Joe
Staudt, chairman, who urged all
retail and wholesale business
houses to send representatives,
regardless of membership In the
chamber of commerce or the mer-
chants committee.
Lhter store hours for the con-
venience of Christmas shoppers
will be discussed. In the light of
announcements of pre-Christmas
store hours adopted in neighbor-
ing cities, several merchants have
asked that the question bo open-
ed and an' earlier decision be re-
considered, he said.
Other business concerning plans
to encourage early shopping for
Christmas will be considered.
Two Vessels Due At
Docks for Rice, Ties
Two vessels arc due for loading
cargo at the Port of Orange to-
day and Tuesday.
The Bern I Nubel docked this
morning to load 4,500 sacks of
rice for Cuba.
The German motership BUbum
was due 1st* today to take on
cario of railroad cross-ties for
Belgium delivery.
rked out 8
ctory te
govern-
parties
compromise
nority jm
gress,
mine
labor,'
meijt after getting
around a table / to
trait differences. > ,
McConnell was reported to have
in mind the same sort of an ap-
proach to working out a new labor
management relations act to take
the place of Taft-Hartley.
McConnell, an investment bank-
er and not a lawyer, has never
disguised his belief that Taft-
Hartley is too legalistic and ob-
scure to be understood readily.
Called
There'tl Uf/ bo
ange*s Charter C4qr
Tuesday. A,/
Mayor ted C'tepivet said this w
morning' the riiecjing was --off/
The reason—May/>r [Cqjtfavet joj
Cobnty Judge
And Industrie J
Rector John W
Austin junket,
state highway conteiissteh. JA
The delegation '/of prapsc .of-
ficials hopes for additional state
aid in road budding ,tn the comi-
ty's critical industral \ area
Meantime, Mayor Caillavet
no new date has yjet i
conf
Fleet..|U.*
non^teh/ an yet
y’ll /V4sit the
ssteii.
lit/ 1 it >* Jr ---v - |
the first meeting ffl thi\ city's [10-
members charteXchangc\groupf
c to.
in F
Eighth wnnjr ^mimaiTderi1 <
rangetnonts irq;\Ei6enhowtr'i
, Around the My,
ried /to ioipplete iSKhug'
‘Seoul’s Mayor Kim Ttei
tdejed the work finished t
/,iSs schbdul#l two mon
jrften^Tuesdayi
hetii.fcr Eisenhow
not/ / --
Deadly Serious Note
Rickety streetcars clattered-
through the streets draped- with
hugq bannere proclaiming a wel-
come. Storekeepers covered their
windows with American and Re-
^Psaid ■ pitteic of Korea flags. Hl-clad'
cn set] for ! qteNteu skipped along, waving
tiny flag* at patfmby.
There was a deadly serious note
. q
/
■ ml
' 1
-
A:
, J
Post Office .Will Build*
Handrails in Front
The Orange post office is ad-
vertising for teds for the instal-
lation of han/irails at the front
e post office here,
R. Coalc announc-
entrance to
Post Master
ed today.
He said the handrails will be
installed to aid aged patrons in
entering the post office.
FEPC Fight in Congress Will Continue
Despite Efforts To Ktep Party Solidarity
By G. MILTON KELLY
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen.
Humphrey (D-Minn) said today
that during the next Congress he
will vigorously renew the fieht for
a federal law to forbid racial and
ether discrimination in employ-
ment.
Humphrey said he will refuse to
soft-pedal the fair employment
practices commission (FEPC) is-
sue in the interest of harmony be-
tween Northern end Southern
Democrats.
“We won’t have Democratic soli-
darity on some Issues and this h
one of them," be told a reporter.
He said he doubts that the re-
bellion of Southern Democrats
against demands by some North-
erners for such a law was much
of a factor In the Democrat * elec-
tion reversal# this year.
Bor subcommittee which Sunday
released a report which said a sur-
vey shows that state and local laws
with teeth to forbid iob discrimi-
nation eaainst minorities have had
"healthy” results.
The renort was written by Dr.
Monroe Berger, assistant professor
of sociology at Princeton univer-
sity, at the request of the subcom-
mittee. Humphrey indicated it
would be used extensively by ad-
vocates of similar federal legis-
lation.
The report said that experience
in seven state* and two cities
which have had fair employment
practice )tws since 1845 has Indi-
cated thd statutes eliminated dis-
criminatory practices with a mini-
mum of dissension.
Berger said the laws in each
case ware adopted over the pro-1
too.
South Korean army troops «nd
(See 2. Page 2)
| ORANGE JUICE
Mrs. E. W. SobHes writes as
from the family’s new address.
She says the doctor’s health (asth-
ma) is improved or they would
lie back in Orange. She says “all
news is eargerly read amt it is
tieart warming to hear of the new
polio ward and further plans for
the new hospital”. The new ad-
dress is 510 Darrell road, Caro-
lands, Burlingame, Calif.
Pet peeve (phoned in by wom-
an): Shell trucks which fling a
part of their cargo Into my yard
every time they make the sharp
comer on the narrow street at
Ninth and Main.
Letters have been forwarded
to Santa Claus from Lewis coop-
er Sims, and two others signed
Jean’s mother, Honey, Jean, Mama
and Lela.
Three presidents of the United
States have been bom In Novem-
ber. Today is the birthday an-
niversary of President Zachary
Taylor who was bom in 1784 to
become ti\e 12th president, the
14th presidbqt, Franklin Pierce,
was bom, Nov. 23, 1804, and pres-
ident Garfield on Nov. 18, 1831
Among OranoeHe who will ab-
* c r-v e birthday anniversaries
Tuesday are Doris Ellen Hardy.
Lt. Roy Bell, Mrs. M. A.
Mrs Charles Atd
Y. Bell, Clifford Burrows and
John Slaton Lae.
Y
I
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 282, Ed. 1 Monday, November 24, 1952, newspaper, November 24, 1952; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557919/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.