The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 137, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 11, 1946 Page: 1 of 4
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VOLUME XXXIII
♦ •■*
m
, By Dewitt Mackenzie
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
India's some 600 ruling princes
are heading lor a tremendous
shake-up under the program for
Indian independence and it won't
be surprising if five-sixths of
them don't survive the ordeal.
Pandit Nehru, president-elect
of ; the All-India Congress and
next to Mahatma Gandhi the most
powerful figure In the country,
called during the week-end for
democratization of"" the native
ment which is projected. That is,
Nehru demands that the rule of
the principalities be transferred
from the autocratic princes to the
people.
AMALGAMATIONS DVB
This apparently doesn't pre-
clude the retention of a prince as
head of state If his people want
him. However, he will be merely
a nominal ruler Instead of having
t)te power of life and death over
his subjects, as many of these pet-
ty sovereigns have. Moreover,
.hundreds of the principalities are
str small that 'they arehardly
worthy of the designation, and
these may be amalgamated into
provinces which will, pension off
the princes and thus end their
i I rule. - •.
- I •* y* v* •: ••
Scores of tnese potentates have
squandered vast fortunes on heaps
f erf. Jewels and other follies while
their subjects 'literally went hun-
gry. You have to'see this way of
life at first han^ to believe that
It could survive.
•• •• WtilWi'Ttrt ** •.
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ORANGE, TEXAS,
JUNE 11,1
&MM
NUMBER 137
S0M|TH1N6U>
ABOUT
•tf.V?
N
' ■■■ ■
final Rites Today
For Mrs. Hudnall
. • >• • , . i>
Final rite for Mrs. Charlie Hud-
nall,. 60^ who died Sunday at the
home of a daughter In Epps, La.,
were held at 8 p. m. today from
McDpnald Memorial Baptist
church with Rev. W, W, Kennedy,
pastor of Cove Baptist church,
officiating with the assistance of
Rev. K. W. Terrell, minister of
McDonald church.
" ■ ■ t;:
Interment" was.in /Evergreen
cemetery. Burial services were
under the direction of Fuller fu-
neral home of Orange.
SLATED
TONIGHT
With full dress rehearsal set
for tonight and first performance.,
scheduled for Wednesday evening,
Director Jimmie Hull today pro-
nounced everything in readiness
for the huge revue - minstrel "At
the End of the Rainbow" to be
presented here for three nights
this week under the sponsorship
of the Orange Junior Chamber of
Commerce. —-
1
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PARAMOUNT PRINCE
The paramount prince of India
—and one who presumably will
' continue as a constitutional ru-
■*Her—Is Hia. fixalted Highness tl>c
Nizam of Hyderbfld. He is abso-
lute ruler over a state about the
size of Kansas and having a pop-
1 illation of more than 16,000,000.
They say this sixty year old
autocrat is the richest man in
the world. It has been estimated
tlfat he has $l ,500,000,000 in jew-
els alone.
But tlW rlchcs of some of the
maharajahs doesn't rest in jew-
els alone by any means. When I
• first visited India i/i 1016 I was
told that the Nl/-am had 250
wives,
" The major princes already have
signified their willingness to par-
i ticipate in the proposed indepen-
dent federal government for In-
dia/ Wc may be certain that the
All-India Congress will insist
that the principalities be placed
on the same democratic basis as
tljc provinces pt British India.
Baseball School
For Boys Planned
For Early Date
«-A baseball school for junior
Knd lower teen - age boys is
planned for an early date by the
Orange recreation commission, it
' \v'us announced today by Joe
Thrash, city recreation director.
Tutoring the young players
will be * done, Thrash said, by
Dutch Lorbeer, scout for the
New York Yankees; Jim Turner,
manager of the Beaumont Ex-
porters team of the Texas Lea-
gue, and other members of the
Exporter team.
The school will be conducted in
West End park, the announce-
ment stated, and will be open to
all boys in this area, within an
age group to be revealed later.
Thrash said also that tentative
plans have been made for the
formation of an American Legion
team from among players in the
school.
Details concerning the school,
age limits and dates on which it
will be held pre to be made pub-
lic as soon as Lorbeer returns
from a scouting trip to the West
Texas league, the recreation di-
rector advised.
The state highway department
in Austin began advertising today
for bids off two road construction
projectf In Otange county,
' One of the" twocallS.for pro-
posals oh the construction of
10.962 miles of grading and drain-
age structures on. highway 87
from the north cUy limits of, Or-
ange to the point at Intersection
of the road with state highway
236 southwest o! Dewtyville.'
This work, on the basis of pre-
vious announcements '.'-by . the
state highway department, is be-
lWvigtf ' to' be fn anticipation of
straightening and hard - surfac-
ing of this strip of highway 87 at
an early date.
The second advertisement re-
quests bids on 7.305 miles of
grading, structures, flexible base
?nalt
ment off farm to i
and double aspii
Urface trcat7
arkct highway
105 from its intersection with US
90 at Vldor to ar point one miifc
south of the/ Jasper county line.
Bjds on the former project are
returnable to Ahe state highway
department in Austin until 9 a.
m. June 23 at Which time they
will be publicly' opened and read.
Proposals for the second job are
returnable at the same place and
h;ur on/June 26.
Plans and/specifications for each
are available at the office of C.
H. Brpwn/ resident highway en-
gineer, In Orange and at the high-
way department in Austin, the
nd ertlsementH state.
/An all - local, all - amateur
cast of 350 persons has been re-
hearsing under Director Hull for
several weeks in, preparation for
the show. Utilizing all the ex-
perience and, skill in this field
garnered in his many years in the
Show business and with the able
assistance of his wife, "Tiny"
llull, a little lady with a great
Stage record of her own, the di-
rector has told members or the
east that he hopes to make this
week's Jaycee production the
masterpiece of .his career. His
own largest undertaking and re-
putedly the biggest production of
its kind ever attempted in south-
east Texas, the show is creating
widespread interest throughout
this area.
BROADWAY COSTUMES
With costumes imported direct
from Broadway,' the cast will
present 20 scenes and 23 song
and dance numbers during the
three - hour show. While the
performers are all amateur, Hull
points out that many f them
have had considerable stage ex-
perience arid persons who have
Wltriessed rehearsals have ex-
pressed amazement at the pro-
fessional manner in which mem-
bers of the cast, particularly
those doing specialty numbers,
put over their acts.
An eight - piece orchestra con-
ducted by Ed Flinn has been en-
gagM to/prov ide music Jo/ all
performances and Mondav/ night
held its first rehearsal with the
cast.
ORANGE SPAF
TREMES is usual
year around
things affe
ppt-i
e story the
refcrencej to ^
Weather copdl- j
tlons. White 'one remember* that j
it has^^been 81 years - since the
last severe storm experienced in
this place, according to the. most
accurate history, many are aware
of the fact that when other Sec-
tions are flooded and damaged by
heavy rains, that Orange only re-
ceives a mild portion of it. A
week or ten days ago whfn other
sections of the ritfc grovylng
country sustained heavy d|m-
. . <If
ages., Orange county rice growers
lost but uttic. ;——1—H—
NEW C. OF C. DIRECTORATE
to include the newly elected,1 as
well as the hold - ov ers, repre-
sents one .of the strongest knd
most promising groups in the
lineup for many years. With ma-
terial on which this ^roup can
work for the next twelve months,
idle moments will be afc scarce as
the proverbial "hen's teeth". No
doubt this group will see and hu d wj(h immc.
acknowledge the outstand ng h«d ^ suecolation ovcr whether
of one or two new hotels and
Dies Under Wheels of Train
Washingtoji, June 11. (AP) A
The unprecedented spectacle of
one supreme court justice publicly
assailing another stunned official
Washington today, but several
lawmakers held it might lead to
restoring what they term the "lost
dignity" oLthe. tribunal.
The bombshell which Justice
Robert. H. Jackson exploded In
SEVERAL CRIMINAL CASES TRIED
IN DISTRICT COURT HERE MONDAY
! • ■ "
William T. Dunn '
his blunt attack on" Justice Hugo
Black projected a long • smolder-
ing judicial feud< out into the
open, and these infivfential law-
makers thought this could be a
good thing in the long run.
Specifically, they said private-
ly. congress may order a complete
overhaul of court procedure in
an effort to mlnimixe "bickering"
on and behind the bench.
At the moment, however, the
Fla*He* 6f Life
City Council's
Meeting Tonight
Is Postponed
. Because of the absence from the
eifjpSf several members of the
body, the regular monthly meet-
ing of the Otwge city council
scheduled tor tonight, has been
postponed until further notice, it
was announced today by Mayor
Homer E. Stephenson.
A number of important mat-J for Bulman to return with
Guards, Lancers
Hare ftecord Group
In Summer Classes
- ' 'i V . ' t ■
A record enrollment has been
reported by Jacque Famum, mu-
sic director at Stark high school,
In summer classes in begihnEtffg
band, orchestra and drum and
bugle, as well as In advanced
band,
Registrations in the courses for
beginning instrumental students
have been closed, Farnum said,
but advanced students may reg-
ister at any time during the sum-
mer. This provision, he said, has
been made to accommodate stu-
dents who were on their vacations
during the initial registration.
Rehearsals tor the various mu-
sic groups are being held daily
from 10:30 to 11:30 a. m. and on
Tuesday nights from 7 to 8:30
o'clock, the director reported.
First band coneeft of the sum-
mer, Farnum announced, is to be
held in the city park at Four-
teenth and Cypress streets on
Thursday night, June 20, begin-
ning at 7:19 o'clock. Complete
program for the occasion is to be
announced at a later date, he
stated.
TIME ANNOUNCED
Lloyd Posey, general manager
of the production for tnc Jaycecs,
has announced that /doors will
open at 7:10 o'clock/ Wednesday
night. The overture/Will start at
7:50, he said, and tlifc curtain <vill
rise on the Nrst act at 8 o'clock.
A ten - minute intermission will
be allowed between the revue and
the minstrel show.
Ticket sales art reported mov-
ing along briskly and a capacity
i pucHence Is predicted for the
first performance.
Peppers, Sabine
Remained Tied For
Softbgll Lead v
i
Dr. Pepper and Sabine Supply
continued their deadlock for the
lead in the Orange recreation
commission softball league Mon-
day night by winning a game a-
pieee.
The bottlers downed Orange-
field 12 to 3. The game had? one
distinction in that the star Pep-
per hurler, Buckshot Pachar, was
scored on in league play for the
first time this season, although he
kept up his excellent record by
allowing only four hits.
Sabine Supply took its firth
game of the season by turning
back Naval Station 13 to 2 In a
contest called at the end of the
Sixth because of the ten-run-lead
ruling. Griffin twirled for the
merchants and gave up but one
hit.
Booked lor the eye - opener in
West End park at 7 o'clock to-
night Is a match * between USS
Nahant, which has only onV vic-
tory so far, and Housing Author-
ity, up to now a "Winless nine.
In the evening's finale North
Orange Baptist will tackle the
Naval Station in a battle for sec-
ond place position.
then accept the challenge to
"Let's Do Something About ft".
—^ ' - ' ■ • ' •
FUTURE OF WAi;ERWAY4 at
Orange Is apparently greatly;' 'at
stake at this time as prospects for
the municipal docks and water
shipping channels to be relieved
of obligations incidental to the
war, begin to lOoffi. Certainly
Orange has borne too great a bur-
den in the establishment of great
waterways with the - aid of 'the
government, to permit ihtfii, to
go unusued. The task of rifvlving
water shipping through the port
of Orange will not be too easy
to resuscitate after the business
wag forced to fold up temporarily
in order to serve all purposes
that would tend to help win
war.
the
Caribou on the North Ameri-
can continent at the present time
arc estimated to number about
fifty million.
diate speculation over whether
Jackson and Black intended to
coptlnue on the high bench. The
situation Was without parallel in
modern court history.
'Jackfeon lased out at Ncuren-
berg last night at what he called
Black's "bullying" tactics. He
declared his colleguc had threat-
ened hiw with "war" unless Jack-
son "covered up facts" in the
portal-to-portal mine pay case in
which Black's former law partner
represented the victorious United
Mine Workers.
With District Judge F. P. Ad-
ams presiding, the district court
here Monday disposed of the fol-
lowing criminal cases:
William Dixon, charged with
burglary and ttfett, assesses 10
years in the state pemk'litinly.
Puppies should be fed tour or
five times a day until they are
tlx months old.
Caribou are erratic and rest-
less to such an extent that they
pften arc declared to be stupid.
They arc the only members of
the deer family the does of which
often bear antlers—spikes of 12 to
18 inches.
FOR COW BAYOO WORK IN BILL
hub cap. He drove off In
ters face the council and full at-
tendance i desired when It meet.*.. cab. leaving the taxi driver
he mayor said. I the middle ot the «tr*et.
UNFAIR TRADE
Chicago, June II. (AP) — Al-
bert Bulman, a taxlcab driver,
was taking a passenger from su-
burban Melrose Park to a rail-
road station when he stopped his
cab in Oak park to retrieve a
lost hub cap.
But the passenger didn't wait
the
the
in
Court House News
New marriage licenses of rec-
ord Monday at the office of the
Orange county clerk were issued
to Thomas Dye, Jr., and Miss
Faith Marie Taylor, Donald O.
Smith and Miss Beverly E. Es-
kew, Frank Young and Mfs. Pau-
line Alexander, Paul Isaac Pol-
lard and Miss Helen Roberts, and
jlnlt' ffottthct and Mlm Adelle
Fortner, all tft Orang
. ■
A~|Ki;opo£a Ito widen, .straighten
and deepen a portion of the Cow
bayou channel in the Orangcfield
community neared the final
stages in Washington today.
...Interested federal officials
there have made formal request
berore the senate commerce com-
mittee Tor inclusion Of an appro-
priation Tor the project in the
rivers and harbors bill now pend-
ing before congress. Cost or the
work is estimated at *323,000,
The bill already includes a
$73,000 allotment tor work on the
lower section or Adams bayou,
as well as several million dollars
for the intracoastal canal.
COMBS TESTIFIES
Rep. J. M. Combs of Beaumont
appeared before the committee on
behalf of the project today and
since no opposition to the appro-
priation has been expressed, its
inclusion as an amendment of |
the house - passed bill has been
predicted as fairly certain.
Work to be. done under the pro-
posal includes enlarging the Cow
bayou channel to a 100-foot width
and 13-foot depth at mean low
tide for a distance of approxi-
mately 7.7 miles upstream from
the bayou mouth. It also would
include a turning basin 300 feet
wide, 500 feet long and 13 feet
deep at Orangefield.
i' Intended primarily as a flood
control project, the proposal has
a secondary purpose in that it-
would provide additional tide-
water frontage for future indus-
trial development In the area.
ADVANTAGES LISTED
In testimony on the proposal
before the commerce committee
Monday, Col. P. A. Feringa, di-
rector of civil works for the U. S.
Army engineers, set forth advan-
tages of the project as providing
a channel which would serve as
an outlet for "the tremendous oil
field development In the area"
and to alleviate flooding of over
6038 acres 61 oil field* and farm
lands.
Ask by the committee chair-
man, Sen. John H. Overton of
Louisiana, If there were any Tex-
ans present to testify, Col. Ferin-
ga said there were none. Neither
was there any opposition 'to the to for prevented flood dai
QUESTION RAISED
One qiKwlion w s raisnd
■ fill
con-
Ih
corning the proposal. Sen. Thom-
as llart, Conn., suggested It
might be well to remember that
"oil fields have limited lire." I^e
rererred to the 50-year amortiza-
tion period or the project as being
too long. Hart alyo pointed out
that the cost ratio set by the army
engineers or I to benefits of
1.71 is "not a very hi/li ratio and
should be adjusted."
Colonel Feringa replied that it
had been ''our experience so far
that usually another oil field Is
found where one existed before."
He said the engineers had been
told by observers that "oil In
Texas should hold out 20 years."
''Other oil tields around there
will probably be brought in," he
added.
AREA IMPORTANT
Stressing the advantages to be
derived from flood control, the
engineer added "Beaumont, Port
Arthur and Orange, important in-
dustrial and marketing centers, are
within 15 miles or the basin. Many
summer homes have been built in
the lower part of the basin. Moat
of the residents are employed in
Port Arthur and Orange."
"Local interests unanimously
desire flood protection In Cow
bayou at Orangebelied and below,"
Colonel Feringa continued.
"Floods have produced stages a-
bove mean low tide up to 10.4
feet at Orangefield and five feet
at the mouth . . . it is estimated
44 damaging floods occurred in the
Orangefield area from February,
1B17, through September, 1945.
Estimated damages to agricultur-
al, residential, buiines*, oil field,
etc., by a flood equivalent to that
of, May, 1944, amount ot $148,-
000."
SAVINGS CITED
Other enginters^ited savings
on transportation costs on 100,000
tons of annual commerce, They
also pointed out the advantages of
Industrial sites to be provided a-
long the channel.
Estimated annual benefits, al-
lowing tor abandonment in 25
ytfar* of oil field properties sub-
ject to flood damage, is $34,740,
engineers said, of which
t: - vi
NOT CONTINT with just dropping
Bar line and letting the flr.h nib-
ble whlle^ she relaxes at the
water's edge in ' Lakeland, Fin.,
this flshermlsa, Charlotte Cook,
reeled In a whopper. She displays
the 10%-pound big mouth bass
which fell victim to her charmed
"line." (luttrnitii'nal)
TRUMAN VETOES
CASE MEASURE
■r r —
Washington, June 11. (AP) —
President Truman vetoed the Cose
labor, disputes bill today because,
he said, it would compel men to
work- for pi i vat« omployor* -in-a-
pcacc - time democracy."
Declaring that the measure
"strikes al symptoms and ignores
underlying causes" of work slop-
pages, Mr. Truman added in a
4500-word message that endrd
more than a week of feverish
speculation:
"Strikes against private em-
ployers dun not be ended by leg-
islative decree. Men can not he I
forced In a peace - |ime democ- I
racy to work lor u private cm- I
ployer under compulsion."
ASKS OWN FLAN
Major provisions or the Case
bill included the creation of a
federal mediation board, restric- '
Mary Lou Dixon, theft and
burglary, 5 years suspended.
Robert Rogers, burglary with
intent to commit theft, 4 years in
the state penitentiary.
Willie Henry Smith, burglary
and theft, 10 years in prison.
Walter Ray Woodward, burg-
lary, 10 years imprisonment.
Mannie Sudds,' murder,>5- years
in the penitentiary.
Clarence Johnson, murder, also
5 years in prison.
Clifford Brooks, murder, 5 years
imprisonment.
Advisory Group
To Hear Officials
On R. Cr B. Plan
kllll
Killed Instantly
By Mo-Pac Freight
William T. Dunn, 87, prominent |
filial nii'i'i'illf 1vllf
instantly about B o'clock
morning when run over by
freight train on the Missouri P*-' I
citic railroad side track there.
According to Dick Stanflelil, ■(,
Orange county sheriff, who werft ;1
to Muuriceville with his deputy^ ' }
Sam Moses, and Justice of the "
Peace J. P. Swain to conduct an
investigation and inquest, Mr; j
Dunn apparently had gone from a
his rice field near the railroad to I
a point on the switch track to - ®
look at a recently killed yenrllngt
STATEMENTS TAKEN ™
Stanfield said statements taken '
liiirn train crewmen, only wit-
nesses to the death, indicated |i|
that Mr. Dunn may have heard
the train approaching but be* vf
Jieved it to, bjt on the main line
and so paid no attention to fran- ■
tic signals which the 'engineer
Several county officials who ' to have used when he i
have had experience with 1 ' S1,w 'he man on the track ahead.
unit system of handling road and ! The sheriff quoted trainmen as
bridge funds proposed for Or-
ange county by the citizens ad-
visory committee will be present
for a meeting of that body tomor-
row at noon, it was.announced t i-
day by the chairman, H. S. Man-
ley. Included among these will
be the county judges and engi-
neers from McLennan and Brazos
countjggs, both of which have been
said to have found the system
much to the liking of their
zens.
The meeting is to be held
Elliott's cafeteria.
Today In
Washington
stating the freight was moving
at a speed of about ten miles on
hour .when it struck Mr. Dunn.
A verdict of accidental death
was returned by the justice ot
the peace.
A resident of the county for 32
years, the deceased came here
originally as a school teacher and
has since become known as one
of the most public - Spirited citl-
clt:- j /enK I" Orange county. He was
<u member or the Methodist
church and Woodmen of the
World, secretary of the Maurice-
vllle school board and on the dls-
trict reclamation and conservation
board. At the time Of his death
he was engaged in the mercan-
tile business .and in rice farming
and stock raising. •,
fly The
Senate \
J SURVIVORS NAMED -
Associated Press r Survivors are his widow
lake*! up OP A "-'i- i Mnry Dunn; his Step mothej1,
tension bill (meets l« a. in. CST). lM)(l. Duon of .Crowed;
M""afy committee hears Ita- J gevfcn s Mi /tiordon, Qtilncy, ASl,'
pldo river veterans oppose pio- ( Wayne. Wendell. Wilm*
motion ol Mark Clark lo be ma- , ull of Maurlcevllle: one
Jo'' general (II). ' ' I daugmitt*, Mrs. Dewey Bean >1^
nance committee calls fion. 1 eleven grandchildren; $hr
veterans admin-
I. insurance
and $4700 is savings on 2$,000
tons of mud shell moved in the
area yearly. ..
!•
Omar Bradley,
istrator, on ( .
posh IK (0:30).
Commerce comm 11 tec
hearings on
projects (9:30). / \
House — A wartS President Tru\
man's mcssa ge^on Oise labor bill
and votes/On enlisted rfsen'x fur-
lough pay measure. (II).
Military committed hears Sec-
tions against any strike or lock- | rotajy of War Patterson on atomic
out while the board sought so-j control (9):
lutlon of a labor dispute; a ofo- •
hibition on secondary boycotts;
and provision ot court suits a-
gainst employers or labor organ-
izations violating collective bar-
gaining contracts.
The -chief executive coupled
his veto with a renewed plea for
his own Emergency stdike con-
trol plan, for a senate - house
study of the whole Held ot labor
relations and for enactment of
his long - stalemated domestic
legislative program.
(brothers, Frank and Abncr Dutih
i or Margret, Texas, Bud Dunn tot
' y i California, Mike Dunn of Shreve-
i>"Hinues ; |>0,.ti La., and • Ephc and Stark
rivers atul luiborK 1 [)Un„ 0( Crowell; four slsteri^
Mis. Myrtle Taylor, Mrs: Verdie
Bell and Mrs. Fannie Mlddle-
brpok of Margret, and Mrs. Ora
Bell Roberts of Elide, New Mex-
ico'.-.. . £ '.SB
The body has been brought to
j()r ngi> by, Fuller funeral home,
j Funeral 91 rangements had Hot
j been complei.ed at 1 p. itf. today. S
I
IN HOLLYWOOD
By Bob Thomas
Hollywood, June II - (AP) -
They don't write 'em the way
they used to. That's what Cro-
oner Perry Como has to say a-
bout t'xlay's songwriters.
Perry just came off the set of
"You're For Me" where he spent
the morning kissing Vivian Ilia-
MRS.
RITES PENDM6
S-il
'The fact that we are laced ine. Tough work
with an emergency which does
justify the passage of temporary
legislation does not, in my opin-
ion, justify us In the adoption of
permanent legislation without the
study that such permanent legis-
lation needs," he declared,
Funeral arrangements fori
Lulie Brantley Roberts, 73, who •
died at ifiTlO a. m. today ljere"' at
the home of her daughter, Mr#;-
Frank B. Ruch, Jr., 1107 18th"
street, after a lengthy illness, had
not been completed at I p. m. to-
day.
Widow of the late Henry
Roberts Sr.*' who died here fh
j 1031, -Mrs. .Roberts was bofn at
Nacogdoches
Honors Ellis Carter
With Dance
Nacogdoches, Tex., June 1L
(AP) — Officers will be elected
today at the annual district Lions
Club convention here.
Yesterday the delegates picked
Beaumont as the I947~c<mvention
site. District Governor Ellis D.
parley Orange, was honored at
dance last night.
T-,;
The Alasica brown bear is the
most savage big game animal in
rr • I Ih jl'piifilii Till Is endowed
with the killer instinct and wilt
attack men without the slightest
provocation
"The proof of my theory," he
said, ''are two recent records 1
made—'They Say' and • 'AD
Through the Day.' Those were
new songs but it was the oldies
on the other sides that sold the
records—'If You Were the Only
Gal' and 'Prisoner of Love'.J'
The Cannonsburg. Pa., ex-bar- j St. Stephens, Ala., and prior ^
ber said that ..,fl oftt of his _ fan t ber marriage in 1006 taught
mail praised his work on such j school for se\er"al years near
vintage tunes as ''Sloe Skies" and1 here, if,
"Kentucky Babe." And much of She came to'Orange with he^ , j
that is from kids who were un- husband and family in IM5. .
born when those songs were first I Other survivors are onie datii^bi-
sung. ter. Mrs. C. :Au Durham of
"It's strange that the ' vtfrvters | ton; one son, Henry David Rob-
who produced the old songs are
the same ones who are Writing to-
day's hits," Perry observed. "But
they don't have the heart in it
now. Maybe they've gotten too
commercial. Maybe they've in-
come too old to *feel' their songs."
Maybe the answer is new and
younger song writers. "
A dog's nose is not a sound in-
dication of hi* condition. A cold
nose does not prove he is healthy,
nor does a hot noAif mean he is
lick. .w-iiM
erts, Jr., of Beaumont; four
grandchildren; one brother, S. B.. -]
Brantley of Wathena, Kansas,
and' two nieces. .''^SUB
Funeral rites for the de
will be under the direction
Fuller funeral home. 1 :
, v ' ' \ •" • V.-t 11 0 own wHwh—*
I>ucks which feed on-
face leap Into the air',
under way by Wing
vers, however, patter
surface of the water to
lance before they
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 137, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 11, 1946, newspaper, June 11, 1946; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth308383/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.