The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 280, Ed. 1 Monday, November 26, 1951 Page: 1 of 6
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The Orange Leader
VOLUME XLVm Member Associated Press ORANGE, TEXAS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1951
6 Pages
NUMBER 280
SIX THOUSAND DRUM STICKS COMING UP—Three thousand
baby chicks in the four brooders above are getting started in the
newest of three broiler houses opened in Orange county in the past
two weeks. These are at the place of Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Risinger
(extreme right)at Rebeck crossing just north of Orange. The Rlsln-
gers opened their broiler house last Friday. Others in the picture, left
to right, are Sid J. CaiUavet, executive secretary of the Orange Cham-
ber of Commerce; Gus Harris, manager of the Farmers Mercantile
company, and Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Campbell, owners of the Husky
****.r*®1* , Chick hatchery, all of whom cooperated in brining this new industry
Nov. 29 (AP)—General to Orange county. (Photo by Flickinger’s Studio),
right D. Eisenhower sternly
top Haggling, Ike
Commanders
Atlantic Pact
U. S. Agrees to Private
Arms Talks With Reds
Negotiators Pinpoint Buffer Zonei?*!"^1
psrassr S5Ssr Sue*
rned Atlantic pact command
today to stop haggling over
»nd appointments, forget
livioual national glory and “at.
?t the impossible" In building
Western security against ag-
rton by pooling their sov-
eignty.
'He declared
trope's defense line
Now At Last We’re Starting to Raise Our Own
MlimpS Hits By Christmas Now Attdck Hits
Schools Here <”»»,*»*!■ UN Troops
By Robert B. Tuckman
Mumps today was cutting MUNSAN, Korea, Nov. 26—
deeply into attendance at the (AP)—Allied and Communist
By John Randolph
Over Its Files To
Tax Fraud Probers
By B. L. Livingstone
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26
PAWS, Nov. 26 (AP)—The
united States agreed today to
get together with Russia for
private disarmament talks as
suggested by a group of Asian-
Arab states, but expressed doubt
as to the usefulness of the move.
Iraq, Pakistan and Syria sub-
mitted a resolution to the 60-
member United Nations political
e SBflSHatKSHSaSSSsE
ere never will be peace with
* was Interpreted as abruptly. Under the prodding of
definite reference to inclusion gid J. CaiUavet, executive secre-
German forces in the Atlantic tary of the chamber of commerce,
£*. trFY‘ ' " County Agent A. J. McKenzie,
The Atlantic pact supreme com- and Orange feed stores, three
ander addressed the North At- broiler houses have been placed
antic treaty of organization
*iATO) chiefs of staff in ad-
ncc of an appearance before
he 12-nation NATO council. He
slated to teU its members they
nust step up their defense efforts
f?r peace through strength.
As hC spokes, qualified sources
eported that Britain again had
timed down a proposal to set up
American-led North Atlantic
aval command at once. Britain
committed, on paper, to accept-
an American admiral as head
Of the North Atlantic command,
the Center-Nacogdoches area of East Texas. This situation is changing 94 students and three teachers ab-
sent due to mumps from the six
in operation in the county during and the ^unior hifih
the past two weeks. _ '
The number of absentees for
the shooting wUl stop if an ar- ft* fLS!?- ** tax. investigators reached an
2oJohCchiSnsWiwaSai«^tolSy by ,his reason at Stark -uld not
^iam^rt MvSf tfi b? tomodhleljr determined but
Twenty-three Die
In Railroad Wrecks
By The Associated Press
s '5
Chandler said he was sure the to-
by J. R. Rountree in the Winfree
community.
The most recent, and largest of
the three, was opened Friday by
Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Risinger at
their place near Rebeck crossing,
At least 23 deaths in two rail- just north of the City of Orange,
road accidents Sunday climaxed ft has a capacity of 3000 chickens.
mistice is signed within 30 days, ends and m the center of
Only signatures of the truce the Korean battle line,
negotiators are needed to com- In the west, advancing U. N.
plete settlement of the second troops were hit by a reinforced
item on the armistice agenda— Communist battalion south of
fixing a cease-fire line. neeohat/om’ 20 mMrs mv' of the House ways and means in- Ambassador Philip C. Jessup
The subcommittees will meet m negotiations. Some 20 miles away, vestigating subcommittee, told Iatar told the committee the U. B.
llth-hour agreement today on ‘embif'presidenfpJuiH
opening up Justice department Nervo of Mexico to try to recon-
files dealing with tax fraud pros- clle the Western and Russian dis-
ecutions. armament plans.
Rep. King (D-Calif) chairman Recalls Previous Failure
a Thanksgiving holiday weekend
marked by five train wrecks.
The headon collision of two de-
luxe New York-New Orleans
The Risinger broiler house is a
sheet metal building, 30 by 80
feet, located on a built-up area to
at apparently the British want streamliners at Woodstock, Ala.
action deferred until a Briton took 18 lives and caused 60 in
put In charge of the projected juries.
a hundred.
Tilley elementary school in
Riverside was hardest hit with
29 cases today. Curtis, In the
same area, reported its situation
better than last week when at
one time 30 students were out
with mumps-
The outbreak of mumps here be-
gan several weeks ago and has
spread slowly, according to re-
ports from doctors reaching the
Ms
near Yonchon, Allied forces Sun-
day had shattered an attack by
up to 24,000 Chinese against "Lit-
tle Gibraltar."
Eighth army headquarters said
Allied troops were pushing to-
(7 p. m. Orange time Monday) to
approve the proposal. The full
five-man armistice delegations
will open a plenary session one
hour later.
Then in a race against the
30-day deadline and while the
fighting goes on, the negotia-
tors will work on three other
points that must be agreed on
before a full armistice can be
signed.
The staff officers pinpointed command launched a victorious
the last sector of the cease-fire two-day Une-straighUng often
keep out moisture. Baby chicks, City-County health unit. Many
{Middle East command. -----------2he trains were the northbound SsS {ftSfi
The North Atlantic command Southern railway system “South- removed and the younTchickens tor. said today it is apparent that N Lmmand
'ructure, the Mideast command, emer” and the southbound Louis- have the run of the house until co^uftog toTir commun^ said' minor“er-
the small arms standardization ville and Nashville railroad ready for the market.
(and the streamlining of NATO’s
ilitary structure are the chief
The Farmers Mercantile com
-Crescent.” . The Farmers Mercantile com- Phystoians and declared that this ^'““X^aXral
V structure are the chief At Orchard, Iadho, five crew- pany at Orange also has cooper- cr?£jf* a . on the iine battle
bogging down the North men were killed when two Und ated in getting the business, now ... /?ur tr?m Phy*k!tal>s wei e ironed out and
i- defense ministers who Pacific freight trains collided. ^ 0£ major .further •-* dlcate that {ar 400 few cases of Wole lroned out and
newsmen the attorney general was ready to do this if the corn-
had agreed to make the disputed mittec voted it. He pointed out,
files avaibale this afternoon. however, that the deputy foreign
The development came as the if
rrthih— SoTTW' Ai^ttyV”11^ reach such an agreement without
ward high ground south of Pan- Assist. Atty. Gen. T. Lamar Cau- success
munjom when the Reds counter- dle41,n “» public heatings on Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
attacked, shoving the U. N. forces Justice department handling of y. Vishinsky told reporters he had
back toward their main lines. tax case®. referred to it by the not yet decided on an answer to
Three Portions Lost Internal Revenue bureau. the Asian-Arab move aimed at
East of the Pukhan river on the It occasioned a delay in get- easing East-West tension,
central front, where the U. N. ting the expected week-long India’s Sir Bcnegal Rau led off
hearings underway, and King said the Asian-Arab peace drive with
they would be recessed during the suggestions for a “study group” to
permit investigators try for a permanent end to the
the Justice department Korean war and for an assembly
three advanced positions. for an examination of files relat- subcommittee to try to reconcile
Southwest of Kumsong, in the ing to the Caudle hearing. the Western and Russian disarm- ___
same general area, U. N. forces McGrath issued a statement amentj>roposaki. ^<__> \
meeting here.
Thief Steals Young
fSgt. Frank Hill Is
Returning to U* S.
THIRD BOMB WING, Koprea
(Spl)—After five years in the
: jar East Air Force, M/S Frank
|J. Hill, Jr., of Orange, Txeas, is
returning to the U. S.
Sergeant Hill was chief inspec-
tor of U. S. Air Force B-29 night-
, intruder bombers flown by the
’Third Bomb wing. It was his job
to inspect aircraft before they
left the maintenance shops to
take off on night-attack missions
against Communist troop and
supply lines. He checked to keep
standards on maintenance at its
peak.
“The men who fly these air-
craft every night are depending , , _ . .
us," Sergeant Hill said. “They I inn flt Ff Wflrfn
want a plane that can take the U,IUn ri* ▼▼will*
mountains and all kinds of weath-
er ... So they can hit the ene-
my and get back home safely.
It’s my job to make sure they get
What they want.”
Sergeant Hill’s wife, Dorothy,
lives on Route 2, Orange. The
Hills have three children, Sandra,
Frank III and Raymond. Mrs.
Evelyn Hill, his mother, lives at
the same address.
K of C Confers
Sixteen Degrees
Sixteen members of the Orange
Council of Knights of Columbus
received first, second and third
major degree exemplifications
during a meeting Sunday at the
Second City Well
Location Readied
In a third wreck, at Portland, in East Texas, extended
Colo., there were no deaths but county,
livestock and freight were scat-
tered for more than a mile as 13
cars of an eastbound Denver and
RiO Grande freight train over-
turned.
Two other deaths were caused
Saturday in an accident near Fort The Ohio Oil company, afipar-
Knox, Ky., where an Illinois ently confident of finding pro-
Central passenger train Jumped duction in its first test on preper-
the tracks. Both fatalities were ty belonging to the city of Or-
crew members. Four passengers ange, has begun preparing the
were injured. location for a second.
On Thursday, at the start of Crow Brothers Drilling com-
the four-day period, 27 persons pany has just started putting
were injured when two New down the Ohio Oil company’s tious stage
York, New Haven and Hartford City of Orange No. 1. It is lo-
railroad trains sideswiped in a cated at the city dump near the
tunnel under Manhattan’s Park north end of the municipal docks
avenue.
“Because of the danger to
adults front mump* themselves,
and the danger of complications
in children,” Dr. Key added, HI
■ 'would advise that anyone with
tMs disease be placed under the
ctre of a physician.”
He said there was little anyone
could do to avoid catching mumps
if they had not already had the
disease but added that its spread
can be lessened by keeping pa-
tients isolated during the infec-
cooper-
members
Resolution Introduced
after the offi- mounted an attack of their own promising the committee
,£ __________ =:m©ass&
tnis jjr Key sajd Only 14 cases were both sides Initialed. 8U were beaten off, the Eighth King said the agreement work-
reported to the health unit last The cease-fire line approved by army said. ed out with the Justice depart-
week. the negotiators will be the center In the air, Allied and Conunu- ment did not mean that the files
of a demilitarized buffer zone nists jets tangled Monday in a would be given into the commit-
2Va miles wide if an armistice is new air battle over North Korea, tee’s possession. But he said Mc-
signed within 30 days of the ap- Big Air Battle Grath agreed to let staff investi- _________
proval expected Tuesday. F*fih force said 17 F- gators check through the records bate which has been raj
at the justice department for such united Nations for the
information as the committee weeks.
the negotiators fail reach agree- an action swinging ftom 35,000 specified. The proposals came as many U-
ment within the time limit. The feet down to 19,000. It reported The hearings will give Caudle N. delegates, studying Vishinsky’s
line will be redrawn just before that all the Sabres returned safe- a chance to explain toe outside proposal Saturday to tack nunter-
the truce goes into effect to cover ty- “pressures” to which he said he ous amendments on the Western
Pakistan’s Sir Mohammed Zaf-
a
a conciliation group to negotiate
in private on disarmament.
The members of Pakistan’s pro-
posed group would be Nervo and
delegates of the Bi|
jig Four.
This group’s private
Would substitute for the
The fighting wiU continue until 86 Sabrejets tangled With nearly
and armistice is reached, and if 60 MIG-15s and damaged two in information
ions
tc de-1
the
three
battle changes.
property ih South Orange.
Several hundred feet to the
south, piling is being driven for By The
the drilling platform of the City Little scatfl
of Orange No. 2. tinuefl today 1
Ohio has 80 acres under lease whose grain
from the city in the tract. Thel are in dire n<
wells
FORT WORTH, Nov. 26 (AP)— state has allotted two wells to rains 'to replenish subsoil mois- fore the fire was extinguished.
A circus lion was out of its ca?e the acreage. ture. The Beaumont fire department
and at large today in Fort Worth. The No. 1 is just a few hundred Light rains were falling this reported the fire’s origin was un-
But residents need not scurry feet west of Ohio's Lutcher and morning in the Austin-Corpus known, and a number
for cover. Moore Lumber company No. 1, Christi-Laredo sector of South were
The lion has company—a thief, first completion in the Phoenix Texas. The U. S. Weather bureau as a safety measure. The fire de-
who is making sure that his prize Lake field on the Texas side of said that the heavy cloudiness partment received the caU at
doesn’t elude his grasp. the Sabine river. Thirteen wells was also due to bring light rain 11:10 a. m., and declared the fire
Besides, the jungle animal isn’t are producing on the Louisiana to the Brownsville area later in extinguished it at 12:30 p. m.
Snow up to six inches, temper- was subjected in his tax work. disarmament1 p'l a n, saw little
atures as low as 10 above and There were advance hints that chance of an East-West comprom-
icy winds up to 60 miles an hour the pressures of which he spoke ise.
heralded the first big wintry after resigning at President Tru-
storm. That enforced a ground man’s request might involve some
lull. members of Congress. But beyond
But the Little Gibraltar fight acknowledging this “possibility,”
Beaumont and Bethlehem Steel Ffiday int° Sund°y W3S committee sources wer* mum
Press company firefighters battled a
showers con- blaze in the forward hold
tantalize Texas, Navy munitions ship USS
and pastures suvius at the Bethlehem yards
of good soaking Beaumont over an hour today be-
Bkna Breaks Out
Scattered Showers Aboard Ve$l,¥jus
Tantalize Texas
Gov. Shiv«rs to Speak
At Pt. Arthur Tonight
l'£ 41 Texans Killed In <*an9e Sea Scouts
t Holiday Accidents Wm Conoe Racc
big enough to hurt anyone if it side,
did roam around unaccompanied.
It's only a seven-week-old cub RETURNING FROM KOREA
K of C Hall. Victor Herm, grand
Khlght, was in charge.
Honored guests for the occasion
were E. J. Watkins, district dep-
uty; C. N. LaBlanc, district secre-
tary; Pat Tynan, field representa-
tive; Allan Suire, district warden,
and L. M. Jeffers, chancellor, all
of the Nort Neches Council 2461.
Alto L. J. Bourque, grand knight
of the Bridge City couneil 3406;
—about the size of a big playful
dog.
The animal, owned by Capt. Pat
Anthony of the Shrine circu -. • as
taken from its cage early Monday
at Will Rogers memorial coliseum.
Cruising •policemen saw a man
with the cub shortly afterwards
but he convinced them he was a
circus man just taking the lion for
a walk.
Four men from Orange were
aboard the Army transport Gen.
Weigel which docked at San
Francisco today with Army vet-
erans returning from the Korea
war. The Associated Press list-
ed the four as Set. Janies W.
Bacon, 1412 Burton; CpL Carl
L. MontivUle, 1M4 Burton; 8fe.
Glenn D. Pace, 60S Border, and
Sgt. Eugene F. Willis, 5#1 First.
the day. The Vesuvius had completed a
Elsewhere in the state, the short shakedown cruise in the
partly cloudy to cloudy weather Gulf after being demothballed
AUSTIN, Nov. 28 (AP)—Gover-
nor Shivers will be honor guest
at a banquet tonight in Port Ar-
thur.
The banquet will be sponsored
by the Port Arthur American Lfc-
A hotly contested. 75-mile gion post of which he is a member.
By The Associated Press canoe race down Cow creek and Mrs. Shivers will fly to Port Ar-
, . - . . Violent death struck at least 41 the Sabine river from Camp Bill thur this afternoon for the ban-
Ivm11 « 1*2? times in Texa* during the four- Stark to Orange ended in victory quet, if weather permits,
still standing byat 1 p. m. day Thanksgiving holiday—but for Jimmie Dyson and Jimmie The governor is ducking hunting
strangely, few of the deaths oc- Hammers of Sea Scout Ship 5004 today with several Senators on the
curred on Thanksgiving day. at Orange. Gulf coast.
Traffic, as might be expected Seven two - man teams from
during a holiday, when there is throughout the Sabine Area
more highway travel, was blamed council participated,
for the greatest toll—20 persons. The race started Saturday
Plane crashes took 6 lives, 5 morning and contestants camped The most priestess story we’ve
jOrangeluiccj
was due to continue today, to- here in Grange last week, and persons burned to death, four overnight just above Deweyville heard lately concerns a little girl
n. ifnLI'l liwere fataUY shot- There ware two before making the final lap. here in Orange who perched on
scattered light showers. No major tionai repairs before faking an suicides and two men smothered Dyson and Hammers reached the lap of Santa Claus to » local
sss i. r,sr^» a. sruiwa am as 5. rus sla
atisretA*,tw xts:zsajr* -
two Royal Air Force men.
Truman Weakest Demo Prospect-Bvrd Stw
. By Edwin B. Haaklnson woman member, Senator Margar-
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (AP) et Chase Smith of Maine. Mrs.
— Senator Byrd (D-Va) said he Smith said she is not a candidate.
........- (AP)
—The Women’s Christian Temper-
Albert Rabb, grand knight, and regards President Truman as Byrd, in an interview with the
Mallaley, chancellor, of the
Beaumotit Council 951, M. J. Ba-
bin, past state deputy of the Port
Arthur Council 1304; Lucius ‘Cor-
mier, grand knight of Port Arthur
®uncil 3195, and Don Terry, dep-
uty grand knight of the Houston
Council' 803.
I’Today's Weather |
D.t. Fr*a> v. 8. Wnthrr Barca
•orecut: Orange and vicinity: cloudy,
.uchtly cooler. Widely Mattered light rein
tanight. TUoeday cloudy. Lovwet Wmpera-
Vii, tonight. CO to « degrees; ‘hlfhe»t
xLsday. 74 to 11 degrees. Northeasterly
trtnda. eight to 11 mllea per hour tonight
. as Taste's-»
■’■ffijas.® vs>
end 4:M p m.; low 111114.0. end
^lui^riMs Tuesday at CM a. tL tad
self *t 4:IS P in, _
-yt. t- • f. r ” ? ' ■
m"'" ■ % ’ ■ -
“weaker today than any” other magazine U. S. News and World
possible Democratic nominee for Report, left little doubt if Mr.
the presidency in 1952 and he Truman wins the Democratic
does not think the president can nomination again, he wiU con-
be reelected. tinue to oppose biro. In 1948, thf
Byrd, perhaps Mr. Truman’s senator opposed him up to and
bitterest critic within his own during the party conventipn, but
party, said however it is his par- remained silent thereafter,
sonal belief “that be is going to “Conditions were different in
run if he thinks he can win,” and ’48 from what they are now,”
he added: “I’ve been doing all I BynLsaid. “Today I am convinced
can to help him make up his that Mr. Truman would bring this
mind. I do not think he can be country to disaster if his program
elected if nominated.” is adopted.
Mr. Trumans has said he has Mandate from People
decided whether he will run “I feel further that his re-
again but is not ready to an- election in 1952 . .. could right-
nounce his decision. fully be claimed by him to be a
Wants Woman far Veep mandate from toe people to put
Meanwhile, Senator Aiken (R- through this program in its en-
Vt) proposed that the Republi- tirety.”
cans nominate for the vice-presi- Byrd said, as he did in a re-
gency the Senate’s only current cent speech is Alabama, that
Southerners should fight against
Mr. Truman's nomination through
the convention and “hold our-
selves free to do whatever may
be necessary” thereafter if Mr.
Trumafi* 4s renominated.
He said he “couldn’t say”
whether Southerners feel as he
does would support the GOP
ticket if the president runs again. WA'
The Senator continued: crime commUt*€'
“I think the opposition to Mr.
Truman and his policies is very
much greater in the Smith than
it’s ever been before.
“Four Southern states, as you
recall, voted the States’ Rights
ticket last time and thereby broke
the belief on the part of many
that in the South you have to
vote the Democraic ticket in
order to stay in politics. Those in FIFTEEN HUKT IN RIOTS
the four states who led the fight BOMBAY, India, Nov. 28 (AP)
to leave the Democratic party in —Fifteen persons were injured
1948 are stronger than those who Sunday night in a clash between
opposed leaving the Democratic
party.”'
Confidants Declare President Is Making
Thorough Inquiry into Atrocity Stories
ance union, foe of liquor, today
attacked department store toys
that “glorify gambling and gang-
sterism.” quiry into the handling
Mrs. D. Lrifh Colvin, national ko^an atrocUv chorees
president of the WCTU, said mer-
chants should get “back in step
with the religious significance of
Mrs. Colvin took a look at toy
counters and found “toy roulette
wheels, pinball and slot machines,
and race horse and dice games.”
‘Not only that, but there were
toy guns and ‘outlaw costumes.'
‘Obviously the displays do not
fit into observance of the Sav-
ior’s birthday,” Mrs. Colvin said
in a statement
cat and her “potty-pot.”
The Leader editor has issri
that getting one’s name in Qrn
Saturday Evening Post beings
some interesting mail Ope writer.
John M. Parenzan of Shamokin.
Pa., wants us to help locate an
old Army buddy, Tillman A. Wil-
liams. Anybody who knows Mr.
XEY^WECT?n».,VNo^r26 UP) si^ing^a ^fe^t^lhe atiw- Williams WiU do us a favor by
—Confidants said today President ity charges until he has all the calling The Leader, 8-3571.
Truman is making a thorough in- facts at his command. Another letter, from Henry
of the In his only public comment on Behm of Temple City, Calif., was
Korean atrocity charges. the atrocity charges, the presi- accompanied by a check for a
An atmosphere of official si- dent termed the charges horrible subscription to The Leader. Mr.
lence, however, enveloped his in- and said if true it was the most Behm is 81 years of age and re-
ss^L’sfwsraa; *- srssAsatsiE
1. The aUeged shooting down Representative Edith Nourso spite the mention of mosquitoes)
of an American bomber by Rus- Rogers (R-Mass), charging “er- and wants to move here provided
slan fighter planes. rors and contradictions” and The Leader’s advertisement aec-
2. Soviet Foreign Minister An- “botched handUng*’of the charges tion discloses “some reliable real
drei Y. Vishinsky’s rejecton of that North Korean and Chinese estate men and a live bank.” We
the American-French-British dis- Reds murdered Allied prisoners especially liked that part of the
armament proposal. - of war, declared: letter which said, “You have
3. A House committee's demand “The president owes the par- milder winters, fishing facilities
for Justice department files on ents of our servicemen a clear and no doubt meat, milk and
tax fraud prosecutions for its in- and unmistakeable statement of vegetables at fair prices.” Coining
quiry into Internal Revenue bu- the facts at the earliest moment.” from a Californian, that’s the ul-
reau scandals. * Parents SheaM Knew timate in praise.
Comment Refmed This development followed the Tenaday’s birthday calendar
Presidential decretory Joseph disclosure that Gen. Matthew B. lists Sylvia Kay Rauro and a for-
Short refused to comment an any Ridgway had reported to thu mer citizen, Andy1 Kkert, now
of these developments, bat other -----
White House aides, unquotable (See 1, Page 2} •». public
parading Socialists and supporter’s
pf India's ruling Congress party.
Ash
• )
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 280, Ed. 1 Monday, November 26, 1951, newspaper, November 26, 1951; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558598/m1/1/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.