The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 12, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 16, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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PAGE FOUR
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STARTS TODAY "
AT 1 P. M. .
THE NATION S NO.-l BAND
—IN THE 'TEA'é'S NO. 1
MUSICAL ROMANCE!
It's Hep! It's HIlarinusMf* Hoi!
WIIEN THE KING OF SWING
STAIiTS SWINGING! ^
■¿Station K. P. A. G. ¡ / Wins Divorce
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ORCHESTRA
^ WIVES"
—With— v
GEORGE MONTGOMERY
ANN lUTHERFORD
GtENN MILLER
•AND HIS BjJtfiD
CAROLE I.ANinS
CESAR ROMERO
' ' i: jj.
Sunday. January ÍI71BBKJ
7:00 Chapel in" the Sky
7:30 tOrganaires
?:*#. ¡News' |
8:00 Assembly of God Church
8:30 Voice oí Prophecy . *
, 8:00 Radio Bible Class
9:30 Treasury Star Purnde
MS ; Music for the Morning
10:00 Wesley Radio League
10:30 Melodies you Love . 1
10:45 Today's World WexVs witn
Stanley
1>:00 Hss'.en the Day
Í LIFE SAYS
"SHE'S AS -
DANGIJROUS AS. A
SOU LB. BOMH!"
"NO
GREATER
TODAY
and
MONDAY
ROYAL
-Prices-—
yVDOtTSri' 25c
CHILDREN . . fte
You'll Wish You Were In
untvir
HOORAY! - HOORAY*
Ring Singing His Way To Glor$-
\ Willi Twelve Swell Song ÍÍU !
Dolly Swinging Her Way To Your
Heart With Fresh Allure!
Bing Crosby — Dorothy Lomour
MARJORIE REYNOLDS — LYNE OVERMAN
BILLY DeWOLf^E— EDDIE FOY, Jr.
•" '• . • ,.A
Don't Miss This If You Haven't Seen Jk!
It Is; Worth Seeing Again If Yo i Have!
———Extra Attractions——y-
Cartoon — "CASE OF THE MISSING HARE"
Pathe News — "ALL THE BOWL GAMES IN REVIEW"
LEADER
500,00
¡sraíT"
SHIRLEY *OSS, blonde screen ac-
tress, testifies;
A-T>.IS>44
WM?M
Miniature WAC
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««wjwassa;'. 1
" «y HEUN ISSAXY pi]
Central Press ¿Columnist
• WASHINGTON^ had * wonderful
Beach to Wa
train bound from
I sat beside a b
from 16 months «
e at breakfast on
told me w]
1 Never "i"
bo; "
^thought
had I net a
Itself cold in tfca fast-:
Around ill
^HAÍbé4':
' W
In • Galley
M
—SHOWING TUESDAY ONE DAY ONLY-
The Dead End Kinds In "KID DYNAMITE"
...... , above, In a tos
es ccHirt that her husband,
Kenneth , H, Poldn. habitually
r stayed out all night during? fóui
years, of their marriage. She won
her divorce Suit. (International)
11:15 Plantation Days
U:3D If'irst Baptist Church-
12 00 Stanley Dixon.
1.2fi5 Waltz Time
12:43 Hod "Cross -
1:00 Pilgrim Hour
T un • Rhythm *: Reason "' v
2:15 League of Worhen Voters
eijii Adventures of Bull-,
dojj Drummqnd "
3:00 Lutheran Hour
3:30 *Muslc Box
4:00 Rev. Percy Crawford
4:30 The Shadow
5:00, Avj Maria Hour
5:30 Upton Close . •
15:45 Evening Reveries
6:00 Old Fashioned! Revival
7:00 Glenn Millcr'p Oich.
♦**♦* ♦ *• ♦ ♦ ♦♦«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦« ♦♦♦♦♦♦#♦ ,
♦.
♦
♦ .
♦
♦
♦
: -
♦
f GUARANTEED RECAPPING & VULCANIZING
GET your slick tireá
~ ■ RECAPPED
We Can Give Y«u Quids, Servrce Now!
7:30 'Treasury Star.Parade «
7:45 Gabriel Heatter
8:00 Heroes of tfte Navy
8:15 Tommy Dorscy'a Oreh.
8:30 Boys Town '1
9:"00 Cedric Foster
9:15 HltTParode
10;00 Justin Stone's O'reh.
10:30 Ted Lewis' Orch.
10:45 Denny Beckner's Orch.
11:00 Lawrence Wclk's Orch.
11:15 Eddy Howard's OrcJi.
If11:30 Abe Lyman's Orch.
12:00 Sly OB
WILKE'S TIRE SERVICE
-NOW THRU WEDNESDAY-
Rear of 410 Fifth Street
V • '
1k
Orange, Texas
« «• * * «« ««« ««« ««t *•>* * ♦♦♦♦ M ♦ *-+
BEWARE!
Harrisburg, Pa. fA?) — Tot.
many \yords were the downfall oí
a Philadelphia cotiple says tho
Pennsylvania liquor board in
charftina them with using fake
labels on Jlquor bottles.
The "board said the tell - taje-
and unnecessary— Words oo; Ihg
labels were "Beware of
felts."
■ . ' - ,-T
Us
*$¿A
Sr
the First big laugh riot of the year!
What a Man! What a Gal! What a Picture!
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MkMURRAY
im rormmmvtt't
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<&$
sailor. He was a sea cook ftst
He told me about bte job. He 1
girl .
of his profession. I let my, coffej •
train while 1 «atened to him
talk. Of course, in the^Tylxig way o ~
led him on Jo talk wlUi^lfave yoü
"Y««, ma'am, I sure have;'< he answered promptly-1 *
"I'va been spending my timaron a submarine net
. layeif^WhereT óh, everywhere?^ the Caribbean.
v . The South Pacific. The Cortil 8ea. Around the Aeu-
tlahs. Anywhere we got orders to go—there we went. See any light-
ing? Well, a Uttle. We're not a combat ship, if we do get Mne Ur*y
shots now and tl*n. But me~l«lon% «wSt-—I'«n" the cook." ,
"No!" I said, "iou don't took, like a cook." He was very young and
slender and even the piie of hot cafts he was eating would lefiX-c 1
' waistline the size all kfttís-envy. - ' ?\-i '$ !i/
"Í sure am the cook," he answered proudly. "I've got two ai
anta and four meia boys. And, believe me, we keep busy all tbetItrie.
The fellows on the net layers sure do eat. Specially when we are in
- action. We cook twice as much food wfcen the bo^& are working, It's
like thla—if we have 40 on hoard X prepare for ja It really is inter-
' estirtg to watch 'eip. You give 'em a plate so full you would think
they'could not..eat another bite till day after tomorrow. Thenf they
put on their divers sulU If they don't have tfeem on already, which
they mostly do,.and they Jump overboard, spiVwl the nets down
below the water and ccrna Bp an hour later ready for another plato-
ful" . .• *' v '
1 wondered how It was possible to cook Ih heavy seas. Sometimes
it waa so rout# you Just couldn't cook anything, the seagoing cook
replied.
. "But when the.ship's rolling at say an angle of 45 degrees you can
manage all right," he said. "Our stove has a sort of ledge on it so
the pans don't fall off. The-diahes have little ledges, too; so the food |
won't pop out.
"The china U so hard you can't break it when you throw It on the
Boor. . . . Gee," he paused remlnlscently, "it'll be good to see my
mother and father again. ... And my glrL I been wanting to get
married for three years." " ^ -~
"Won't your girt say 'yes* T" I inquired.
"Oh, sure. It's not my girt that's afraid to ge.t married. It's me. 1
think getting married is more than Just having a little fun, 1 think
R's an inatitution. It's settling d*wn and having a home ahd^
h dren." - ♦ . . ||
"I told my girl I didn't think It was fair to her to mararTier and
and then go off and maybe be shot up and her have a^enpple on her
handa the rest of her life. I've seen too much jifthat already. It
1^1 doesn't .work.",.
Perhaps he < )Jn't l|k* girls very muchjuiyhow. I hoped for a good
answer. I got It. 'yr
"Bay! Ms not-Ilka girls! ListeRff know girls In every port my
ship's been in. Up and down,¿He Atlantic coast. In South America. '
Around Auatralla. Like aU"fhe fellows on the small Y
craft—and believe m^thefellows on the small craft Has Olrl In
really have it tp«fh—when I'm in port I raise all - p- \
the rumpus L-«n. Í got giria everywhere. But there ^ 1
Is ónly wrfgirl that mattera." < Hoturallyl
OouaureT" —
T J say I'm Sure! Any sailor win tell you the same thing. The fel-
low I'm traveling with is comiqg back now to get married'to his girl.
And has he hit ft up everywhere he's been! Look—would you like to
see my girl?" Ha reached, into a narrow pocket on his left hip an*
found a leather folder. "There she is!" I was looking at a smiling
wide-eyed young thing. "She doea look sweety" I. said.
"She's o. k. all right*" the sea cook answered—then added, calmly ,
"Here's some others." The "others" were snapshots of at least *
dozen other girte. In one pose the sailor was kissing a girl. "She's •
Puerto Rlcan," he explained, "Tow got to keep 'eUj.all dangling,*
' "And how will your rear gttTfeel about all these ?" I asked. •
"Oh, she'll be alright I already sent her an album of pictures girls
gave me. She'a not Jealous.... Well, nice to have'met you- Maybe K
i ever see you again I'll be cooking on a submarine. It's a cinch coofc.
In* under water. No waves! Well, so,long."
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STARTS TODAY
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Wilh
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—^xfraAdded
A FUNNY CARTOON
ÍG NOVELTY
UNIFORM OF THE WAC
wall
'/ . fc ;
Í943 when Im country was faced with a disastrous
r,v;-Shortage, the Secretary of Agriculture said, "The
ar additional supplies is from thcifcirm
woodiotn. i>'W- v J " \
And the farmers of America did not let Mm down. Their patri-
otic response helped a lot to supply much needed pulpwood
for ^for-industries.
Now, as we enter 1944
. *. ' ' N N-;"' . "' 'v " . "
tt is clear that a serious pulpwood shortage will continue.. But
farmers have learned that pulpwood cutting Is good business
as well as sound patriotism. Now is the best time to thin wood-
lots when pulpwood prices are at their peak. And recent rulings
of the W^ar Manpower Commission encourage farmers to cut
pulpIIUUÜ III Uli IIHHHliS'fay
ward deferment, >
And so the farmers of America are asked^tojnake pulpwood
cutting an important part of theW 1944work program. It is off*
season work; profitable work; patriotic work. Do all you can.
Your country needs every cord you can cut. Keep in touch with
your locar pulpwood committee.
wnror[
WAC through the Stat '.
Stripes War Orphan fund. ;Har
father waa killed In North
Africa. (International}
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VICTORY
PULPWOOD
tY PULPWOOD
CAMPAIGN
V. A. McNEILL, Chairman
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GI
r-i\,
'■■Am :
HARDY
.
' * v .
tiff' «R#
MEW ROOF t
OR
REPAIR
THE OLD ONE! '
There are no fragments so pre-
cious as those of time, and none
lure so heedlessly lost by .people
who cannot make a moment, ai\d
yet can waste yews. — Montgom-
ñ: : - - - '
iflmBULqnce servia
Wi! Can Supply Yon
You Money!
TEMPLE
LUMBER CO.
-Dial (171
1111 I'.ir'k Ave.-
■i i in nnijei. ii
ASBESTOS
PIPE COVERING
.Why' ™ you wait to have
,vour water pipes covered
with Asbestos Pipe Gov-;
.£1 If-tbcy freeze it will be
hnrd to get a plumber or
materials tot the
,orqu
supply co.
PHONE W46
W Seventh St. i
7-
tal
BUY AN
EXTRA BOND
TODAY!
CONSERVE for
WARTIME THRIFT!
If you're considering buying your usual quota of
clothes this year, stop and recail all of the warnings
you've read on thé dangers of rising prices. It's
it's smart to save by limiting your purch-P^
nhiiiil flilr niinwiMflil
Spend the money you will save for war bonds and
stamps to insure yo^ir future security. Have your
old clothes cleaned, pressed and reconditioned Mr
-another season of wéara^ility. Cleaning preseras
the fábric; helps it to h61d its shape, makes clothes
fit better, last longer. Try our quality cleaning ser- ,
vice today . . . - I
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 12, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 16, 1944, newspaper, January 16, 1944; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth142879/m1/4/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.