The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 214, Ed. 1 Monday, September 11, 1944 Page: 1 of 4
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V
TO SPEAKATI
■PRISONER
IY MEET
Rev. Ed Bareus Jr., pastor of
the First Methodist church, will
be the principal speaker for the
mass meeting to be held next
Sunday. September 17, at 8 p. m.
at the first Methodist church, for
all persons w.ho have relatives in
enemy prison camps or listed a*
missing. \
This meeting is sponsored by
the Prisoner of War committee of
the Orange County chapter of the
Red Cross, with Mrs. Allen Cain,
chairman, in general charge of ar-
rangements. The Methodist con-
gregation will ornit the usual
evening worship seiVice to make
the church available for this
meeting.
Mrs. Cain is urging that nil per-
sons whose relatives are prisoners
of war, or missing in war areas,
be in attendance at this meeting
and bring any communications
they have received.
Following the brief program, a
visiting hour will be spent in or-
der that persons may exchange in-
formation.
The meeting is open to the pub-
lic and all interested friends ol
, war prisoners are invited to at-
' tend.
Following the first appeal for
Hhose who have relatives in pris-
on camps to contact Mrs. Cain at
her home 1212 Seventeenth street
or telephone her at 40(52, she has
received calls from a large group
of persons in Orange and Orange
county. Persons living in Dewey-
ville, Call and Jasper have also
contacted the Orange chapter.
A short musical program is also
being planned for the meeting.
Sixteen arrests were made by
the Orange city police department
for 24 hours preceding # a. m.
Stmday. Of the sixteen appre-
hended, three were turned over to
the county for further prosecu-
tion.
An unusually light docket was
fond Monday morning by City Re-
corder A. H. Prince as a result
.police activities through < Sunday
and Sunday night. Two were held
for drunkenness and one for fight-
ing.
Marriage licenses of record
Monday at the office of the Orange
county clerk were issued to Frank
Reed Jr. and Miss Nora Lee, of
Orange; Walter D. Hoffpauir and
Miss Sarah Vidian Ousley, of Or-
ange; Everett N: Loeb and Miss
Dorothy Lee Evans, of Orange;
.Billie Gene Mason and Miss Deva
Ray Smith, of Orange; Herbert B
Nealy and Miss Bernice Rodgers,
of Orange; Zubzit Mayeaux and
Miss Mabel Gould, of Orange; E.
S. Harris and Miss Mamie Lee. ol
Orange; Vandell Harris and Miss
Alma Merle Wfillen, of Orange.
TEACHERS OF
CITY SCHOOLS
MEET TODAY
Pvt. Paul Havens, of Orange, is
now in an air service station
somewhere in England, assigned
to a giant air service command,
according ' to official information
received here Saturday. He is the
son of C. H. Havens, living at 107
Green avenue. " p
Lieutenant Thomas Arnold, for-
merly of Orange, has been trans-
ferred from Camp Howze, Texas
to Camp Gruber near Haskell,
Okla., where he is in charge of a
prisoner of war camp. Lieuten-
ant Arnold is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. T. J. Arnold of this city.
Pfc. N. C. Walker, U. S. Ma-
rines, writes his parents Mr. and
Mrs. N. C. "Nick" Walker of 203
Turrctt Road that he has recov-
ered from wounds suffered in ac-
tion July 21 jn the south Pacific.
He was wounded in the right hand
and face, his parents were noti-
fied.
Mr. and Mrs. James Grubbs of
1207 Burton street, this city, have
been advised by the war depart-
ment that their son, Lieut. James
A. Grubbs of the intelligence di-
vision of the U. S. army, was kill-
ed in action August 8, somewhere
in France. Lieut. Grubbs had
been previosly reported as miss-
ing in action.
Lieut. Grubbs, a native of Or-
ange, graduated from Orange high
school in 1936 and for the past
few years had been employed by
the Republic Oil company until
he entered the service in January
of 1943.
Besides his parents, surviving
Lieut. Grubbs is a brother Wpod-
efl (Bebub) Grubbs, a former
football star, also his grandmother,
Mrs. Lessie Clark. He was a ne-
phew of the late Lloyd Grubbs, the
first Orange man to be killed in
Florence J Brandt, 22, (111 C.v- world war No' '' Th,; local post
A regular meeting and dinner
of the Orange" chapter of Na-
tional Secretaries association will
be held Tuesday night at 7:30
o'clock with Mrs. Mavis Powell,
president, in charge, in the Ratn-
The line new FPHA building at bow room at the Riverside cafe-
132 Turrcd Ruud In Riverside, des- terla.
conditions as prevail in Orange
A two-year old child and a 08-
year old woman paid last week
with their lives the penalty <?f
somebody's mistakes. Perhaps to
locate the place where most
blame should be placed, would be
a problem, yet every one must
know that a vicious error occur-
red 'somewhere.
ADDITIONAL GOLD STARS
to represent sacrifices made by
MORE ACCIDENTAL DEATHS«
In the immediate past serve as vi-l
talent reminders of the cost of traf-
fic errors, especially in a locality | 132 Turrcd Unjjd
with such complicated traffic; t^ted us the Riverside Adult j
" building was formally opened to
residents of Orange Saturday
night. -*
A short dedication program was
held Sunday at which time Ross
D. Evahn, the FPHA projects
manager officiated. Open house
was held all day and community
leaders were present.
The newly elected officers of
the Riverside association welcom-
ed guests and an enjoyable time
was had by all who attended.
Orange are becoming increasing- Among the entertainment facili
ly in order. Lieut. James Grubbs,
who was quite a favorite among
the young people of Orange as he
grew to manhood and took his
press St.. Orange, Texas was en-
rolled recently at the Naval
Training School (Yeoman-VV) on
the Iqwa Slate Teachers College
campus, Cedar Falls, fvwa.
of the American Legion was nam-
jd in honor of the l te Lloyd
CJrubbs.
RINGLEADER
SENTENCED IN
HITLER PLOT
London, Sept. II (AP) — Dr.
Karl Fried rich Goerdeler, former
Leipzig mayor described .is a ring-
leader in the abortive July 20 plot
to kill Adolf Hitler, has been
sentenced to death along with
six' other "politicians," Berlin dis-
closed today,
.. lunnhei of alleged conspira-
tots. mi ludmg high army officeis,j
alie.i ,V have been killed The
tJ0->ciir old Goerdeler bod been
USO stiifT officers were instrumeu-j i,v the plotters to be
ties the new building provides are
a ladies' lounge for club meetings
and other uses, u card room, a
men's club room finished with six
United
| continental limits of, the
States. \ ^
Miss Brandt is Mrs. J. 0. Quig-
ley's sisted and was employed in
a naval inspection office in Orange
before joining the WAVES.
MRS.LORAKERR
DO SATURDAY
\
M rs.
lege sti
Seabees-Cruisers
In Playoff Tonight
Lora Kerr, 57, of 711 Col-
leges Street, died at a local hospi-
tal Saturday. She had been a res-
. IftUjnt of Orange for the past 26
Plans arocomplete for the Or- rtxa5' —* James Arthur [years. She was a member of the j
ange school schedule for this week, 1 ^nort. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Methodist hhurch.
beginning at 9:00 o'clock this1 James A Short of Box 271, Or- Survivuig are hot husband, L.
morning in the Stark high school nnK*\ Texas received his silver j Kerr. of^OnVnge; six daughters,
building, at 10:30 a. m , in the Carr ; w'n8s last Friday when he grad- Mrs. J, M. WiWk of Port Arthur;
Junior high with high school lac- "ated as a second lieutenant from mis. Leon E. SniMh. and Mrs.
ulty meetings. Maria Army Air Field, an ad- gam Long, both oKOrange. Mrs.
Other schedules of the first day ,vanced two - engine pilot school i Horace Lyons, of Yyilon, La.;
include meetings from 1:15 to 4 lhe AAf Training Command, it \]rs Mary Moreau, opicaiunont
P- m. i WHfi announced by Col. A J. Ker- und Mrs. " Bill SchulU, dKHills-
On Tuesday, the schedule fol- wm Malone, commanding officer, boro, Texas: eight grand children;
lows. 9 at m.. Can Junior high ! four sisters, Mrs. J. A. LaDoux>of
faculty, visiting teachers; 9:00 a , c Alfl'ed Martin, son of John ! Crowley. La.; Mrs. M. Carrier, o
in.. Stark high faculty, guidance c'- Littleken of Front and Seventh , port Arthur, Mrs. B. C. Speai-s, ol
rjest
place in business lire and then. ncw po(1| tables, and provisions
became a soldier, is the lasj to be! |(ir c(0min0c8 and checkers, und
listed. A gold star to represent j,#n attrac-tive and well equipped
him will take It's place on the ser-1 sntJ(.|t bar
v ice flap, of the First B.iptist ; Tlu, [.'pHA-USO offices are
church of which he was a mem- ; hi)usi-a in the building. The lour
ber.
TEACHERS WILL FLOCK in
this week to bring abo it a general
change in the population .set-up
with most "of them filling places
in civic affairs in addition to that
of school teaching. This is as it
should be in view of the fact that | desirable entertainment. It is
it tends to put into practice the ; planned to have high class dances
principles of most subjects that; ,,vt,,.y Saturday night. At the first
arc taught In public schools,. /Or-! duncu music will be furnished by
ange hus for many years been ex the victoiy Syncopalors, said to
ceptionally fortunate in the type ol ht. 0IK, of the best dance bands in
tal in arranging loi the open.uy
and US<) representatives will be
preset.t at all times to cooperate
with the Riverside association In
making this center a suitable
place lor the residents of River-
side and of orange to find de-
sehool teachers employed.
game,
evening will give them the title.
The match originally was sched-
uled for last Thursday, but ruin
forced a cancellation At the con-
clusion of the official season the
SeaBces and the Cruisers were
tied for the Championship. w.th IK, adc ^un|nr ^ " burn attended Smack.,ver High,
nine v ictoi ios and thiee ea . Friday: 9:00 a. m. to 12:00 noon,; Pno1' enrollment in the Man-
each A two-out-of-thiee game. u.„u gch,K,| sopho- ;t,me Service, he was employed a«
meetings continue: 1:15 to 2:45 p.; , P. WaUWn, pastor of the Brunei
!m„ area meetings, j James E Rayburn. 112 Elm St. Methodist church officiating, burial
i Thursday/ Registration 9:00 a.r),un«c- *; " 1,1 Mrs. A K Ray- taking place in Evergreen ccme-
i in. to 12:00 noon, high school se-j'111,1 of Smackover. Arkansas, is tery under direction of the Fuller
niors; H. S. football squad; ninth nr,w enrolled at the United States funeral home,
I grade junior high. 1:1,5 to 4.00 p. j Mai itime Servfce Training Station The following served lis active
m., high school juniors, eighth j J" Sl- Petersburg. Florida. Ray- • pallbearers: J. M. Wood, .1 A
RED ARMIES i
NEAR HUNGARY
AND AUSTRIA i
stop at tlu
oscow, Sept. II (AP) The u)(, |^it
RedNarms by frontal and Uaifk
assaulfywas driving German and j
HunganaK troops today from
fheir strongtuilds in the eastern
Carpathians, Nutei crushing en-
emy resistance uv the Transylva-
nian Alps.
Armored column/ voider the
command of Russia's neWst mar-
shal, Rodion Y. Maiiriovskyv were
less than 30 miles liom Njhc
Trunsy K aninii capital of t'liH.
His forces, advancing steadily
ftnm the northeast and southeast
By Aiton'L. Blakeslee, Associated
Press War Editor
Allied armies pressed closer up-
on the German border today along: |
u massive assault arc against
fierce enemy defense. Americans
captured the city i>f Luxembourg, .
capital of the tiny grai\d ditchy.
and U! S. guns pumped shells onto ,
Siegfried strongpoints on German .
'sacred soil." ,. . .k%HI
U> S. army units freed Luxcm-
hourg, and to the north sliced '%
within 8 1-2 milies of the '' relch I
frontier. Their shells were re- "r*
ported exploding in Aachen, ,a
Siegfried stronghold. The first
army und British second army hud
joined hands above Husxelt in
Belgium, crunching toward tho
hastily - erected defenses from
Aachen- to Kleve in the lina
gum ding the Rhineland and such
■cities as Cologne and Uusseldorf.
Bitter German opposition, cool*
, mg weather and suicide Naxi dc-
fense of vital Atlanticsupply porta
slowed the Allied offensive.
Resistance stiffened southeast
of Liege, and against the British
who spanned the Albert canal in
Belgium. One dispatch, however,
said the Second army had thrust
ahead nine miles from its canal
Hendi-iek cn,Ksin« ut Beerlngen.
South of Luxembourg, the U. S.
I'hlrd army fought near Metz.
Germans battled as bitterly to
who formed the
the militarist ti
this section.
The building will be open daily
with USO personnel in attendance
! together with representative* of
tlTe Riverside asSociat.on. Plans
are well in progress tor providing
i various recreational activities en-
tertainment to meet all needs, and ' ,.,,nsp)rntoi s,'
I taste.
The building can lit' easily
found by driving north on Second
street to Weingurtetis large store,
j turn light on Tin ret Bond und
lust lug building on
/■
conic chancellor of a new German
t,ovei ninent which would have
sought peace, the broadcast said.
The six convicted with Goerile-
ler were named as IJIrich von
Hassell, former Nazi ambassador
to Rome; Countly Wolt
von llelldorf, former police chief
In Berlin. Troll Zu S.ol/, former
secretaiy in lhe >n nistiy of foi gua,.^ the BeMort gap Into south-
eigri affairs; Pi.nl Leieune-Jung, u *
former deputy: Wilhelm Leusch- Seventh #rmy
ner, former llessii.n minister ol
the Interior: Jus*f Wirmer, ajv at-
•a
torney
.Goerdeler. tormei German min-
worked to
western Germany against the
Frenchmen were
within 10 miles of Belfort, and
the Amcrlcuns within 24. Other
' 111
Frenchman (penetrated the out-
, - . skirts of Dijon to the west.
irter of economic,, worKM «o Mf)>flow dlgpatche!1 inditalwl
the pi.ins or tie.ison an. it uhs Imminent new offensive on the
, ^ J pol",h «nd Baltic fronts, and « '
aitois an po a British broadcast declared Soviet
>'1111.111 m *■' patrol* had been operating In
agency riansocean said. East Prussia
Ooi'idfM'M vvhh after •
price of a million inaiks (about
$4(10,000) had been place on his
FIFTH ARMY
MOVES UP TO
heart
The conspirators intended 1m-
|medrctelv after th" nsstfsslniitlftn
I to set up a dictatorship ' which
would have immediately capitu-
lated to the enemies i f Gorman.","
I the agency mii.I
| All seven of the, accused were
declared -to have had 'connections
With foreffcn powers since 1942,"
CONGRESS TO
STUDY TAX
REDUCTIONS
v d
GOTHIC LINE
Ledoux. Horace Lyons, Sam Long, I WPre rapidly seizing confiol ol
playoff seiies was arranged by the
registration high
recreation commission
mine the league winner
to deter-
mores, seventh grade
ling Convention
Well Attended
Singing Convention
The schedule lor elementary
teachers meetings this week, un-
der direction of Miss Epsic Young,
opened with a meeting of building
A large, number attended | principals from 9:00 a m to 11 00
monthly session of the Orange a m iind from 1:00 to 4:00 p. m,
County Singing convention held at with continued conferences,
the North Orange Baptist church j on Tuesday, teachers ol Andcr-
from 2 to 4 p. m. Sunday with W son Curtis and Pine Grove will
A. Black, of Orange, presiding. continue in supervisory conferen-
: . |,ccs and building mjeetings; all
j Riverside teachers, iat Colburn
j school, teachers of Manlcy and
I |C/^ QPNFni II F Til'ey schools to meet at hours
J■ If UUI" 'scheduled from 9:00 a. m to
OF ACTIVITIES """"""
♦ i _. . _ .
_ Monday, 8:00 p. m USO Campi BIliejOCKetS TTip
I J i^how. "The Hurricane from Har-| |_i _ . ri . -) .
1 < '"I'm, 'Heigh-Ho", presented by llOT jnOlS, &■ I1
|t Commanding Officer Captain J.
M Schelling, USO, for Service The U. S. Navy Bhiejackets
Men and Naval' employees; ad-! tripped the Consolidated Hot
mission bv invitation only. ! Shots, 2 to 1, in th^ semi-final
Tuesday, 4:00 p. m„ Camp Fire j round of the cttjorfass A softball
Girls Reading room. 8:00 p. m. championships*! West End park
Square Dance Club; all civilians j yesterday. Approximately 500
over 18 years of age interested in! people saw^the hotly - contested
square dancing cordially invited! battle, which was exciting from
to join the club; Service Men. in
junior high: a service station operator.
1:1 f> to 2:00 p m.. registration!
strays; 3:00 to 4:00 p. m., meeting Raymond Ashcralt. son of
of all secondary teachers at Stark j ^*®"rgc R Ashcraft of Hll Gilmer
Courts is now enrolled at the
United States Maritime Training
J Service Station ifi St Petersburg,
| Florida Ashcraft attended Or-
ange high school.
Mr and Mrs. William Hicks, 401
| First street in Bland addition,
have received word that their son,
'If. F. Hicks, seaman second class
i of the U. S. Navy, has landed in
i San Francisco, Calif, after four-
teen months overseas service, He
is expected to ai l ive here for a
i visit on September 19. Robert L.
; Hicks, petty officer third class of
j the U. S^Navy, stationed in Dal-
las, yient Sunday here with Ins
parents, Mr, and Mrs
jifeks.
Howard
Smith.
Harper, and Leon E.
All-Stars Meet
Port Arthur Gulf
Oil Ten Tonight
vited guests.
Wednesday, 2:00 p. m„ Naval
Officers Wives Club. 8:00 p. m.,
linger Painting, Lobby; Person- First Methodist
nfcd Association, Small Club room.
8:19\P m., Informal dance. Social
roomNService Men and GSO girls.
Jay, 8:00 p. m„ Decor-
ating party; come and help decor-
ute for theNFriday dance.
Friday, 8 (ifi p. m , North Pole
Dance; keep cck>1 by suggestion.
'* Servicemen and GSO girls
Saluithiv, 8:00 pX m.. Special
Dance, Camp Polk Orchestra; Ser-
vice men and GSO gir
stand to finish.
The Orange recreation commis-
sion announced after the game
that the Navy would play the
Church
The All Stars will be bolstered
by the addition of Red Weather-
ford to the pitching staff Al-
Wllliam | though bordering fifty, Weather-
1 ford still is one of the finest un-
der arm hurljers in Texas and has
W. C' Weekly Jr., of the U S. j suffered only one defeat this year,
navy, arrived home Monday tt, I He has beaten the Oilers num-
spend a shbrt time on a visit to j her of times when he was with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. c. the Humble Oil Co, of Houston
Weekly Sr. and is anxioUs- to take them Into
, camp again.
j The All Stars starting lineup
probably will be Weuthcrford, p;
Mazzagate. c; Bingham, lb: Ton I,
2b; Crum, 3b; Adams, ss; Green
the entire mountain block that had
protected Hungary liom invasion.
The Soviet iiidin increased the
| Intensity ol Russian appeals to
| the peoples nf Hungaiy and Aus-
i triii to throw olf then Nn/i yoke
las the Red army ioiled closet to
I them.
The forces of (Jen, feodoi Tol-
bukhin were teported uppiouch-
■ ing the Yugoslav Irontiei us well
One of ihe sol t Ira 11 attractions of I as fanning southwaid close to the
the local season is, on tap tonight I Aegean sea.
when the Gulf Oil Co. ten of Port A junction between the Red
Arthur invades West End park I arms and Marshal Tito's Yugo-
for a game with the Commercial I slav partisan:, will pippare the
League All Stars at R 15 o clock. | way 11 om a double : weep into
The Oilers are leading the Port j the llungai urn plans liom the east
Arthur city league and have only and south, it was believed in Mos-
dropped three games this summer, j cow.
The Moscow i ommiiiiique said
Soviet columns hitting inside
southeastern Transylvania and a-
long the eastern side had captured
nearly 60 towns and villages yes-
terday, and forced another Car-
pathian puss into Transyl , ania.
Two Delegates
To Convention
Meanwhile, Russian newspaper,
dispatches indicated that the pro-
tracted lull on the Polish and Bal-
tic sectors of Ihe eastern front is
likely to explode at any moment :
The timing and direction of Ihe j
next" major thrusts by the Red
army remained a guarded secret !
Rome, Sept II (AP) Taking,
advantage of the enemy's preoc- j
ciipation with large scale, bloody |
lighting on the Adriatic coast j
south of Rimini, U.'fi. Fifth army
foiees followed up a German with-
drawal north und northwest of ,
Heienre and reached the Gothic
line defenses. Ail ed headquarters
disclosed today"
>1 S"me Fifth aim.y units. Iiead-
' quartets said, reached Usella, 17
miles northwest o(.Florence and'
; only 35 miles south of Ihe great i
\ Po valley industrial cil.y and com-
! munications center ol Bologna
Farther west American troops
\ pushed well into the outskirts of j
1 Pist'.iji und occupied high ground >
dominating the town from the
) northeast while' elements of the
(92nd infantry division reached the,
! Gothic line defenses at Zezz.era. (I
1-2 miles northeast of Lucca.
Pi esurriubly content to wait un-
1 til they get back into the north-
ern Apennines, where the terrain
j is ideal for defense, the Nazis
I offered scant opposition to the!
Filth
1 Stiffcr resistance was met near
Italy's west coast where the Am-
ei icans made more crossings of i
I the Serchio river and Vecchlnno,
five miles north of Pish, was oc-
cupied, The river crossings,
brought the doughboys into ex- !
NEW HIGHWAY
CONSTRUCTION
BILL READY
Washington, Sept. II. (AP) A
house committee cull for postwar
lux reductions, particularly for
flume tn the lower und middle in-
come groups, was added lodny to
lhe I low of Uioklng-ahead propo-
sals made urgent by military guc-
cesses abroad. •
In agreement with War Mobi-
lize) James F. Byrnes that now ta
the time to build the framework
,lor the bridge back to (waCe, tile
special house economic planning
committee proposed in a formal
Washington, Sept II (AP, A "la"'
h.gh speed post win highway sys- <" S,u"" "W™'1 *a" reduc-
i,-,n ade<|i,Hte to serve an cm,- u""'- "|,,n" w,th incentives ^cr/
mated 411,000,000 motor vehicles t" K'ow and Investor. U>
was envi.su today by sponsors " * ,i"'" venla^T.
of road const, uction l.-gislatlon u> < ' edit controls to p^vent
ien.ly lo, senate conside, alio,, tins «-cumuUled savings fiord c us-
W(,,.k ■ 11lit inflatiun us they arc turned
loose. ' / , y[
In addition to tlics/ mam poilitii
for a postwar program, the com-
mittee headed iiy Hep. Colmer
(I)-Miss) called also for ecorui-
mics in government, incn'wsi'd lor-
elrn tradiy early removal of ag-
riculture. controls, maintenance of
an arijied forces of upwards of
;i.OOfMlOO men until the occujia-
l.ori job abroad is ended, and in-
'."feases in stste payments for un-
i • m ployed com pens a lion.
ti
Despau ni(f on an immediate a-
gieement I>y joint conference
committees to work out senate
and house1 differences over le-
eonversion and surplus property
disposal hills, party leaders sum-
moned absent senators back .to
consider other major legislation.
Senator Hayden (D-Ailz.I said
he would take up a pending $:! •
375.250,000 road constru'tion jirfi-
poBa 1 tomoriow if there is a 'urge
attendance: and, if not then, t
first time I sight enough mem)*eih
on the floor to give it proper .con-
sideration."
Ration Roundup
M
istenCe mine fields and mortal
The Russians made it plain they) fire
Up to noon today Indications j The game was arranged by the
were that only two representa-1 Orange recreation commission,
I tives of the Orange county demo- i 4
If; Boutwelt, ef: Lea, rf: Byrd, sf.| Intend (o'rarry their full shai c of! was acTTvp "in that areaT droptiing r through
the offensive burden in the final | a number of bombs Saturday
knockout of the relch. J night.
team j cratlc organization would attend
Thursday night al 8 o clock at the state democratic convention ■ • T k. A
West End park for the1 title to be he)d in nallas Tuesday W LlOnS I 0 Meet
B. Simmons, Orange county dem- A *. "7 DA T ■ i .
j ocratic chairman, and Charles P. At / !jU I OniQnt
—LANDS SAWBL'CK | Smith were each en route to Dal- ;
Chicago. — 12-year-old Lester lias Monday
Sims didn't catch any fish in Fox j
Itkt — but his luck had not de-! Once to every man and nation
serted him. j comes the moment to decide,
Sims almost fell out of his boat In the strife of Truth with False-
when he pulled in his line and} hood, for the good or evil side.
found a >10 bill on the hook. | --James Russell Lowell
By the Associated Press
Meats, fats, etc Book four
• he enemy airforce ■!<* I red stampstill ouuh /.« and A,)
r tivuu AMkiika ^roijih valid indefinitely
VrtHptfscd foods Book four
blue /Stamps AH through 7J\ arid
ROOSEVELT,
CHURCHILL
A regular routine meeting and
supper of the Orange Lions, club
will be held tonight in the ban-
quet room of the Holland hotel
Rotary Club
Meets Tuesday
V
Fierce German resistance heldjAfi/through LS valid indefinitely
: the Eighth army offensive against
H. C. Cranfill, assisted by De-
Witt C. Bennett, will be in charge
of the program at the weekly
meeting and luncheon of ,Vi" Or-
Rlmini and the avenue into
Po valley to a standstill.
The flr« depa
out at 12:30 p
ent was called
Sunday on* ac-
with O. D. Butler, president, in j ange Rotary club to bo held at count of a f*JSe alarm being re-
charge. The meeting opens at 7:30112:15 p. m, Tuesday in the m ianu | ported In Ivicinlly of Elm and
o'clock. > ' hotel banquet room. | Tenth *t><eU.
False Al
Quebec, Sept. II. (AP)
of blue tokens will be discon- ident Roosevelt and Prime Mini>- :
tinned Oct. 1 tor Churchill have arrived in Qtt«-
Sugar — BiKik four stamps 30 bee for their war conference. V
. throjigh 33 valid Indefinitely for Roosevelt will cahtft
I five pounds each, stamp 40 good Prime Minister Churchill, ;
for live pounds for home canning reached Halifax yeiterday,
through Feb 2rt,- 1945. Z' The president was
Shoes — Book three tfTfpftane by Mr*, Roosevelt. %
stamps 1 and ^ good indefinitely
Gasoline — 12-A coupons good From lack
for three gallons through Sept. 21. empires fall.
B*3, B-4, C-3 and C-4 coupons slitibie,
good for five gallons.
of moral
Right, i
m
,v
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 214, Ed. 1 Monday, September 11, 1944, newspaper, September 11, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth221359/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.