The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 269, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1937 Page: 4 of 4
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THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1937.
MRTOLDFIE
AIM OF GROUP
WAftrtmQTOK. July 23. (4?)-A
Rjroup " of th< > >ni*te!9. wutst qrdent
champion* of thf HdmlniBtrntlnn or-
unAir.eri a campaign today for co«n-
pfetlon of 1h< jnfdlrtpnt's lcKialntlve
proRWin at this WSdion hf corttrwe.
Senator Bone, p., Wa h.. «ald the
member* would try to combat <i grow-,
ing netitlmont to ndjottrn immotllntjely
aTter settlement of tb<- court rcrir-
i(a«tcati«n wwrtroveriiy., 1
The Kr<iLtr wIlllnaiAt that eonsrewi
May in wiffllnn, In1 *alrt: imtllyft pa n-
cp (tt-Ipant throe nut/or rn(.i/*urc y—
the ''hoiminR, wa*e-hour a/d farm
bills. .JH
Senator MeNory, B. Ore. the rnl-
nortt.v leader, said, however, he ivoqld
(tplwiHe ' action.1 on a;t>.V leiiisltt- ■
tMn. ■■■■'• jl :■/■
' Bonator Pope, D„ Idaho, who ititro-
dueed t lie farm j XA\\ providing' for
more stringent production control.
Bald he believed the housing and
wage-hour ,propo aw coitld be enaot-
ed w/th mite./debute, but. suggested
the farm bill might be held over un-
til l'SSS. He, urged that hearings bo
started now, however.
he wage-hour bill in on thfe sen-
afife calendar. but the housing and
frtrm measures still are being eongld-
ed by on'nmlt teen.
-*-*■ l^oTB^ild^Electric"Speed_C«r
'[Frankie TJumia^^vu'^itl Staje^arrSpends S^^Time
^ I:.21
In Basement Workshop
m mmk
•p HANKIE THOMAS ha* pulled
'JP tradition down by, the ears!
For ohe thing, he is a successful
star of both stage aind screen, at
that In-between age when juvenile
stars are generally neither seen
nor heard of. For another, though
he has been appearing) as a profit
slonal since he waacarried onto
the stage to his mother's-arm* at
thi age of nine months, he^ls a
thoroughly A all-rou nd^boyM,who
In the New York autoraobli..- show;
but bis part. In "Seen But Nqt
Heard" delayedhjs work, The ma*
chM It four feet long, made of
wood and equipped with special
small-sited balloon tires. It is
powered by means of a new type
of glass-clad storage battery and!"
a half horsepower motbr which
drives on the back axle. FrarikTe
hopes to do as much as twenty
miles an hourover,the twenty
Frankle Thom&s builds a car that will go 20 m.p.h.'
' -* *r at the flip of switch./" t*=~~
FOOD MARKET
'I'll i ill
rice-
Camels Banished FronTDesert ,
By fewest American Transport
TN planning lumme:
X ways well to ineli
het disk. A hot b«r«r
the aire plea
soup, hot ~
cord roaat
dessert may
jr meals It Is el-
ude at least one
beverage is of eourse
at a hot appetiser er
etable Salad,
lies or a hot
tar*.
A hot beverage is
lest, but a hot ap
meat with vegeti
; with hat vegetable
lay all take their ti
Beat Halts Meat Price Rise
A long hot Spell will do Ski
meat prices down thin (
. .Ing else, for no matter hew *ho
the supply, consumer demand,4:
below it. Hindquarter cuts remain
bat good values are available in fore-
ter cats of LAMB, VEAL, and
P. Smoked and prepared meats be-
ing more in demand are somewhat
higher. Legs of LAMB offer the best
roast value.
Broiling CHICKENS are plentiful
and reasonable in price. Generous sup-
plies of FISH should mean fairly low
prices. EGGS continue to be available
at attractive price levels. The hard-
cooked egg salad or omelets are al-
ways popular In hot weather.
limits Plentiful, Reasonable
Fruits in variety continue to pour
late. 'am*k>t, fftw AjfPLgfl, several
w"aia."Ma
ttmn&ms.
are net teo expensive eon-
end the sfaert
are the aewest
IMS
JR,,
filtering the season
crop. NECTARINES
arrival.
Use Vegetables Freely
Witt a lent list of cheap
vite year attention.
foods with one hof dish.
Cold Cats MMi*"dCVe*stable Salad
Quartered Tomatoes
Bread and Batter
Chocolate Souffle Hard Sauce
Iced Coffee
Milk
'This menu tested and tasted
AAP Kitchen.
Sports Roundup
* By Eddie Brlets
Wh^re Tbey my Today
; P*line nt San Antonio. nlRlit.
Fort Worth at Beaumont, day,
< Only two gamea acheddied).
, ^ By tlie Associated Press
John flrodsleki probably Would be
a* good n man n any to pnt a erlmp
In Stanley aperry's etin-en strivings
as n conseetttlve game hltteti ;
■ The Oklahoma City Indians' see-
ond tmseman has conneeted safely In
26--gami.«. Eleven shy of the mark
nchelved by Ike Boone of San An-
tonio 14 years ag<V ■ " - ■
(Iroditieki proved himself Houston's
• top-noteh twlrler In a 1 to 0 vlofory
over thlrd-plnee Tulsa last flight. II?
not only , kept the erferuy at bay but
supplied the game's"1 oply run, A long
homer over the left field wall in the
iplghth. He allowed nine hits hut
himself out of more than one
with 11 strikeouts.
las seems to have Improved Its
f baseball under'new Manager
Itay Btubaker hu.t the last minnte
punch l\ stiil lacking. The Steers
tangled i wjji San Antonio In^-WTe*
gamp and loint out 3 tg^3i—Tfie North
Texans have ^^tosirTnany a game th|s
yen rj y~--Ttt nt%i rgl n.
win gave iSan Antonio Ha fifth
straight and pulled tlierri til , ^Ithin
a gam«* of Port worth, hanging on
the frayed edge of tke,first divlsloh.
The Pats ended their\nine-game los-
ing streak by taking Ui\ nlghtoap of
a doubleheader from Beatoiont. The
aoore was ft to 5. Beaumon^ took the
fipst 4 to 2.
'The punch that made Olfehoma
city the league pacer ovi-r a^long
fplaVa right half-back"on his school four acre* that make up hlrVar-*
football team and does carpeiitry.
lLafet year Frankle was starred
i the motion picture i"\Vednes-
iay'# Child".iThls fall, when the
iurtltlh .went'up on, his current
'|Broadway production,^ "Seen But
(|Not Heard", a friend whispered to
kit mother—"He'a done It!"
l^'Done what?" said Mrs. Tbom-
ir«Bunf an anxious mother-eye
ultd to.tee what^Franklo had
one now.\ I ■ % i
fc"Brldgedjae7gaj),'^replledjthe
lend,"
,
'IBUUtl t ^
PThatVthe amazing thing about
TSUiyoungster.* Bettorjthan any
heatrlcal prodigy of the last two
_eeade9,'which list Includes such
spectacular names as Jackie Coo-
per, Baby Peggie and Jackie Coo-
gan,< Frankle Thomas has bridged
the awkward age that Is a go-be-
tweenfrora childhood to maturity.
Op the stage, he has all the poise
of a veteran.1 Off-stage, though In
many tways amazingly mature for
a * boylof> fifteen, heis as com-
many tyrays^ stmazlm
by
hobbles'aaithe average youngster
pletefyl*possessed Ibylsports • and
his ateHMiPV>
■■Intervlewed^recentlyil In W his
■■sdt,Workshop'at the^famlly
C5 neariSu mm it,l New i Jersey,
Ihojeald jjls main lntereetlwas in
■IBminiature. car< shown! In the
i mallei thej plana
iIulilJMNPMVV
CdThopedl
I'ialdM
rhomasl
'iVkkSfaiftarilniUme^tOienter^tt.,
ents' country home. ^
In the woods back of the Thom-
as home In the Watchung Moun-|
tains of New Jersey, Frankle and.,
two friends from the Professional
Children's School In New York
City have built a log cabin which
they Use for a clubhouse. That
walls are hung with tennis rack-
ets, golf sticks and hunting tro-
phies collected by the boys. And
the young atar Is eagerly counting
the days until he can park bis
"Katbamobtle", with a flourish in
front a this ju'bachelor's para-
dise".* ..........
Both Mr. and Mrs. Thomas are\
actors and both erf them believe'
the best way for Frankle to de-'
velop his amazing talent Is for
him to lead as normal a life as
possible. —i ■*" id
4a"You can't-portray a hjiman be-J
lng on the stage, unless you are
one.iWe send Frankle to a (fchool
that'ohly differs, from regular
public schools ip the * hours.
Classes stiirt at ten, so the young-
sters can catch up on sleip. We
don't want Frankle to live apart
—In the false, sheltered existence
of so-m&ny child stars;" added
pretty>> blonde Mrs. Thomas, as
she « stepped gingerly > across a.
basement floor strewn with nail#1
and tools, and led the way up-
stairs away from the clatter ot,
her famou« son'srbammoilng-,p^
streteh of the* seamm wart still tbej
when the Indians ■lNttHed^i34rtv5Stnn.
In the latil four' iji«4«jrs"*the.v ulAmmed
across eltht-rrinf. winning - s "to K.
— t '■
YKNTKItllAY'S STARS
I.on 4-\>tte and Johnny Lannlng,
B4e«: Held tVinlinftlx, to five hits
and two lilt#, respVcthely, for 5-1 and
2-S doubleheader win.
• Jibitny Foxx, Red So*: HiF~fWO
hottiere In 10-3 win over Tigers,,
1 BUI Lee and Larry French, Cubs:
Stopped Phillies 4-1 and 8-0, reHpeet-
Ively, Iii twin bill, allowing eight and
si* hits, "Ti
Kemp tVIleker, Yankees: Held the
Browns to ten hltk and drove two
runs In with singles for til8 vlesory.
' Je.ffooat, Dodgfrs; Fanned seven
handcuffed IMratea with four hits
f<vr (l-o triumph.
AI Simmons, Senators: Hit homer
and sihgle, driving in'.three runs for
7-3 win over White Sox,
Paul Derringer, Reds: Pitched hit-
less ball In 11-2 liinlng relief trick
to save (1-5 win over Giants.
"Bud News" Hale and Brace'Camp-
boll, Indians: Former drove in two
runs, including winning tally. In 9-8
Opener victory over Athletics;, Cam p.
bell hit two doubles, two singles,
driving In three runs in 8-7 night-
cap wih-
NEW YORK, July 22. (AP)—Too
bad , Rogers Horhiby had to go.c Rut
allj the fans were "on" him and the
club wasn't - drawing. Paid attend-
ance at « recent game was only 712,
Big league clubs can't get very far on'
crowds like that. The.full handle of
Tommy purr Is Thomas Cleorge Paul
Farr. Jhrimy Braddook may make
the first start of his new campnlgn
against Roscoe Toles In Detroit this
Summer with Scotty . Montelth doing
the prompting. Joe .McCarthy of the
Yankees says Pie Traynor of the Pi-
t'atca^ia-llie .gyeateat, third sackec he
can rememlHjr.
On the , same day Cleveland sports
writers were demanding. a snappier
double play combination, the Indians
palled four. Tom Walsh, a Chicago
golf pro, charges his pupils accord-
ing t<) t|ie number of strokes he can
take off? their score. Tom Yawkey,
<rWnep-..cff the Red Sox. sees more
games than ntit.,.other big league mo-
gul. averaging niortV tUup too per
season. The Boston Bees flre. lean-
ing towards San A,ntoht<), Texas, a#
next year's 'training camp. ,....
R®ft Stfrmah, Jael?1 Deni^ney'Sf' hca-
V.Vweight, i.s one of .theji.'f«fw fighters
Who has campalgned In ev\ry divi-
sion. He began as n U2-pound fly-
Weight and now mingles with the blg-
gesf in the business; Jimmy Dykes,
White Sox manager, says he'd feel
better and play better If the m
nates would let hlin_ jju*kc—cigars
|\ ytODERN American
reached
while play 1 ng_jLWrdr""
-XEW CHKVROI.ET TAXI-
C'Att ADPF.1X- TO IlKCt'bAU
I,INK OF l :i7 MODKI;S
Answering the growing deptand of
the taxlcnb Industry for a" roomier,
low-priced, economical taxioab. W- JS.
Holler, general sales manager of- the
Chevrolet motor dlvlMon of General
Motors Sales corporation, has an-
nounced the- addition of n hew Chev-
plate type with single eushion-mpuflJ.s~
ed disc ft inclies lp.,aimtreTi>ir and
with braidesL-«« We<r"facings to pro-
" life.
to-If
' en ess has
to bantoh an- f
pipl
tlon Id a far-off land. m
* Ski pa of the deaert that
fly the lastly aeaa be-
tween Danaicni and
Baghdad are heading for
their lait port Who will
traverae 800 ail lea Of
Syrian aanda by camel-
hack whan ha lean spin
comfortably and far more
quickly aeroea than by '
sleeper boat
.. The deaert haa no terrore fttr
thla haw tranaport ineana, now aup-
planttng area the faateet auto-
mobile factlltlea. U a t n g tba
Mate eonatrnction principles as
A ta erica's popular light-weight,
faat trains. It haa a top spaed of
sixty-five miles' an hoar behlhd
Ita ISO - horsepower tractor that
covers 800 miles In fifteen hours.
Sand storms and atKltng temper-
atures are part of the serious
weather vicissitudes With which
Byriah desert tracers hare had
to contend, but they are no handl-
Chevrolet* available in the W37
models.
The new taxlcab, build on a 127-
lneh wheelhnse. has tt turning radius
of 22 feet, right or left, Holler's an-
nouncement deelarSd. It has an ov-
eritll length of 2l>2 inches, with a 8-
3 1 (1 inch clearance inuler the frOht
axle and an 8-incli clearance under
the rear a*le.. ■ T
Ah outstanding feature of the new
taxlcab is the removable straight par-
tition between the driver's and the
passenger's, compartments. The par-
tition can easily he replaced v with n
sedan-type of front sent, converting
the cat, into a seven passenger sedan
after it has served Its purpose as a
taxlcab. <, wS^hfs-.'feo-ttire isreatly In-
creases the car's tl-nde ln' resale,.val-
ue, |nceordlng to W. E- Fl*h, Chievrt-,
let. commercial ear manager.
The new- Chevrolet tnxleah ^carries
all tlie major features j f the'regtilar
llrte Of Chevrolet passenger cars,'
along with some special adaptations
to meet the specialized reitulrements
of taxicab service, the company an-
flounced.
In the Chevrolet taxlcab, operators
get the tried and proved Chevrolet
six-cylinder, valve-in-head engine with
its Increased horsepower and great-
er economy. Quick, positive, and
can j' gear shifting are-' provided by
t!hevrolet's , i111 proved syncro-mesh
transmission with silent second
speed. The elijtch Is of the stnBte-4 w^hjrtfe^r by the sentinel's call,
(i n em/iM
cap to the bus travelers. They ride
In a tightly sealed vehicle air con- i
ditioaed by most approved Amerl-1 1
can methods, their surroundings aa
comfortable as they are In the air
conditioned homes, trains, oSlcaa^ "
and factories with which Americans
dally are growing more familiar. ll
' In Washington William 9. Hen-
derson, executive vice-president of
the Air Conditioning Manufactur-
ers' AasOclatlon, said the Syrian1
deaert aerylce la the latest striking
evidence of the acceptance of this
great health and comfort principle.
roiet taxlcab to the regular line ■ of
rifle, pistol and-,,in«chftM* -gun nuirks-
matishlp, also . Close -order drill. They
ttll realize that ah efficient soldier
must be able to march and shoot ac-
curately," and Consequently,, their re-
eeptlpn of the Instruction presented
by/bfflcers' of the 359th Infantry has
been and is very enthusiastic.
The boys are also getting ncciunint-
e<l with the responsibilities 'of guard
duty. That they are getting the spir-
it of this also is evidenced by an (ic-*-
currence recently. The members' of
the guard detail .are Invariably In- SACOIJS. Mich.,
st rile ted to stop and examine nil J>er^ Blonde l'snbclj
sons, ho matter what the rank of
"Carry on, Major." ,
' In the afternoon, anyone around the
"hostess house may see a large group
of .boys shadow-boxing ' or sparring.
Down in the drill field one may see
other boys piny lng. volley ball, base-
ball, or .getting In condition for the
track meet. ' '
YeatCrdayi the church services were
well attended, both Protestant and
Catholic. About/850 boys attended
uW^mornlng services, 400 attending
theP'rotestttrtt service, and 150 .at-
tending the' Catholic service.
these persons might be. Cn^Uifo"-*!^' she
eiflc night n Tar. eomTn'K into' camp.
Boys Make
Good Progress In
C.M.T.C. Training
The 10fl7 lioys In the Citizens' Mil-
itary Training Camp at Camp Bullls
are, progressing, ..admirably In their
training. \
This has so far consisted mainly of
Halti .JJ'ho goes there?" The answer
out of the dftrjfncss was, "Major——."
The sentinel replied, "Advance and
be recognized." then seeing that ft
really wns Major——- '- resuni^t!.. ,h|
march with the gruff statement, ati>
tllble /at the other end of the camp,
July _22_
wns publicly
ay"~of gossip charges that
served cocktails to her hlch
school pupils, but her teaching job
Was farther away than ever.
SHANGHAI, July 22. (AP) — A
reported "bold attempt" to assassi-
nate Japanese Ambassador Shlegeni
Jtirwjigoe. toddy was dismissed by
-JLapati# c^ authorities as a misunder-
standing.
LIE CriAHIN SI
? mIIoffici
IS ON FLOATING
Murray ' Sokolsk.v, soh -of Mr, am.
Mrs. flyman Sokolsky of Orange, has
returned to his home after attending
cantp and: San Antonio a'ttd visiting
with relatives and' friends in Dallas
and Houston.
When Charlie ChapHn, master of pentomime and maker of sue
cessful sUent pictures in sn ers of sound, sets o
it all." hs boards his yacht, the "Psnscts,
sets oht to "«et sway
naces," snd heads for
JMBRRII - npuif-nsmcd craft is not
but is extremely comfortable, with sleeping accom-
for sight and s crsw of two esfl«>ni, both old friends
\ deep blue waters off
luxurious * '
The
Buy neckties
with what It saves
It Uo'i awMMMy In | r 50« «T mom to get qualiiy In a
dmrifrio, TuotH P ««. m «t by lb®
of Li<tnia«, nan to you In a llrga tub* *125«. Nats
hiw It rti- n«, WmtlftM *nd pn«Mt> font t« S. More,
trlj I (rfrt II u«r«ymi |3 • yr.i o*« S0 tl«itl
.firliim. tM*f« yiu «lik th*t MTlnt—««k.
lit « UH'l'I; • iu|gmtiau. LaMxrt Pluumtcol Ca.
LISTERINE
TOOTH PASTE
25c
I
Bf fORE YOU 5TART YOUR
v Jb%*
• Any rasp's chances of winning are slim
when he places his money on unknown razor
blades. Play ssfe-*shsvc with Probak Jr.,
product of t^e world's largest blade maker.
At ^ lor i0#,lNls blade is absolute "tops" in
its prloe class—a double-edge blade that
whisks through the most stubborn bristles
WithMt puQ or irritation. Buy • package of
Probak Jr. from your dealer todayy ^
long. "Panacea" is powi
ompanv SB
lowered by
-four feet
modationM
Charlie picked for e. ^
Sggr owered by twin-screw neavv-awy
e-type battery of glass-clad const
te wster at a 17-knot pace- Charli
. years, snd 4s Using her ss hesdqi
conferences on his next picture, to be released in the fall of 1937.
a powerful kathanode-type battery of glass-cl*
drives her through the wster at a If
Panacea" for 4 years, and "is
the
heavy-duty engines snd
lass-clad construction thst
Charlie hss owned
ir ss headquarters for
illions prefer this "flavor
that is different"
skillful
fashioned
mayonn
boiled d
special
e whip
piquancy all its own! Miracle
is totally different from all
mmm
UN
■BLADES
Jl EIQCUO M THI WOBIO;* |ASOI« «IA0I MAKIftC
1
Southwestern Greyhound Lines
Bus Station, 505 Green- Phone 252
Open 24 Hours
Bussed Leave Orange
EAST
3x00 A. M.
4:59 A. M.
10:35 A. M.
2:05 P. M.
4:35 P. M.
0:45 P. M.
6:14 P. M.
8:55 P. M.
1(M
h59 P. M.
itaEST
2:00 A. M.
6:35 A.M.
9:05 A. M.
11:05 A. M.
11:45 A. M.
1:50 P. M.
5:20 P. M.
7:55 P. M.
11:20 P. X
a. am r. mu, •
■ A. M, 1:«| P. M., I
S-'-
Stop by * Rumble Service Station or
Humble Dealer*$ and let him put
i * , \ • : ■ ■
,v your car in. fityl data shape for a
' , tcorry-free trip. Give him your car
v for a half dayt:1before you start and
ypU% probably iave yourself both
^time and money while you're gone
... While yotfr* traveling in Texas
—flop for service tithereyoutee the
1
HUMBLE OIL & REFINING CO.
H
lilg
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 269, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1937, newspaper, July 22, 1937; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth303055/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.