The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 35, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 13, 1944 Page: 1 of 4
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ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1944
*
A double launching of destroyer
escorts, sent into the waters of
the Sabine river simultaneously,
was staged at the yard of the J
Consolidated Steel Corpora^toh, i
Ltd., on Saturday afternoon with
if, the usual impressive ceremonies.
The vessels were the U. S. S. Key
«nd tho U. S. S. TriW, both named
in honor of heroes *of world war
-fi'im.IT." ; "" 7.....,.'j",
Mrs. írá F. Key, of Bryan,
Texafe, mother of ahe lute First
Lieut, Eugene Morland Key, for
whom the U. S. S. Key was nam-
ed, served as sponsor of that ves-
sel. '
Mrs. Jennie Traw, of Lake City,
Ark., mother of the late Platoon
Sergeant London Lewis Traw, for
whom the U. S. S. Traw was
named, served as sponsor of that
--vessel.
Ceremonies for/launching of the
U. S. S. Key .were presided over
by Vice Preatdent Harvey C. Cran-
fill, of the/corporation, who pre
scnted tly sponsor and guests,
including Joé and Julian Key,
brothers and Mrs. V. 9. Key, sis-
tcr-in-laW of the hero being hon-
ored on this occasion. Lieut. Key
was born in Conroe, Texas, Oct.
S, 1916 and was killed in action at
Tulagi in the Solomon Islands'
Aug. 7, 1942. He was awarded the
purple heart, the ^Presidential
Unit Citation,' the American De-
fense. Service Medal and the
Navy Cross together with the fot
lowing citation: "For extraordi-
nary heroism while attached to
the First Marine Raider Battalion
during an attack against enemy
Japanese forces on Tulagi, Solo-
mon Islands on Aug. 7, 1942. When
his platoon was attacked from the
ink by a group of hostile snip-
erK First Lieut. Key, although
mortally wounded worked his Way
forward until he could throw
hand grenades into the enemy po
sitions. By his indomitable fight-
ing spirit and outstanding skill,
he de8troyea\Japanesc resistance
at this point and enabled his pla
toon to «dvancXfurther without
loss. His great pefqonal valor was
A KirtCT «IT scored on a Jap oil
large off the coast of New Ire-
land by a Navy Liberator bomber
Was easily verified by the plana,
for in addition to its bomb load,
the bomber also carried a power-
ful aerial camera. When the bomb
hit the vessel squarely amidships,
a camera record of the perfect
strike was made and carried back
to headquarters as proof of the
kill. United States Navy photo-
graph. • (laternMtioatl)
s serv
16 CUbil, China, and on
the high
seas before Pearl
Harbor,
> ♦♦ > .
^DOfp
SOMETHING
ABOUT IT.
■
MAY THE BEST, MAN WIN iff
the mayor's race in view of the
fact that Orange certainly is en-
titled, to the best material avail-
able. Every one will admit that
there has no vet" been a Ume in
the history of this city when the
most capable men and Women
were in such extremo demand- It
Port Neches, Tex,. Feb. 12.
"Rubber Rancho Grande," the
world's biggest '.'plantation" for
producing nr an -made, rubber, will
soon be- ready to operate at full
speed, it was announced here to-
day by W. j. Piggott, plait! man-
ager for the B. E. Goodrich com" j i¡¡ just as important on a basis of
■tntiu niniolt mi ■ ■ 11 llin 1 Vll ■—v " ,1
pany, which built the 120,000-ton
polymerization plant and operates
two of its four units. All essen-
tial construction' on the final 30,-
000-ton unit of the rubber-making
plant will be completed within
the next 30 days. •'
The other "world's largest
plant" here — built by the Net
ches Butane "Products company
for producing synthetic rubber's
main raw material, butadiene —
is shortly scheduled to start full
production.. TJiis, Piggott said,
will .make possible the type of
"straight - line" operation origi-
nally conceived for the whole
Port Neches establishment, with
the butadiene being piped direct-
ly from its source, right "next
door," into the plant where it is
CAPTURE OF
proportion, that Orange has .the
best material for mayor as that
the ullied fighting forces of the
world have the best leadership.
The mutter of-xompctcncy should
stand out in local elections over
the thought of fulfilling the am-
bitions of a friend. ; ,
co-polymeriied, with styrenc and _
other ingredients, to form man- j?uie [(lal an individual who Will
THE SHOPLIFTING MENACE
in Orange, is rapidly diminishing
because of the fact that there Was
cooperation in th¿ matter of DO-
ING SOMETHING ABOUT IT.
The old Idea óf refining from
action when some individual is
caught stealing must be put aside.
The individual whd will stoop to
the smallest theft is not due con-
sideration on tho part of honest
people, further than to show him
or her the error of his ways. The
BOOK
TO BE GIVEN
HERE MONDAY
"The Human Comedy" by Wil-
liam Saroyan will be («viewed by
Mrs. J. J. Wheat of Beaumont on
Monday afternoon, February 14,
at throe o'clock In the Anderson
School auditorium. Admission
will be fifty - five cents including
tax and proceeds will benefit the
Anderson School Parent-Teacher
Association, sponsors of the re-
view.
' . i'' '.
Wi, tiSSfiU'ifi
By Richard McMurray, Associated
Press War Editor
The Germans said officially to-
day they had captured Carroceto
(Aprilia), northern stronghold in
the slender Allied beachhead be-
in keeping with the^highest tradi- Rome, - as the outnumbered
tionsofthe United Slates Naval Americans and British "turned ev-
Scrvice. He gallantly gave up his
life in defense of his country".
This vessel was launched\ side-
ways.
In charge of the launching
monies of the U. S. S. Traw w)
Captain Harry B. Hird, vice pres^
ident of the corporation, who pre-
sented the sponsor and her guest's,
Mrs. Mazie "Lacoss, a sister, of the
hero of Walnut Ridge, Ark.; W. P.
Traw, father, of Hoxie, Ark., Mrs
Martha- Spikes Johnson, a friend.
of Walnut Ridge and Miss Blanche
ltickman, of Lake City, Ark.
Platoon Sgt. Traw was born in
Pocahuntas. . Arkansas, ■ April L
1003 and was killed in "action ,a<
Guadalcanal, October 27, 1942. He
was with the U. S., Marines for
Americans and British turned ev
ery available plane against the
enemy siege lines. " *
The Berlin communique said
4,000 Allies had surrendered in
the beachhead and that 89 tanks
Itad been captured or destroyed.
II the German assertions lacked
affirmation.
dispatches . described
rial attacks as one, of
ground support oper-
undertaken by' air
the Al
the grea
ations
forces.
made rubber,
The first unit of the ruBbev-
making plant was opened last
August 23 by. B. F. Goodrichpwith
additional facilities, operated by
Fjj'ostone, coming into service on
November 27. DUring this period'
butadiene for these operations his
been shipped in. '
The new butadiene - producing
establishment-will have a capacity
of 100,000 short tons a year —
enough for the butadiene content
of. 110,000 long tons of "GR-S,"
.the government general - purpose
synthetic rubber. The "constitu-
ent companies of , Neches Butane
Products are Atlantic, Gulf, Pure
Oil, Socprty -' Vacuum, and the
Texas company.
The rated capacity of the poly-
merization plant units here
120,000 tons — is nearly ha Id the.
total for the state of Texas, 25ft,-
000 tons, which in turn is mo(C,
than one - third the scheduled
national capacity under the fed-
eral synthetic rubber program.
The Texas total,. Piggott said,
also is "probably as .much syn-
thetic rubber as all of Germany
has ever turned out in a single
year, although making synthetic
rubber has been a leading na-,
tional enterprise of that conn try
ifnee -even before World Waj^l."
The other rubber - making plants feTa"s"-\o bccome""übe men a
in Texas agat Houston, Baytovyn „a¡n
r; and butadiene plants
stoop to_commit what appears t<
be an insignificant theft, Will
commit a greater.crime where the
opportunity, presents itself.- gener-
ally holds-good.•- :
THE ALLOC.'ATION OF FUNDS
by large concerns doing business
in Orange for the purchase of war
bonds for this fourth war loan
drive, is the. equivalent to mani-
festing a deep interest in the' gen-
eral welfare of -the' tommupity-
Two Companies doing business in
Orange swelled the war loan drive1
by $172,000 Friday in the co-
operative purchase of war bphds.
Certainly "the cooperative act will
serve a three - fold purpose, first
in strengthening the- war effort
and lending' encouragement to
those sponsoring the drive and In
establishing a favorable atmos-
phere in 'Orange the fastest grow-
ing, town in Texas.
Bond saies in the Fourth Wor
Loan Drive up to noon Saturday
with several issuing agencies still
unreported totalled $3,2226,590.01,
committee headquarters reported.
The figure is expected to pass the
three and a half million mark
Whe ntotals are all reported Sat-
urday night, headquarters indi-
cated.
$3,900 wtw- raised last night - at
the Bridge City bond rally.
. F. Luckie Making
II Room Hotel:
From Residence
Escaped German'
Officers Captured
Mexia-, Texas, Feb., 12. (AP)-\-
Fivc Germans who escaped the
Mexia prisoned of war camp
thought it would bé easy in
and Borger
sire located nearby Jti each case.
nted incessantly
and\pen and cannon
lfied defenses
division for
indications' were
marines who went into that area.
His decorations included the China
v Medal, the American Defense Ser-
vice Medal, the Asiatic - Pacific
' Campaign Medal and the Silver
Star with the following citation:
''For conspicuous gallantry and
intrepidity while Serving with the
First Marine division during ac-
tion against enemy Japanese for-
ccsjn the Lunga area, Guadalca-
nal, Solomon Islands', October 24
and 25, 1942. Undeterred by ter-
rific „cnemyf ire. Platoon Sergeant
Traw coolly directed and con-,
trotted the fire ot the machine
guns in his section against re-
peated assaults of enemy, force
greatly superior in numbers. The
combat achievements of his pla-
toon under his inspiring and cou-
rageous'-' leadership contributed
greatly to thc rout-and virtual an-
nihilation of a Japanese regiment.
He gallantly laid down his life in
j, the service of his country'^, The
' launching was endwise'.
Destroyers Down
Strong Marauders
Of Lake Charles
The Consolidated Destroyers,
flashing one of the post brilliant
scoring attacks ever displayed in
Orange, hosed put the Lake
C'hurles Flying Mfrraurtars Friday
cl^tto^hTOW^the Am^J^uns and
begun, and thai the intensev air
lines may have delayed it-, T
Germans, however, retained the
initiative on the ground,
Even, fortresses and Liberators
were drawn from strategic bomb-
ing tasks to support the beach-
head positions. The action was
reminiscent of the campaigns at
Kasserine Pass in Tunisia yand'at
Salerno, below Naples wheh over-
powering use of Allied air fight-
ing tipped the scales lyr victory.
The violent battle .of Cassino, 60
miles to the east, raged on with-
out a decision although/the Algiers
communique said th^f Americans
'made further progress" and re-
pulsed "a very sírting counterat-
tack." u The "progt4ss" vraf§^"thc
capture -of five la/ge buildings in
the toWn of 15,000 and the level-
ling of the Cassino jail, one pf the
strongest Gernvan defense points,
with artillery ¿nd tank fire. The
Germans, however, still fought
from the cellar of the clink.
Heavy'lighting was in progress
today against the- British in the
CorroceUj area 16 miles below
Rome. Americans west and south-
west of Cisterna battled grimly to
hold /back German onslaughts.
Air power was thrown at the
Nazismo northern France for the
fourth consecutive day after Brit-
ish Mosquitos struck at Berlin and
western Germany a\ night. Amer-
üGaa
Revival Under Way
At North Orange
Pentecostal Church
Revival services are being' con-
étrniué i
L
iQbl
tacostal church on Eleventh ana
Fs strceJS it was nnnouñíoíT
They probably had dreams Of
fighting for their fatherland a-
gain, but failed to reckon with
.the uncanny eyes- of- a( Texas
' newspaper carrier and an alert ]
housewife.
Three of the men were captured
yesterday at -Hubbard by City
Marshal L. O. Battis, while their
tWb,Jí¿i't¡iérs i'iil the escape wci^
SPECIAL VENIRE
SUMMONED FOR
MURDER CASES
A special venire of 75 men has
been summoned by the sheriff's
department for the trial of two
murder cases set for Monday, the
fourth week of district court, Rari
Mollis, a veteran Orange- county
stock farmer, is charged with the
slaying of Frenchle Thiebodeaux,
whose body was found on a pipe
line right of way July fi, of 1943.
Dan Harris, a negro, will be tried
for the murder of his wife, allcg-
j ed to have been shot to math jn
iier'bcd on, .u .farm some four miles
out of Orange on the Newton
road-'in December of last year.
Attorneys J. T- Adams and K- W.
j Stephenson are defending Hollis
Í and « Mr. Lewis, of Center is de-
fending Harris.
E SOKOLSKI
TO SEEK
TION
'•'I will not beVcandidatcJwr
third term for m>m>r'V declared
Mayor Abe SbkolskrSarftirday. lie
said he fclt impelled to step out
of public service aftc ' having ser-
ved 'the city for twelve\ years,
m
Allied" Headquarters. Algiers,
Feb. 12. „(AP) — Allied warships
thundering into action have help
ed repulse u new German assault
the storm ,- swept, invasion
bridgehead' below Rome, and
headquarters, officer declared tor
dayntfeiisspite Nazi pressure the
front lines there have "remained
relatively, unchanged during the
past few days. >■ .
On the Cassino front to tho east,
American forces madcWnew gains
In bitter struggles within that
towrf and within u mile of the Via
CasTIina, the' Germans' only cor-
ridor into the city.
Ruin, snow, sleet and gales can-
celled Allied (weJilowS against the
Germans pressing against the in-
vasion bridgehead, leaving thO
Germans free to move up troops
and supplies harried only by na-
val and land artillery bombard-
ment.
The single Nazi attack yester-
day was flung unsuccessfully a-
gainst American troops' in the
area west of, Cisterna, headquar-
ters said, where hard fighting eon-
tlnues;
Naval units including the. Brit-
ish cruisers Muuritus of 11,000
tons and Dido of 5,450 tons moved
do*? inshore to shell the left
flank oí the Germans as they at-
tacked.
(CUS Correspondent John Daly
said this morning that "arter four
anxious days, the core of the Al-
lied bcác¡nhejrch>below Rome Re-
mains secure."
(The German communique
broadcast by Berlin said Nazi ar-
tillery broke up heavy Allied tank
attacks against "new German lines
near Aprilia," knockinn out 17
tanks.)
, The guins by American troops
in bitte^fig|)tinK in Cassino ..in-
cluded the Jail which the Germans
had converted into one of their
main fortresses, continuing to hold
out in i)s basement even aftor
MUerd artillery and tanks had
levelled the; "Structure to the
ground. The Germans arc resist
ing there no longer.
The U. S units also knocked out
a number of strong points in the
northern part of the town. Their
push in the hills to the west
threatened' To choke off the Nazi
supply route into Cassino.
Fighting in the mountains a
round Cassino was impeded by
heavy snowfall but more artillery
was brought up to back up the
American infantry.
Three, thousand Germans have
been captured on the bridgehead
and oh the main front in the last
week, for a total . Of 13,000-M-iuti#
taken since the invasion of Italy
began lnHt September, headqtiar-
tors announced- That is the c-
quivalcnt of about one division
The enemy also has suffered heavy
tolls Of dead and wounded.
D. F. Luckie, operator of the
Luckle's Hotel Dormitory and
Lucky's Apartment Hotel, who
recently purchased the ' Cooper
property consisting of three resi-
dences on the corner of Moln and
Ninth streets, is having the build
ing's remodeled and is converting
the largest of the three into an
eleven room hotel; Work of* con-
verting this building is nearly
completed, he reports, add part of
It has been placed in use.
AT
■■toPHi
,t V
FRANK C0L6URN
SCHOOL OPEN I
HOUSE TODAY
An open house program will bt
held at the Frank Colburn ele-
mentary school located on Turrett
Road and Avenue. B, in Riverside
addition from 3 to 5 o'clock this
afternoon, it was? announced Sat-
urday.
Parents of the achUSL children
and others interested are cordi-
ally invited to attend the opening.
The Strand "rt eatW(
miere Friday night plaj
packed house and tlf'
represented a total of"
extra bond sales, I
tickets taken at tlie dopr i)ü
The progi-tun opened wj<
minute concert by the
inous Bengal Gtiards, «H i
and. bugle wrps. To
iriimpets the color
Bengal Gjiard
stage and set up
lor Lowry, manager o|;i
«Ai Amusement Comptnyj
here, presented II. J,. h.
.. owster of ce«w«nlesl ..-j.:
Mr. Stark gave an I
iinjl presentad Lleút. ¡
commanding officer
Naval Receiving Stat
in turn introduced C ...
1st Mate Charles H, V4
naval hero who
a week ago by prefcnV
Ñhvvy~Cross. He Wa l
>y Mr. Stark,
The film,
lived up to advaqme
held the
The house party will Include J.
W. Edgar, superintendent of city K U ' ° Picture- ^
schools: T. W, Ogg, assistant su- ,—_ ... 1 „^v V.
perl'ntendent; Mrs. N. J. Athis, ' ,,'y '
Congress
today by Rey.' Henry L. Stevens,
nesdáy, will continue Through
February 20, with Revi Samuel E.
aker in charga of the preaching
Kj'ices.
mmm
mm
Taiiclili'i
nm iiivl v'""s
served for four years as mayor
; pro tem previous to being elect-
18 Arrested
in either caije.
■icott «treeI Pi iiiuy iiiuhl,
lOfOUi
MKNwWOMCN
IN UNIFORM
ra<!
night at the Stork high school gym
414o"4i':-.
The victory is all the more im
\prcsslve when the strength of the
visiting team is taken into consld
eration." Three Marauder regu-
lars are former .all - American
selections, Capt, Smiley of Cornell
in 1937,. Capt. Shane of Cornell in
1998 «nd Capt. Hasslinger of Co-
lumbia in IMS.
Pian for a return game are be-
ing advanced.
attacks on the aircraft fac-
tories of Brunswick in central
Gentiany and the Dutch fighter
fields at Gllze and Rilen yester-
day cost the Germans 84 planes
and the Americans 29 heavy
bomber and eight fighters. Over
northern France, six inore Nazis
were destroyed at the cost of
three RAF craft.
The Germans* said 150 planes,
presumably Russian, bombed the
Finnish town of Kotka, 70 mites
east of Helsinki, for two hours
last night.
Staff Sergeant B. E. Wallace, Jr.,
son of Mrs. L. A. Bingham, was
in Orange recently ,-for a week's
visit with, his mother. He haS
beeh stationed at the Hondo, Tex-
as, airbase . for the'' past three
years. During Williams visit here,
Leroy Bingham, son of L. A- Bing-
ham was home on 30 days-fur-
rough from the South Pacific and
the half - brothers, met , for the
first tinte, vLeroy is a former Or-
aneg Tiger football captain.
of, Otlo Kucbm, the latter a tier-
man by birth, but an American
world war I veteran, answering
raps on her door Tuesday night.
When the men, one' of whorfr call-
ed her by her correct name and
spoke in German, went a*/ayr Mrs.
Kuehm called, officers. Lt. Eu-
gent Kui'z, 20, and L.I- Heinz Jo-
chim Grimm, 21 were captured
Wednesday.
, Trudging along" n moonlit cen-
trah Texas' road early yesterday,
William H. Kline, a route carrier
for the Waco News - Tribune, saw
three men between Mount Falm
and Waco, with packs slung over
1 their shoulders, He Went into
Hubbard and informed the city
miy shal because he had heard of
the escapas,
Major Kurt Botticwiki, 37; Lt.
•Walter Heymann, 23, and Lt, Rtis
jdolf Gottfried. 43, were captured
| easily. • " , - .
Certainly I will always stand
by Orange in her efforts to be-
come a real city and aV a citizen,
I will remain loyal to the- people
.1 have tried to serve dUrirrg my
terms of office", the mayor said.
visiting teacher} T.-P—Baker, prin-
cipal of the Helen Carr Junior
High school; Miss Mauririe Biggs,
director df'home family life c<hi-
cation; Miss Helen Carr. principal
of; the' Luteheit Stark Senior High
school; Miss Estallne Cox, direc-
tor of library service; J. R. Cur
fee, principal of the Giant Man-
ley school; Mrs. Roy Greenwood,
principal of the William Tijlcy
school', Mrs. Jack Kihiierly, pin *
cipal of the Curtis tichisil; Miss
Bertha Lect supervisor of Health
and rnysieal educatioñ; M is Ja^
sephirie Linn, principal of Krank
Colburn .school; Mrs. Jumes Neff,
director of guidance; Miss Flavig
Wignall, principal of Anderson
school'; Miss Epsie Young^elemen
tary supervisor; v;" Miss WHma
Wingham, head of the Riverside
nursery; Miss Vcrna Bean, princi
pal of Pine Grove school; Mine
Mary Etta Vernon, director oi
cafeteria^ Miss Margie Boref.^sec-
retary to the Supeiintendent.
Tho following parents aro /to
serve aji-co - hostesses with
teachers in their respective rooms:
Mi's. T. M. Howell, Mrs. Frank
Brewer, Mrs. James C. Brewer,
Mrs, J. W. Vasek, Mrs. Charlie
Groams, Mrs. William J. Mllli ;
Mrs. J. Branch Fuller, Mrs. J.
D/ McDonald, Mrs. Jack Justice,
Mrs. Harry Duff, Mrs. I .eon W.
Johnston, Mrs. A, B, Maygood,
Mrs. George Hay, Mrs, King,- Mrs.
H. B. Plumlee, Mrs.. K. E. Wy
itioro, Mrs. G. M. Moline. Mrs.
Ross Bugley and Mrs. Schcll.
mrt
the.Orange city police departrhen
Friday and Friday nigixl, aOíord
|ng to city recorder's records Sat-
in day. AH were' charged \ Will
drunkenness,
L.u. Mwf/'t)
'l ////y;
^<r/J///-' if /
©
Shipyard Worker Here, Honorably
Discharged Front Army Has Seven
Brothers And A Sister In Service
' Frank Washington Buckner is.WAC's; S 2-c. Bobby .Gene Huck-
back from the wars with an hon-iner with the U. S. Navy stationed
orable discharge earned by'at San Diego; Pvt. Jasper Buckner
wounds suffered in the Meditjr-|of the air corps in Nprth Africa;
ranean campaign.' but his seveniPv.tvLorenza Buckner of the med :
Ul'IHlmia, U liUBtlli ÚnB a tBtlT metical uoiiwi staiionsj at •■Laiwdor
still in the service to give his fam-|Texas; Gun Caf>t. Charles C; Buck-
ily á claim to the title of biggest) ner, in the South Pacific has ptfr*
family in the armed service. ticipated in nine major battler,
Pvt. Leonard Buckner Is station-
ed at Camp Wolter*, Mineral
Wells; Corp, Clarence Buckner is
stationed at Camfe Hood; Pvt.
píese Buckhcr, a double cousin is
stationed in New Jersey and S 2-c
G. W Hammond, a son of Mr*.
Buckher by a former marriage,
has been overseas 17 months and
is now stationed somewhere in
the Sojith Pacific.
(Official news of. ratloi
• tlon, war. pro*ra
activities affectliff (he home
—prepared by ■ the Orange In-
formation Service Corps)
nutri- the fattening qurfTity such peopl<,
and other try to avoid, does the valUe of th<
.-upcake exceed thot of the oat
ncai-milk combination-
Oatmeal and Milk vs. a Small
Frank Buckner has just been
employed by_a local shipyard but
Waco, Texas, is home. His fath-
er and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Char-
les H. Buckher reside at; 12-B Le-
ila Street in Waco, and all nine
children .. enlisted there, frank
said. .
The nine how In service include,
Irene Buctmer, 19, with, . the
The Neglected Meal
Breakfost, coming after twelve
hours 'of "no mcols" should pro-
vide about one-third of the day's
needed requfrcments of food fac-
tors, if efficiency in working ca-
pacity is to be maintained during
the morolng hours. For children,
this meal Is doubly Important, for
it is: almost itnixissiblc to get id
the other meals.of the day. all the
Houilshmeut - nueded- for—
growth and health,
Many young women skip
breakfast because they are afraid
of becoming too fat, yet frequent-
ly these same women think noth-
ine of adding a small cup-cake for
dessert to their lunch. The fol
lowing chart shows the benefits in
nourishment they should receive if
they skipped the cup-cake and ate
a dish of oatmeal (T ouhce un-
cooked oatmea^wlth one - half
cup of whole milk on it lot break-
fast Note that only in calorías,
Frosted Cup-Take '
Calorics —> 1 third lea's caloric
,'rom oatml'al than from cup
,'akc.
Protein — Over 3 times as jnucf
protein from oatmeal, .combinatiot
us from cup-cake.
Calcium — Over 12 times wi
much from oatmeal co'mbinatio
s from cup-cake. —
Iron --- ,4 timcji as much frW
'intmoal i'ombination as from,nip.
Viatmin A— 3 times as miicT
from oatmeal as from cup-cake
Thiamin ~ A • little over nlh'
times as much from oatmeal com
bination as from cup-cake.
Ascorbic acid — A small amoun
of ascorbic acid from the oatmeal
milk combination bút none fron
the cup-cake. --— --"v
Riboflavin A little over flv<
times as much from the oatmeal
milk combination n* from the
cup-cake
Baby Dies
Over New I
Tax Return
Washington,
Vtembers of cu
Juddering look a
tai return blanks
>f them, Senator Cotl
prophesied Uiat the
Aould evoke the
tng and u-hollei
from the taxpayer*.
Seldom In humajfl
gretd, have so
nuch with so
"igurlng out the
id by a squad at
juipped with liquid
rule*.
Those who stum]
<úreM « query
neome on page 1 ot
jogged down on:
jond premiums, page 8.
flex action, most of the I
it that point tosatd the
forms to their crUflÉMÍ'
irs.
Senator Smith, ad
itruetcd South Cai
'rat, iKKMned OUt that
■ilm like the burestucfi
trying to mess up and
icople. í
"Why, son," he
hose blanks are a
the lawabldlng cltl
•ountry. I believe
tto page boys could
ictier one." .
Before Smith had t|M«
>ut a likely page boy, 'a
gres* itself dbimi L ^
to wiininiry ihe twdft. i>l pgyihg'
federal taxes. >
Hitler Hopes Victory Over Allies.M
Anzio-Nettuno Sector Will Distratf
His People's Attention From Red Front.
iy 1 ícwltt MaAch/.ic, Associated
Press War Analyst
One. of the .several pressing rea-
iiih why Hitler is risking his shirt
o win a sensationol. victory a
he Aíizio - Net tu no bridgcheac.
iclow Rome — and he bus cre-
tted a very stalous situation in-
Iccd left the Allies >- is to distrac
he attention of his people ant
vavcrlng Allies from his own dirt
traits tin -the -Russian front.
As the signa, now-read, we cajj
iot be fur ofT from « general With
Iruw.il of the Whole vast Nar,
(ijcc. Thiit was some 1,200 mllci
<!hg in its m'ost' prosperous dayt
mt the Red armies have driven i
jo full of solieiitif That it .now to
.al* over 2,000 serpentine miles
•,n unwieldly and highly Vulner
ibte battle ttnrr^The wonder is-'
nd this Is a tribute to Gérmai
;er eralship —• that the Nazi;
laven't been stampeded long be :
ore this.
The present three great Rusiiar
iflcnsives against this line —v
lorth, center .and st uth —are ocl
ng ás mighty" levers that ove de-
tachlng the Hitlerites from strata
[lr nnrhm-K 'u/Hhn.it ¿/TtgffT
he rest of the line.
Thus Mannstoin's Dnieper ^ejjd
roups Iliavii their backn toward;:
he Bessiii ublan border, and what-
ver forces he is able to save from
nnlhilation will have to, retreat'
0 the Dniester river, which for
. fits border, unless thíre'í l sKaip
hauge in the present position,
'hot's the crisis which Hitler haa- i;
«en trying to avoid — be lew
1 riven up against this Bcssarablan
ateway to the Balkans. He's tor-
ched that such a retreat will pre-
'ipitate an upheave! among hit
Jalkuii satellites — a fear
instilled by the present state of
unrest and revolt. •
As I previously have pointed out
it this column, it undoubtedly has
een this fear which has Impelled
be Nazi 'chief to assign his army
>i the Dnieper bend to the suicide
ask of holding to the bitter end.
'on Mannstein Is too good a sol-
lier to have clung to such a posi-
ion unless he was working under
rderti from the big boss.
There Is one peculiar devclop-
ncnt which might work to
er's advantage and enable i
letay his general
:jegb.„
ront, cannot continue to hold. Th«
idrtKern'TiVo - thirds of It wll'
taye.tp pull back at least to posi-
ISns running from the vicinity oi
ilga, Latvia, to the Carpathians.
Meanwhile Marshall von Mann-
iteln's forces on the extreme <tou-
hern wing, which have been cling-
ng So stubbornly to the Dniepei.
>end death - trap, are In the as-
onishing position Of having been
twung around until they are fac
ng north ."by northeast afld pro-
ject dangerously eastward from,
Ival of spring
he Russian front -
A'hieh, according to
<aim't happened before
•tions.. \
In aiiy event, fate —
hat the Hitlerites will
>ull back towards
o new positions In
,'uture. ' The "
>PP« r to be
ian peopl
Ss going lo M
them.
IMM
•Hfc 1 ¿
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 35, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 13, 1944, newspaper, February 13, 1944; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth142903/m1/1/: accessed June 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.