The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, January 17, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
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VOLUME XXXI
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Pli
ORANGE, TEXAS, MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 1 44
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CANADIAN ENVOY IS AM3ASSADQR
¡TU
KNOX PRESENTS DECORATION TO ADMIRAL HAISÉV
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By "ñichatd McMurray. Associated
Press War Editor _ -ftmww
Pravda, official newspaper ot
the communist party ot Russia,
published as "rumors from Cairo"
today that two English official
had conferred secretly with Naari
Foreign Minister Joachim von
Hitíbcntrop to determine condi-
tions for a separate peace.
"According to ^information from
reliable Greek and Yugo*! "
sources a secret meeting took
■place In one of the- seacoast cit vs'
of the Pyrenees w peninsula, be-
tween two English j officials and
von Ribbentrop," (the brief diB'
patch said, "the meeting had
aim gf finding ou^ the conditions
of a separate pcacg Wtth^tnc Ger-
mans. It is understoóa the meet-
ing did not renwjnrwithout re-
sults." //
The British^ reiterated that no
péace would be negotiated with
the Germans without the full ac-
1 cord of all the allies, including
V) Russia, The importance of the
published "rumors" lay in the fact
that they were printed at all in an
official Moscow publication.
The Russians rejected a Polish
proposal,'suggesting American and
British help in adjusting the Rus-
sian - Polish frontier
■ insisted upon the Curzon line set
by the Allies in 1919, and *>>thhfc
„ would deprive the Poles of two-
'fifffis of their 1939 territory and.a;
third of their population.
t .Thus another diplomatic crisis
wok precipita ted within the Uni'.-
' ' éd Nations • by the sharp, short.
^ : Russian announcement saying the
Soviet union Could not "enter into
official negotiations With a gov-
ernment with which diplomatic
; relations have been interrupted."
Advanced
:cw Guinea, Jai
ritan marines,
lx !
HON- UIOHTON M'CARTHY, right, shakes hands with Presidential
Secretary Stephen Early after presenting his hew credentials to*
President Roosevelt u Canadian ambassador to the United States.
Status of the Canadian envoy has been ralsed^from minister to am-
bassador for the first time in history. (International)
x-
NEGRO HELD IN
FATAL KNIFING
Roosevelt Brown Jr., a negro,
was apprehended by a negro po-
liceman Saturday night and held
following the stabbing of Eugene
i i . <7 /«pi cently has been in command.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, hereto The bulletin,, first to be issued
command the invasion ol western e" headquarters here-;;
Europe, (Qkl correspondents today followed by a United States,
he was taking oveTthe Allied wor departmant announccmcnl u
roms with the job already well' Kl"
advanced by the great work of hj<l 'spclU, a *
the air. naval and supply force^ ZXLn"
|,t* was disclosed at the same
in Wasfr-
had conferred
Headquarters
(AP) -Ani-
sóme ót
bloodiest battle
of the Southwest Pacific, * have
captured Hill 660 to dominate the
Borgon "bay ajr6a .of western New'
Britain, Gen, Douglas MacArthur
reported today.
Australians kept pace by sweep-
ing on lhrough Sio, on i\j\
nea's northeast coast and
three miles farther.
bombera Joined the vic-
tory ¡5 q de? with a heavy blow el
Japanese-sapping In the strong
"enemy baso^r'Rabaul, northeast
"Direct hits and damaging near-
rr . j. ... mac-Arthur's com-
munique, were seored - on- # Jap-
anese cruiser, a destroyer, and
seven cargo'shifts in tl|c harbew.
Returning pilots said the destroy-,
er and on .2 merchant ship Vcrc
possibly sunk. - - -
The attack- was. the first blow Uv
.be delivered against Rabaul khlp-
|)i«g by Allied dlvebombers |nd
torpedo bombors /rom the new
Bo'usiunville island airfields,' .In-
the Solomons, only 250 miles from
Much of Simpsbh harbor at, Ra-
baul 'was hidden |>y clouds,' yfi
the bombers landed damaging
blows on nine ships,'\
Marines have bjeeiv fighting on
both sides of New Britain's ^West-
ernmost tip^-Cape Gloucéal
since, sliortly' after their Dec. 2i
landing, and tl>e Jnpariese de-
fenders sacrificed noorfy'S^WO rtfen
in their effort to retain control of
the area.. .American dead and
wounded in the'invasion total 400.
Americans took the'Cape Glou-
cester, airdrome Dec. 30 and soon
thereafter began their bitter fight
for Hill 060, dominating the Bof-
gen bay sector cost of the cape.
Deluges of rain und dccply-cm-
beddca Japanese maehinegur.
posts made the battle . even more
bittci-'than the bloody struggle for
Guadalcanal, somg of the veterans
\
In lieu of a aecond DUUngulshed Service Medal Is presented by Hecrrlnry of tli<? Navy
Frartk Knox te^Admlrat William <T. Halsey. Jr., In Washington for the latters servlen In driving the
A GOLD ST*
Jap* from the South Pacific. Pictured at the ceremony arc, left to right Admiral Halsey. Mis. l!al-
seyTSecretary Kno^orid Admiral Ernest J, King, commander-Tti-chicf .of the U. B. Ocet. Admiral Hal-,
aey has been in the capital to confer on the stepped-up drive thai Hnbeing prepared against the Jap-
- — -- ^ ... .. .. .. "tales Navy photo. (International Sour.dphstc)
In the Paelflc theater. Official United States Navy photo.
'oír?,
<xxn
* **
m
5u_.
%
rtm
?t¿'M
o. ™, with . President Roosevelt and
i.t w3s dlSClOSCd 3t ine >SQiii>. . .. ,. ¿¡¡i-—j—-j—-m—r"-ttrh^"cfitrl
#¡m «-hot t t Ppn Omar N Hrnd- GciV- Marshall, U. S, cQToT oF starr *>aiCl
time that Lt.-Gen. Qmai N. uraci ■. . ■ ; Only 50 miles of sea separate
ley, who served under Eiscnhow-! ^ . , western N«w_Britain from New
er as commandei; of the Second
American Army Coi-pr írí Tunisia,
Guinea's Huon peñlñAula, where
the. Australian ground forces oc-
(Offlclal news oftrationing, nutri
Hon. war pronrams. and other
artlvlUe affecting the home
—prepared by the Orange In-
formation Service Corps) ■>
WARTIME COOKING
Many housewives say, "lhj)j*c arc-
never enough bf wn_sluiDps loi
meats, butter and «hortvning
there may itotlbe 1>b maui
a series of Wartime Cooking
Classes beginning Jan.- 25, 9:30 u>
ll:3(¿ in \thc Navy Addition Rec-
reation Buildrfig. Miss Vera
Thormaiin, assisted l>y Mrs. ltulji
Wilson; home counsellor^ ot Or-
mge Ind. Schools- and FiKlera!
Public Housing, .will conduct the
classes.
ItATlON FACTS
Meats, Knts, Kisli and
'¿M Wfe
1 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦^# #4
LEt'S DO
SOMETHING
ABOUT IT
« « * • ♦ ♦♦ • • ♦♦♦ • •
IJISKRANCIWSEMRNT- FACKI
vjtufls thf'atory of from eight t«
thousand men and women o
Oiimge county'at this time
| spile ot the fact'that this is th<
year t > elect officers from call
stable to president. The alarminr
fact exists UiH. ,counting today
there are juit tiiirimi more day
In which , the eight wxjnine thoii
sand people may procure a pol
tax rcctypt that will hj: i-i^uircf
for the t.-xercise nf Ihc Nght\o
suffrage. There are thousand? <>
people who stand now bereft o
the right to vole .here or cist-
v liei-e, on anything at any tim
tills year. ; ■
wounded maH>\The stabbing was j,L; Móntgom'ciy
*
'
"
' 4
stiid to have occikrcd arotihd jB:30
o'fcloek Saturday night in the Vi-
cinity of the Peteway drug alon.
COURT HOÜST
AND CITY HALL
BRIEFS
British grotiiid forces for the in-
vasion.
x At Algiers, pen. Sir Henry ¡
Maitland Wilson also focused new
attehtion on the invasion in his ! _The Orange high school' Tiger
first public appearance as com-1basekeiball. team w'" play hosts
^marider )of the Mediterranean] to the South Park Gócenles heh-
theater. He said the object of the tomorrow night in the opening
shipping base at Madang,
¡inline miles from Sio.
125
Italian campaign is
>mc,b
to capture
Rome, but that the Mediterran-
ean front extends from the Bal-
confcrence game of the 1944 sea-
son. The game, will be played In
the new Senior high school gym-1
¡>«♦•>♦♦>♦ *««♦«♦♦> «>« |might
á.
', A marriage license issued to J.
W. Luman and Miss Aline Wai-
ters, "of Silsbec, was, of record
Monday at the office o? the Or-
ange county clsrk.
jkans to the^yrenecs find attacks nasium starting at ?:45 o'clock and
mad
Ms
•imi
I
Rev. H. S. Boydston
To Be Speaker On
Rotary Program
Rev. H. S. Boydston, pastor of
the Church of„ Christ, will be the
s| cakcr on the program at the
weekly meeting and luncheon of
Ihc .Orange Rotary club to be held
Tuesday at noon Inr^lhfe ^ollgnd
muer jrpom- James
nron witftBÍ'W1 '(l'l'Wl
-man on this occasion. President
H. C. Cranfill will preside:
- , —_
Robfrers Enter
Home At 51 f Sixth
*t
Burglars* j
• i ;V...
Mm
...y-'jffljfil
fill Sixth street Sati
and escaped with personal ' be-
longings and $8 In cash. The po<
lice department made an investi-
gation. No arrests had been made
Sunday afternoon.
it, including sbuthern France^
Gen. Eisenhower esyjressed the
eu-
greatest satisfaction with the lie
tenants assigned him for the job
of Smashing Into Hitler's • fortress.
He, stressed to a. press conference
that-his .is to be an Allied coftt-
mand of Allied operations, with
questions of national prestige sub-
ordinated to military efficiency.
He Was highly s pleased to be
able-to confer en route with both
President Roosevelt and ' Prlmt'
Minister Churchill, The píímc
minister, he- added, was lobklng
much better and apparently was
on the road Jo recovery when b>:
saw him.
anywharesalong admission will be 4pc |ot- qtíuPU,
and 20 cents for students, it was
announced today by T. W. Og.v.
assistant superintendent:
, 'fjie.Tigers have won 7 and lost
7 practice games 50 far this sea-
son and team is improving
rapidly, coaches say.
fS 'r ■>v ^ .
Mrs. T. J. Grant
Dies Here After
Short Illness
Moré Entries Are
Needed for Lion
Boxing Carhiyal
Beaumont; Tex., Jan. n' iiíp)—
Entries are coming in slowly'and
there's still plenty room in the
filth annual Beaumont Golden
ó loves fieldfor amateur box^rf.
10 years of age or over who reside
in Southeast Texas or Southwest
bouisiana.
Interested-youngsters are urged
to enter the fistic carnival which
is scheduled at tbe Be a u moil t City
j Auditorium Monday, Tuesday and
[Wednesday, 'January 31 and Feb-
) ruary I and 2 where they will be
boxing in .eight classes from 112-
pound through the hpavy divi-
sion.
The tournament ísv, sponsored
London. Jan. fl. IAP), A jk w-
?rful new Soviet offensive Wmj
¡weeping toward the ÍO-mUe di<-
Uint Latvian border today, hur'-
ng the Germans back aloni' a
line - mile front, while in old Po^
and far to ihc south Red army
ipearhesds were driving toward
he big rail and highway junctUm
>f Rovno.
Asserting last night that the.
«W drive to the north of Nev< l
ilrtta(Jy had i^wept up 40 localities
ind eotsthe important Notiosokol-
tiki ra i may below Lake limen,
Moscow anhqunced at the—..«¡ami*ÍÜsl
ime that Gehv Vatutln's Fit t
Jkraine army hbd killed 100,000
Germans and eaptih^d 7,000 in
hrce weeks oi the maWve offe >-
;fv¿ which tub carried the Hti - ,
ans 55 miles Inside old Pokmrl.
L. The Rett army also forged, alhsjii
ivWhite RuwTO, crossing the fi
(ver to capture Novosclki, 17
nifcii north of Kallnkovichi ii) the
'"'ripet marshes, and reaeiung a
>oint 17 miles from the old Polti.li
Milder in a drive toward Pins*;,
1 bout 100-mile* away.
Moscow dispatches said a coitl
vavp accompanied by sharp frosla
tad returned to White Rifs
•lard freezes in the Pripet marshes
vould afford */lrm terrain í r
anks. ' . '¡¡jig
Tlie Russians told, M repulain'i;
icttvy tank and infantry, couiitr - v|
itlaeks yesterday in the Vinuil .1
md Uman sectort to the south
filling 2,000 Germans and destroy-
or 138 tanks. Sióckholm "die- '
latchos quoted a Berlin military
ipokesman air laying that soma
ted army units had lunged acroia
he Bug river near Vinnitsa, only
50 miles from the vital Warsaw-
jdessa railway which' feeds th«r
Germans In the Dnieper, betid.
The new Soviet offensive north
if Nevet: apparently caused Ger-
nan propagandists some anxiety
)ne German; broadcast declared
■he Russians were ready to thrmv
1,000,000 men in a majoir sweni
ownrd the Baltic states. The
ia*l - controlled Scandinavian
h bureau quoU^T a Ffciw;^ i
nilltaty s|H)kcsman as saying "w¿i
re conVW-cd some of the blM tl-
JUítJbfiUlesísbet ween great ■ i h1 tfe . -
Aitií m--MÍiiá><itít_ t" be fiHMit; "
jv; . . a j:".
'Ittg really a game _ this busi-
ness of eotinting stamps ibid o'
choosing-foods your family need
every day, then scheming up yp«
I>eti7,lng menus that get hearty
approvals fmm all.,
Let us look at some of ' tin
''rules" of the same:
1st. (and1 this is a mui.O "Thuw
precious points must, go as far ¡if
possible'.'. • - , • :
.. 2nd. Choosing foods the famii>
like will always -g^t cheei's. iVbn-
the,sidelines.
3rd>i Variety in the combina-
tions and prepáratiori of the tooilf
is essential if you are to stay on
the winning side.
4 th. Learn to choose thost
foods that are low in point .vaW
but. high in food values.-™'
5th., Do' not let the garbage can
cheat you of precious points and
food! , He's a sly fellow that must
be watched closely.
flth. keep up your morale b>
learning the tricks that also" say
\MriT7npia Elizabeth Grant. 30
dlcH at a local h(ttpitali,?at \5:30
The Allied air fleet's poundinpjo'clock Sunday aftemmin folliiw-
of German^, the navy's defeat-oí' ¡n? u short illness.
^ transport j« she and her family-lived at 80/"
of mettNipd sup! - ..
ganizatlon^btkvast stores of ¿up-1 was a native of Baltimoig and ha<
plies and equipmenjin the United
Kingdom all drew pra%.' as es-
sential, preliminaries to
Elsenhower's brrival was
hounc^d yesterday by the pewly-
ished "supreme headquar-
Force." , which disclosed that, he
had Conferred with Priinc Minis-
ter Churchill arid President
Rtwsevelt en foute to Britain from
the Mediterranean, where he re-
——,J>- .n ..—1—^
X
WANTEDr-Mewspaper Delivery Boys
MUSt HAVE BICYCLE - GOOD PAY
' " •v .• . /h'' JA., *■<•:* '' >'}'" • ii-tit. J-%! •' ^
Route* Open io Riverside. North Orange
and Other Sections of City
-A FRONT OR PHONE lil t
At
lived- in Orange for about á year
and a half. She Was a member of
Ukj Methodist ciiurch.
" SurvlVittif lWr are her; husband
J. Grant; three sons.
Chai"ie3^~John and TKotfias J.
of Orange; h<
mother. Mrs, ÉTlía^eth Sapping-
ton, of Baltimore; <in« brother,
Charles Levingston, of líerfolk,
Va.; a fialf brofcer, Luther Sat
pington, of'Baltimbre; two sisters.
Mrs. Kathering Thompson, Unci
Mrs. 'Dufice Gróbble, both of Boi-
timore. ; .
Services will be held at the Fu1
ler funeral chapel Tuesday with
Rev. Éd Barcus, . pastor of the
First Methodist church; officiating,
after Which the body will be taken
overland to MeryvHls, La., for a
at the'eemetery. with
direction of the
¿curly to lhc licaúmoflt tloS.n"™' JW ""l , ,
better, the Orange tíoünty Chap
ler of the Red C^bss is to*spf"i8'i
•fre; Deportment
Sswe^
to charity
There arc only 32 entries ®
date in the "eight cla.ssjsand._be.
I ween 75 and 100 lads are needed
bi the field to make the tourna
entry list must pick up. liV a
golden opportunity for the teen-
age fighters. . The bid amTOW
veterans are gone and seven of
the eight tRles are open this yeari. . • . „lith,
Ontv Wilb^t- M.o I nd Sunday night.
Processed Foods War Ration
took IV Green Stamps: I), K, and
bow Valid, expire Jan. 20,-
G, II and 1, now valid, expire
Feb, 20.
_ Point freu processed t'nxln ef-
ectlve from Jan. 2 include grape-
fruit juice and citrus juices; green
•>r wax fjcaiiH aud sauei-kraut.
Shoes War Ration Book III:
Mrplano Stamp No. I good indeli-
litely; Stamp No Hi,. War Ra- .
ion Book I. good for one imlr..oí j '
shoes, incleíifiilely. tt, _ mltL
Sugar War Ration Book IV |
troiihle ratigeii trorti petty rob
belies, fist fight , car thefts an.
1I11111k. to murfiet with the ovt-i
flow 'reaching Orange w¿iere4jór
IsdU'tlon ceases as far as puni*h
merit '¡is concerned. . Th.r're- migh'
be a solution to tills unfavorabi'
.condition if «ú'ps wer
taken.
MORE CIVIC; ACTIVITIES
ii
ai Id seem tii be In orde
me in view of the mulU-
which tin
DliUili Will I\tl l Mil I Jtinif i> i ... . " ; . .. ¿.
•Sugar" Stamp No. 30 good for j m «t d.OIl during th.
. iiw * .inn in ... Ma,-,.h 1 next: 12'monlhs and-perhaprf I
long
9 valifti 1 Without doubt,, conditions wil
more and more unusuai
> lbs, Jan. I tí to March 31
Gasoline: "A" No.
hrough Jaatiary 21. "JlP', "Cl„ .... ... •
B2", "C2,". arid "TT" valid until I w,ih ,vmH th.'t ,pee„TT act.o,.
used.
1 er.
j beci >me
...
nlles wide, and five miles
nto the German lines and :¡ew
Nasva to cut die Noyosokoliiiki-
Ono railway "over which the (Sei~
■nans hatl transferred fresli tci/opg
to the front line." .
Stoves: Cerlifi ca tiisf_j«ui' ret
or all new héatlng and ciMikin;"
stoves (electric st«>v«H-aie except
:dí arc obtained at the War Prict
'ind Riitibriin^-Boards. •
Other Rationing: Certificate)
or automobiles, bicycles, typewri
.crs, rubber footwear ami other
■estricled commi^iilier are obtain-
ilile at .War Prtce and Ilationini
toaids.'
Pneumonia Gain -
SMrnsey Infant
Dies Early Today
Of Dip the ría
• Larry Arnold Gurnsey^ afted
three, died <>f diphtheria at a Ur-
eal hospital this- morning shortly/
after midnight. * .
Surviving are parents, Mr. an<!
Mrs. A. H. Gurhsey; one taruther,
Ardyl and one sister, Peggy Anifc:
of Orange; grand parents, Mr. and •
Mrs, Guy Guinsey, of K-idgsbera.
California; Mr. and Mrs. /jpsear
Rupt, iff Peleo, Kansas
Funeral arrangements incom-
plete Monday will be announced;'
by the Fuller funeral home.
Three alarms were answered by Pneumonia cases ir5 Orange dur-
fthe city fire department over Sun- iiig the past week* totaled 34 and
A she-J , of this number 3t> cases were oí
beiidiri¿~"íH3capIéd by (he offtKTKc -vñTJs typí1 and four of^ tirrf'
in "many ways W)l| be tiecessary
(n many lines of eudeoviir, t|i.'
?lids" are being well, maintained
vhiii- in others this situation does
10I prevail.
,3. R. Pless Dies
Di Injuries From
Fall At ShipyaTd
« George Raymond Pies , 4,'i,. oút' j
.id'-' tfiHciiimst , for the <>.i/i's<ili- j
buiRiliig division; "dlvd tluec ange. aica of _
o'clock Sunday morniiig ai a iutai. at «'thick Siindfiy
hospital as a result of a basal slñiif j" *,/ a |UJltl" f. „.f::
Pete Ragusa, 60,
Dies of Pneumonia
Pete Ragusa, 00,
farmer, nod
Will
' There afe pb fees'and out-of-
town boxers will be housed at the
VMCA as long as they wlri.
bung boxers are urged to hur-
ry afón¿ their entries to the Gol
den Glovfejt<iedltor care- BesumonV
re'ot the Uwls~6t tB^ Bet- regalBr ty^g.
Ulr Construction company in the;ed Were: influenza, II ; ' sore
vicinity Of the municipal" docks, throat, 1; mcnnlngltis, 1; miimps, ¡
was badly damaged. A slight, 2; malaria, 3; venereal dlseasa, 0.
blaze occurred at the Union suie
on Front and Seventh streets and
a car fire occurred in the sou them
ly after midnight Saturday nigh.'
The body was shipped by th
■■luiai i« a „. Fuller funeral homp to Birming-
A slight decrease In the numbe'r ^ism, Ala., where ftmeral and bu-
. " .ul i "nvt r~"T«Vn tfnnna
Orauge for more than 30 ycm:>,
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs, r
fir to the
Hotel
Journal br
Beaumont -Lions'
Beaumont,, giving.
weight and address If no
lent entiy blank Is available.
Oxford, NGMC. (AP) — The
Buck, Burnetii family ought to re-
member Pearl Harbor. They oam-
their twin a boy and a girl,
' ind Harbor.
part of TFie city.
of influenza cases with an increas-
ed total in pneumoh: cases wot,
nutetPin the TfiBTTcpfift submitted
at th/;' Orange City - County
rial fierviWs wiirtSkc piacc some
time Tuesday. 1 -
NO AEKBST8
ramr-. • !
k^For the first time within mem-
ory" of many Orange policemen
there waa not a single case show-
ing on the city recorder's docke*.
" nday morning as a raaoSiM
yitles over
——_
health unit.
mem
riKE STOrS WAGES
iftií-ned Jtlmber often results In
the tan of direct and IhdUeci
wages, taxes and other benefits.
A carelessly thrown
upset the economy of
7""" "Has
Surviving aie'.his wife, mn.
Grace Aileen Pless, of Orange* his
mother Mrs. Ida Pless of Birming-
ham, AH<: bne brother, Wra. Pleie;
of Detroit/MiclL; two sisters. Mr
W. A. Dinlel\ ot Birmingham;
Mr*. J-B. ^ri*ll, of Mobitei.^a.
- Mr, Pless, whi with his wife
K-ean eame-te^Qrangc about a year and
he whoU a hall ago, waa
Frances Ragusa, of Orange; fotn* ;;
sons, Anthony and Chester
gusa, of Houston; Sam and t'li
les Ragusa,- of Oranos;
daughters, Mrs. Lana ~
of Houston; Hrs. T1
nia, of Ragley, La.¡
Lepria. of Orange; aL
children. HH|
• Funeral
10 o'clock
St., Mary's,
Rev.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, January 17, 1944, newspaper, January 17, 1944; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth142880/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.