The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1952 Page: 2 of 8
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THE ORANGE LEADER
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1952 • j
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Published
THE ORANGE LEADER
Bunday morning and daily meb afternoon
except
vmurd*», at SOSA Front Street, by the Orange Leader Publishing
Coal Diggers
On Protest'
Mine Strike
Second
I
i Jft ••• SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per Weed ......15c
Entered Jan, l, 1903 at Post Office. Orange, Texas, as
n»«* Matter Under Art of Congress March 3, 1879.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCLATED PRESS .
The AwrciatH Press ts entitled exclusively to the use for
republteotiot? nf all the torsi news printer in thfc newapaper as well
as all AP news dispatches ‘ • 1 . *
'Continued
maxed a two-year running feud
net ween n.renberj of the Orange
bousing board ajrd the Fort Worth
fieW office of PHA. The hassle
, >e*en when the local authority.
{insisting that pine trees
Pine Grove project wouli
trees in the
would die as
meet an emergency situation
created by polio in that city. >
Mias Nelson is itltl here. She
lpcmd* eight hours a day earing
for the new polio Ireataaent
eider's two iron lung patients.
Kane tie Webb and George Bar-
ry.
Orange Is Featured j
In Texas Parade'
-7-
(Centinued from Page 1J
Several pages of what
William B. Alderman refers to as
“Texas Truths About Orange
lisfof thwe>wh|ic!h W roan™
«.as5^*5£|Sr ssus sStfe as>sfaas»
asked pernttssio., to remove all of 800.500 united fund to be raised t,on' «.
she nines. < in a joint campaign with the com- The «®ver of Publisher Ike Ash-
The PHA development section ' munity' chest starling next week. burn ® attractive, informative
turned thumbs down on that cte- * ■/ . --—-:- monthly publication also is derot-
tin ring that destruction o: the# i m «* to this city and the text of the
Is Proposed Road District Necessary?
• (An Editorial)
There is virtually unanimous agreement amonij the-
people of the Orange area abotjt the emergency nature of
a
crossings. Feu taxpayers vvo’lld oppose anv reasonable
plan tor getting this job done quickly.
There is bv no means unanimous agreement that this
project should be tied to a ?600,t)00 road building and
repair program mostly benefiting Precinct 2.
Much of the opposition ;U> the combined undertaking
;s going to come from taxpayers in the city of Orange.
In general, they’re willing to chip in for a reasonable
share of the cost of renovating the ’bridges but they are
going to need a lot. of selling before accepting the rest
of the overall plain
The net effect of the proposed road-bridge 'program,
as Orange taxpayers see it, would be to add about 12
cents per $10fi valuation to their annual tax bill without
niving them value received, They already are rankled by
the fact that populous a Peas adjacent to the corporate
boundaries use municipal services but bitterly oppose
every gesture aimed at bringing the outside areas into
the city limits .„ .
The Orange gitv taxpayers realize, of. course, that the
high municipal tax rate is a big factap in the reluctance
<f the unincorporated communities to join the corporation.
But many also feel that something could be worked out
whereby it would be to the advantage of the adjoining
By ROWLAND EVANS JR.
WASHINGTON (AP)-The pro-;
test strike of 150.000 miners crept
through the nation's coal fields and
producers pressed for price in-
cresser today as the Wage Stabi-
lization board (WSBt plagued by’
Tinsley went «v the Lake Charles
police department radioed and
£2, raid. “For your information there
is a meteor coming down in the
Date Sot for Area
Nixon Appearance
‘Continued from Pxm ti
trees would detract from the
beauty tjj the project. After a
dissension, scheduled another at-1 lengthy argument. PHA finally ..
ss zdkrjssfevszzz iSS" 1 rrrss trz
story, “'Orange . . . Industrial
Giant on the Gulf.” is liberally
sprinkled with scenes of local ac-
The date has been act for Sen
Richard Nixon’s October appear-
we in this area, plana for which
. , , . first were announced by the Lead-
Tinsley said he went outside, or about lw0 weefcs agQ
1
spotted the object and watched
while it -shaked“ through the
skv. He said it ‘ wont in all direc-
tions, sometime? at unbelievable
speed, and .then Ppprnreri station-
: ry at timV<”
It was^gp mrieor. he declared,
because they always fall
town.
The police officer said he tele-
The Republican nominee for
vice president will speak at a Tex-
as-Louisiana raliy et the Jefferson
county airport on the afternoon
of Monday; Oct. 27.
Notice of the time of Senator
-K;
Don Hinga, widely known Hops- tihoned his wife and she. too.
ton newsman. Wrote .the story, watched the object which at that
straight Nixon’s area speech has been sent
to Frank J. Mdlloy of Orange who
helped arrange the appearance.
Malloy said today the California
solbn is scheduled to reach the.
, iPriee Stabilization was awaiting1
WSB action before considering of— I
Removal Cost—$3 070 i iLseri eL^'■ TrU!iian ®c* Many of the photographs were -ime had turned to A bright blue Jefferson *'
SETlS>C!!£r» 1. ■»«*• - •— -—«prl" - *•
firially the many requests received Pines and another in the Arthur
from producers for a ceiling price. Robinson homes hg\e died, juist
increase. ', ! ts the housing authority predicted _
Labor nrembers of the WSB. who a,,r! *'"* 1°*nR to cost ieadtn* ro!c in
angrily" rejected a “suggestion’' -35.u*u to get them removed now.
Economic Stabilizer Roger —---—*" “‘,J
from
Putnam that the WSB postpone
its study of the case foe several . „ ,, ,
davS. were, ready to give their «* by biuHtngs anq utility corn-
approval tothqkl 90-a-dav wage:P»nF overhead >inee and <ht job
The high figure, ree experts told
toe board was due to the fact
that the trees arc now surround
boast. ” {of removing them will be tipie-
The increase, negotiated bv John' ‘-•onsumihf- and tedious.
I- Lewis last month, cannot be Tbe rese.we find for which the
paid until the WSB gives its ap-
proval because it is nearly twice
as high as that automatically ap-
procable under WS7> cost-of-living
regulations.
But labor members of the WSB.
Kazi practices although he hadl ** » nickinger^s studio, is of]
Edrbne
K - — freeing
from Niui domination.
Compared to Nazis
The speech was prepared for
leading before the national Jewish
Welfare V- rd. In it the mesident ^ToTZm°^n^t
stacked the McCarran - Walter ^ 1 ‘ ,he permanent
immigration bill, passed by Con-
ifress’over his veto. ! j
He said the bill adds ud to “the
,°^'G;lra^ superiority de-l (Omttnue.) from Page
velooed by tlie Nazis.
Truman then went on to men- j land of Hokkaido and 32
activities at the Mac Arthur drive
highway information center.
Hinga’s story centers around Or-
ange's four booms and the appar-
ently successful steps its leaders
have taken to make the latest and
t
reas to become annexed to the city if enough thought
were* given to thf* matter.
Certainly the situation isn’t going to be resolved by
the creation of a new political subdivision which would
only overlap the functions of those already existing with
i-unsequent unnecessary overhead expense.
Wouldn’t it be more judicious under the circumstances
to go ahead, with some plan to get the bridges rebuilt,
thus eliminating the emergency, then to take a little time
to decide whether the read problem can best be solved
by the county government through resources already
available to it Mr by bringing the areas in which most of
the road improvements are proposed into the city limits
and- letting the municipal go\ eminent do the job?
First National bank was desig-
nated as depository will be set up
< ut 0? Interne from the lowment | Truman then went on to men-! land of Hokkaido and 32 miles
projects tu meet future ooliga- ; non Rcooblican senators who ■ Russian-occupied Yri island.
1>°ns- _ ' ; wiped the measure through The sharply worded U. S. note
The .hour ns commissioners wil’ Congress. -»ddine that Eisenhower ydrised Moscow “to consider the
which is composed of labor, indu*-‘hoki their annual meeting and ■ yan not ‘'escape responsibility’’ *ra\-e consequences which can
try and public members, have ai<( election of officers at the central because he is now endorsing these frwn its reckless practice, if
gued that other wa»e rules justify j nffice oo Saturday. Oct. 25, elect- ! same senators. ' “ .Hs-sinn
the increase. They say it is neith- jing a chairman and vice-chair- One of. the .‘enators Truman
e;* inflationary or unstabilizing. man. J. Cuilen Browning has been - mentioned was Richard Nixon
Industry members, however.: sen,iijg an interim term as chair- , ^isenhowei’s runaing mate,
firmly reject th^t thesis. They say naan arid Dexter Shelley is con- ELronhowsr. virtually ignoring
they have seen no evidence to In-]eluding a full term as \ic* chair- ! '-is Demorratic opponent Gov
dicate the pay raise is within exist- man. Both were reappointed to 1 Adlai Stevenson, continued to lash
ing ceilings. -he board by\ city commission out at tlie T:-urian admii^tre-
. Industry, meanwhile, pressed for:. r.rlier this week.
j either a lifting of ceilings, or an ----
increase, with th^ OPS lsnaintkin-
1 ing a wait and see" attitude pend-
| ing outcome of the WSB ruling, j
One official told a reporter that!
irom 25 t,i 30 telegrams, pft* nu-
■ meioas telephone calls, have been.
received from producers urging
? the. OPS to give them a ceiling (
J price adjustment^
-3-
lion's recoid of soentiiig. Korea,
roirruotion and v. hat be said was
is failure to get “a better peace?'
'Continued hum Px*e 1)
!
■tT
-1-
C-fitmued from F.ge 1)
us knit and sendinz
lu nrlihiwrinj cities.''
tins) ness
-Soguess »ai«j Uierc was :title if
-as* com: l,.ii"M i shifts: the pro-.
•j'nsed rt-c n!*sg firafte-’ b> the
. ity's, zoning brord.
■ "Tlx sc five imp.' V .aues<
tommendad. “did a thorough and
< oosckntiouf job. Where they err-
ed' they have o‘ftmt to suggest
nangr- in their plan. Tb-sv dki a
>i>mpletfc job of studying tbe city's
eed for irowtb "
, Ndsvees 3’’''* several others
Were especially alarmed today as
be rerult of rn^rponernent of a
white hearing on zoning Which
ran been sclieiiulcd fur Nos-. 7.
City cornr, lissinn called it off
rtuirsriav r,n a technical: :v
Nocnes* el.-rsed. “There's
somethin'; on thei don't
waul anvone to know about."
If the c.tv isn't incline i to act
.41 z.'ning. Nogvess said he and
. few ofht'c wire ready.
Xosiw-s- has csmsuiieri with at-
FATAL HEART ATTACK
CORPUS CHRIST1 (AP) — A
justice of the peace ruled Wednes-
day that Joe Nagel, 41, Alice, died
i.of a heart aftjtJt Nagel’s body
was found shortly after midnight
Wednesday morning .in the intra-
coastal canal. Nagel operated t ie
llice.
tee Box D. ive-irt at Alice.
quit nursing care.
Unable to locate nurses any-
, here else, toe hospital appealed
to the county chapter of the Red
Cross and it sot busy. Within an teratUicks
..mazingly short time three regis-
tered nursef recruited by tt» Red
Crags in the Midwest were on
.heir way to Orange.
Two of mree were Sister. Helen
; nd Cathe int' Lukachic. The Red
Cross foun.; them way up in Far-
mington. .Mo. The.third, Judith
' rone Nelson, was brought here
all the way from Wisconsin.
The nurses reached, her* pn
Aug. 3 ann their arrival eased a
JOE PALOOKA
torneya and hopes for legal action
to an effort hi break the -zoning
code t<> ne mit thp expansion of] critical situation which many
business. 1 j oc-al peopk c 'icerned tvRh the
"There nr several of us stand- l^jol o situation tearing out their
tog by right now with plans ancjlt&ir.
money remiv to move " he argued, i The loci ! nursing shortage hao
“But we can't, the city commission !c ased eo: siderably by early
by failing to ca'i this inning hear- I September ami sri the Red Cress
■ng had iit ri air hand*. Business ! was able*tp send the Misses, Luka-
■nn’t just rtop ilke ’hat." chic on to Abilene. Tegg^jw Tbfc
(Continued from Puce 11
claimed 3.000 Allied troops were survived,
annihilated'' in intense Red coun-
from Oct.
bivadcast. monitoreri | _ J|
'aid the Communists shot down 13
.Allied warplanes and damaged 32
others during the period.
Allied fighting men continued to
pile up Red casualties at a rate
approaching that of the first two
flaming weeks of October.
The Eighth army said U. &.
troops since Tuesday on Triangle
persisted in. of attacking without
provocation the aircraft of other
states.”
It rejected the Soviet claim,
made wi a Russian note of Oct
12. that the bomber was over So-
viet territory and opened fire on
two Soviet fighter planes before
it disappeared.
Moscow was asked to furnish
an immediate report on the re-
sults of a search operation be-
lieved to have been carried out
i by a Soviet patrol boat operating
from Suisho-to island, and to pro-
-ide full information about any
crew members who might have
At the time he saw It, Tinsley
said, the abject was “much
lower than when Sparks first
tootled t«” He said it finally
disatipeared from his view be-
hind trees which obstructed his
vMdn. He said it might finally
have fallen, resulting in the oc-
currence reported later in the
morning.
The Lake Charles Air Force baae
public relations office told the
Leader this afternoon that its
wings intelligence section had
ing for a mammoth rally which is
expected to attract thousands of
persons from over Southeast Texas-
and Southwest Louisiana. „
Navy Buildinv* Due
‘Face Lifting* Soon
been tpina unmercifully since
morriine to unraii'el the mvs-
Thc Orange naval station's ad-
ministration building and two
other structures here will get a
facet lifting” soon, the Navy re-
vealed today.
Eighth naval d strict headfluar-
i ters it New Orleans is advertis-
early!
t*rv surroundin'? the object in the ing fpr bi-tv to clean and paint
^ . the iidiriniftration building^ the
An Air Fores spokesman sa>d, officers c’uh ^nd the bachelu:
Ute base h«4. recehed numerous, ouart<jrs. Such bids will be open-
reports about the object, from as
far away as Mississippi, but had
not been aHc to identify it or ac-
count for if.
Two other theories, neither con-
firmed. were advanced bv wav of
explanation for the earth tremor
beard here at mid,-momine. Re«i-
“ai who felt the tremor and heard
the dull boom which followed
fd Nay. 3 a* 2 p. m. in New Or-
teans. | •
Tuey call tor. bidding cootrac-
lors to furnish labor, materials
and equipment for the job.
&u!*« for Cab rivers
^Modified by Police
Order* tv Orange taxi rah
®-nL The Orangeite Hurt* Back
At Truck Turns Over
.Albert L. LeLeux. 26. of 1464
Sholars street suffered serious
back injuries today shortly before
8 a. m. when the pickup truck he
was driving turned over on High-
way 87 about four miles southwest
of Orange
«airt his experience suggested drivers We been modified hv
cause was a dirtant explosion. ^ tocaj
Remrterv remembering news . . - . . . .._
stories of whole cities tarred bv A n"w ‘’"rf’1'' ,ssucd bv AcUnr
the shock wave which results
when a ict plane nulls out of a
that
have
5-sa*r£f h*<^ or "ounde<1 in a Claybar ambulance where
3.<au kroinwe. ’ X-rays were immediately made of
He was rushed to City hospital-
wWn
supersoak dive suggested
some hot rod pilot may
touched off the tremor.
Kent L. Franks, telephone
company maintenance me-
chanic. first reported it to the
i Leader. Franks mid he waa sit-
ting on a desk at 0:41 a. m.
when he felt the brick telephone
exchange sway, noticed the
windows were rattled and heard
somethin* ths* “sounded like a
drum.”
] Police Chic, f..' B. Hayden will
uerniit mid? passengers to ride in
] the front seat of cab* with the
j driver. v f
Cabbie* are ftrhidden to carry
, women p- srengers in the front
|Wit. ■■■'|
City Firemen Put Out Trash
And Sawdust Fires Here
ABSENTEE VOTING GROWS
Absentee voting was/ up to 17
in Orange county today with Oct
31 as a deadline ror casting ab-
sentee ballots ir the Nov. 4 gen-
eral election. Ballots may be cast
his back to determine the extent
of his injury. ^ s.
_ _ 4_
SWEETHEART NAMED
DENTON (AP)—A Texas State
College for Women sophomore—
Clair Wil!k>m* of San Antonio—
until October's oose in the office; is the 195? Texas A and M college
of County Clerk Sadie Stephens. Sweetheart
TWO ARE INDICTED
WASHINGTON (AP) — Jacob
Freidus and Larry Knohl, figures
ih the congressional investigation
of former .Assistant Attorney Gen
eral T. uunar Caudle, wer
dieted today on charges of making^ vas where the fvjuthern Pacific
talae statements to the Rcconstruc-1 .ailroari right- l-w*y irtterserb
'lion Finance corporation. ! r,flh street N'p t;.mage was lister
I City firemen were called on to
j rut out two sawdust and one
u-ash tiro corlv today and late
1 Thursday, ‘Fife Marshal Raymond
j Horn re putted today.
The sawdust arc today was re-
ported at 9:30 a. m. netrr the
ifurrav Ire company on
rt rp**t. Thursday’s was
Stork ,‘treet bridge o\er
were in-! AdaipOJo.' ■ >u. end the trash fire
«IUC-.JUh_ ha ik,
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SEE WHAT A PEEFECT WPlNS
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By Mel Graft RUSTY RILEY
By Frank Godwin
Y ^ WfT thA- W NC.-TMC \ 7 THEN \ / APPA«NTLV-
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rrs killer cotstsi , -V F& m ttoei
IM AN ORPHAN, CAP'S
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KNOW, CAVE AN? WANTS?
take MS AWAY.' a
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TO i-EAVS MILCSTDNS
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BIG SISTER
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BAS FtACKSENORrA^N ExAV^"E'
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trouble w'rrrt all op us was we waste?
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WAV TO RUN A RANCH.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1952, newspaper, October 17, 1952; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558642/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.