The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 219, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1941 Page: 4 of 4
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ORANGE,TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1941
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KING 250
K0US11 FANS
cts for the greatest foot-
. chow df the season, for Fri-
night, when the Sam Hous-1
ton Tigers, of Houston will meet
t Orange Tigers in Tiger Sta-
loomed here Thursday. A
train will bring more than
students from Houston to the
Football fans point to the fact
the Houston and Orange
are about equal from the
oint of experience.
following probable starting
were announced hero
: Orange — Smith, le;
ttane (Capt ), It;
lg; Dickey, e; Payne, rg;
tream; Manley, re; Reese,
Pete Prince, Jh; Burton, rh;
Duchamp, fb;
Conover, McDonald and White-
Houston: Theodo, le; Smith
(Charles) It; Woodalictn, lg; Par-
ker, c; Pate, rg; Asaf, rt; Bly-
stone, re; Strickland, qb;
(Manor), rh; Jahnke, lhrBlaha,
fb; Alden Pasche, head coach.
The game officials will be: C-
P. Clifford, referee; E, F. Lor-
beer,' field judge; E. Endicott,
head linesman; and Clifford Do-
mingue, umpire.
Double Feature J
r
___
at Strand And He Challenges Any Team of
O /
TULSA TAKES
ID DECISION
FROM REBELS
i:i'S 5K ..
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pa
111
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L
FIRST lU'N PICTURES
GEM* 15c
-TODAY ONLY—
Soma's
lUvi-and-1
" titfHmll
if iv ith STUART ERWIN
■ 1 (iNfl MERKfL • MISCHA AUER
Anger Thwu Fiction"
DALLAS, Sept. 18- (AP) —The
evenly matched Tulsa and Dallas
Steph- j teams, each with two victories in
the Texas league final playoff,
will stage another of their toe-to-
toe battles here tonight — but it
can't be any better than last
night's game which ended in a
1-0 decision for the Oilers.
Sal Gliatto for the Rebels and
youthful Henry Wyse for the
Oilers put on an epic pitcher's
battle that finally was decided by
a wild pitch- Although the; hurl-
i *. .lOlttwcd only, five,hits apicce.
Gliatto struck -Outfielder Ed Zy-
dowski.on the shoulder iri the
sixth inning with the bases load-
ed, forcing in Marvin Rickert with
the run that won the contest.
Joe Demoran, who took a 2-0
victory from Tulsa in the opening
game of the series, will hurl to-
night against Emil Kush. Both
are righthanders. After tonight's
game the teams will move to Tul-
sa to finish out the best - four -
out - of - seven series.
The Rebels had difficulty last
night with Wyse's fast ball that
did tricks around the plate. They
didn't get a man beyond second
base.
Wyse faced only thirty men and
didn't walk a batter. Gliatto look-
ed almost as good except for the
one bad inning that gave the Oil-
T"
IjMiikIi". fun, music in "llit Purnde of toil" Marring Ami Miller,
and Kenny linker sliuuinu today anil l-'riiiay at the Ktrand.
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Albert Vallancourt is shown driving his team of moose on the road between Ontario and Sudbary, Canada.
The! strange team has outrun every horse team in the region and Vallancourt says the trotters can beat
any pair ei horses anywhere. He acquired the nioose when they were very small and gradually broke them
; , I nto harness.
Laughs, Thrills, Chills at Gem Now
TOI>AY irfHl FRIDAY
ITS GOT
let
Romance!
KENNY BAKER
Frances UNSF8R0
HUGH HERBERT
MARY BOLANO
ANN MILLER
ers victory.
DALLAS. Texas. Sept. 18. (AP)
—Selection of the site for the op-
ening of the Dixie series between
Texas League and Southern As-
sociation champions will not be
made until the conclusion of the
final Shaughnessy playoff.
President J. Alvin Gardner of
the Texas league said that the
leagues don't alternate openings
but "the Dixie series is arranged
each season to the best interests
of both representative towns "
..
Sp*t§fei
1
DEEP VOICED
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) -rJoe
'Whitehill telephoned the police
station to report: "There's an al-
ligator in my chicken house and
by his voice a big one."
The desk sergeant sent Officer
Dick Hendry to the scene. Hen-
dry unlimbered his -38 pistol, took
out his flashlight, spotted two
large eyes shining in the dark-
ness and fired.
The Whitehill family had frog
legs for breakfast-
GOOD EXCUSE
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (AP) —
Mark Moorman, cafeteria owner,
went out front to see why the.
Her KW'iitest itrrforiimnrr, Bette Davis in '
inn t< day and Friday at tlic Strand. George
male lend.
'The Great Lie" sliow-
llrent lias the leading;
Bengal Friday
3:30
3:45
Charles Dant's Orchestra
Wayne Van Dyne
young woman and her child Were
crying.
They had missed a Detroit-
bound bus that was to have ta-
ken them to the bedside of the wo-
man's dying nether.
Moorman bundled the strangers
into his automobile and caught Green at 3rd
the bus at Niles, Mich —34 miles
away.
Behind his counter again, he
tossed off the good deed with;
"Aw, I was glad of the excuse to
get away from the place " _
FLUNKED
CINCINNATI. (AP) — Jerome
Hoersting, 22, who spent 17 days
in jail rather than report for ar-
my induction, was wasting his
time- 'He finally gave in to the
Selective Service Act and then
flunked his physical examination
at Fort Thomas, Ky.
AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION
j
COSTLY REPAIR BILLS
'Many Chevrolet owners
make a habit of our free
automobile inspection.
TKey Have found that we
can save them money by
correcting minor servic-
ing needs on the spot and
at small cost. It assures
them more miles of
trouble-free driving with
a car at its peak of per-
formance and economy.
FREE "issss
Save at this sign
inwgji
MODERN
Chevrolet Co.
Phone 0!)
-FKUTIKK
NO. %—
LENT
TOS * *
* * MS
IX IN CtHiL IXiMFOItT
HCKHY, IT KNDS TONITE!
Ho**
CHUCKLESI
°*S,\
llBfUU*1
RADIO GUIDE
, <• ■
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER . 18.,
KTQMI^ •/,. . .... '>J V
4:6o Ireene' Wicker's Stories
4:15 The Bartons
4:30 Movie Menu
4:35 Safety Talk
4:45 Wings on Watch
5:00 Easy Aces i \ '
5:15 Mr. Keen '• '-**-■
5:30 Sam and Louie
5:45 News and Sports
6:00 This is Judy Jones
6:30 Ricardo's Rhapsodies
7:00 Gwen Williams
7:15 Touchdown Tips
7:30 H. V. Kaltenborn
7:45 Ted Steele's Orchestra
8:00 Onr Challenge
8:30 News Highlights
8:35 Army Maneuvers
8:45 Story Dramas by Olm-
stead
Johnny Long's Orchestra
Dick Rogers' Orchestra
News Parade
Lionel Hampton's Orches-
tra .
Associated Press News
Emile Pettis' Orchestra
Dancin' with Clancy
Sign Off
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 19,
, KFDM
30 Home Folks Frolic
30 MUsiCal Clok
55 United Press News
30 Breakfast Club
1)0 Waltz Reveries
15 Sabine Tabernacle
45 Market Reports
50 Sammy Kaye's Orchestra
1)0 Prescott Presents
15 What's Doing Around
Beaumont
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:15
10:55
11:00
11:30
12:00
Henry Fonda with Joan Ben-
nett In Stewart Edward White's-
"Wild Geese Calling" at the Hen-
na! Friday and Saturday,
9:30
9:45
9:50
9:55
10:00
10:15
10:30
10:45
10:50
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
12:15
12:30
12:45
1:00
1:15
Richard Kent
Song of the Day
Movie Menu
Morning News
The Southernaires
Hollywood Headliners
Southern Playboys
Market Reports
Swing Session
Between the Bookends
Modulated Moments
Checkerboard Time
News
Southern Playboys
Singin' Sum 1 |
Noon Varieties
Orphans of Divorce
.Amanda of Honeymoon
Hill
John's Other Wife
Just Plain Bill •
Club Matinee
Red Arrow Newscast
Side Street Vignettes
Johnnie Johnston
TO CHECK
Cheer Leaders
For High School
Are Elected
Six Orange High school football
cheer leaders were elected Wed-
nesday filternoon under the direc-
tion of W. E. La Fodge, a member
of the faculty, as follows: Misses
Betty Ann Crew, Libby Thrail-
kille, Cocile Ratcliff; Louis
Swords Jr., Leon Vice and Leon
Bingham.
The cheer leaders will be on
hand Friday night attired in their
WE SAVED MONtY . . .
SP TICKETS ME THE tOWEST-
PRfCED IN HISTOHYI
\\'\ \ i 11///,
Cracked comedy is at the Gem today only with Stuart Ernln,
I'na Merkei and Slisciia .Aucr. It's "(.'racked Nuts.".
new uniforms, according to plans I
.nade Wednesday afternoon.
Constantine the Great was^ the
first Christian emperor ,of Rome.
Ov
> -
—Ad<led Enjoyment—
"H'K CARNIVAL"
USUAL OCCUPATION'#
EVENTS
r "LATEST NEWS
: -Starts FRIDAY!
—Thnntiid
•IN'I> sif llt'i'x
MCWS
^ «ar,
'"I t HlKlW y Tlfs
U. a.,.
rlt'Hn | mlle«,,>n«
"'Mnetivers,
unr /?//// NFTwnDk'
Price* . on rommoditir* and
•rrvicci are generally up, but SP
now offer* yon the loiee#! every-
day prices in history} example)
E\iini|ile from ORANGE:
$4.95 $ A.Im
ONE-WAY ROUND-TRIP
TO HOUSTON
$0.95
ROUND-TRIP
TO
NEW ORLEANS
In Cudi w Chair C«r
Q h
Air-Comll«lon«4
EYESTRAIN
LURKS
AT
VACATION'S
END
Rett, relax, read, ee eet ery,
walk about In pleasant lurronnd-
in* m |Im onclneer drive* yon
safely over smooth *t«el rails—
at the lotr*si-prie s in hitloryl
Make
their
path to
learning
easier by
having them
study in the
good light an
LE.S. lamp pro-
vides .. .Sight-Sav-
ing light costs but
little more than poor
light and pays big divi-
dends In better grades
and eye protection
*
king...for a dime!
No monarch over enjoyed a better beer than
grand-tastin' Grand Priso—the Texas-brewed
beer that is yours—12 delicious ounces of it
—for only a dime.
Certainly, we could charge more for this
superb brew made from costly ingredients
by master brewers whose equipment is the
best to be had in all the land.
But one dime is the regular
price of Grand Priie . . . be-
cause this beer is the favorite
of a groat many people. Then,
too, you need not stand the
freight on this great brand-*-
it's the product of Texas skill.
To quonch your thirst . . . and to quicken
your summertime fUnjoyment, put- down a
dim* tonight. Thon pick up a bottle or
Koglined can of this deeply mellow, easy-
going boor acclaimed by all Texans for its
grand-tastin' flavor.
♦ '
1
GRAN|
IPRIZE
CITY TICKET/OFFICE
11th fit. * Green Ave.
Phone 1M ■■
INSIST Oil THIS TA6 OK LAMPS
msmm
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 219, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1941, newspaper, September 18, 1941; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth308211/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.