The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 52, Ed. 1 Monday, March 2, 1942 Page: 4 of 4
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PAGE F0J3B
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THE OBANOE LEAD EH
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ORANGE, TEXAS, MONDAY, MARCH 2,1942
Monday, March 8. K1DM
4:00 Eddie "and Pearl
I 4:25 Safely Talk
4:30 Flying Patrol
4:45 Wayne -Van Dyne
15:00 Adventure Stories
K?.'^ 5:15 Secret City
5:30 Carson ,RJ)bison
5.45 Tom Mix
(i:00 Jimmy Fidler
6:15 Ed wa rd Tom I inson
G:30 Dinner Musicale
,;6:45 News and Sports
7:00 1 Love a Mystery
7:30 True or False
8:00 Peony Serenade
K;18 Nova time
11:30 For America tyc Sing
8:45 All Out for Production
'!t:ft0 Monday Merry-Do-Round
11:30 Lum and/Abner
9:45 News Parade
WOULD S LARGEST
MADISON LODGE
No. ii «
'-A. Ft X A: M.
SIiiIhI Com iii on lent Ion
■Monday, March 2nd, 111 III,
7 :;t<l I'. M.
MAKOMC miPLK, 111 Fifth St.
15. I. Hardy, tv. M.
II. A. Ilci k, Krcit'lary
Phil Harris' Orchestra
Jimmy Dorsey's Orchestra
Associated Press News
Boyd Raeburn's Orchestra
Claude Thornhill's Orch. •
Assoc fated Press News
Sign OfT •
Tuesday. March 3, FDM
0:00 -Plney Woods Frolic
7:00 European News Roundup
7:15 Sabine Tabernacle
7:45 Elwyn Owen
7:55 Associated Press News
8:00 Breakfast Club
9:00 Modulated Moments
9:15 Swing Session
9:30 Organaires
9:45 Headline News
9:50 Uncle Sam Calling
9:55 Market Reports
10:00 Aceordiana
10:15 Dance Band Parade
10:30 Preseott Presents
10:45 Novating
10:55 United Press News
11:00 Andrini Contincntales
M 15 Market Reports
11:20 Aloha Land
11:30 Music By:
11:45 Tropical Moods
12:00 News
12:|5 Chuck Wagon Gangti>,
12:30 Piney Woods Playboys '
12:45 Keep 'Em Smiling
12:50 Noon Toons
12:55 News Highlights
1:00 U. S. Army Band
1:30 Into the Light
1:45 "In Cpre of Aggie Horn /
2:00 Orphans of Divorce
2:15 Amanda of Honeymoon H.
2:30 John's Other Wife
2:45 Just*?* la in Bill
3:00 Club Matinee
3:45 United Press News
SCOH'S SCRAP BOOK
u i. rw i oa—.
By R. J. SCOTT
7
BRITISH SAILOR HASfo
BE A COOK OKI SMALLER "tyPES oF
srflps or-ltiE. tfavy —
eactf mah is responsible
for cookikuj
*
oF CERfAlK
MEALS
t '
I ~
RELIABLE AUTO REPAIRS
We maintain the moat modern and complete service
department in the city for the proper servicing of
your car such as:
Minor repairs 1-rake nervliT, steering and front system align-
ment, laxly and rentier nt mighti-iiing, Ruro piiliiting, washiuK.
pollsliliiK, liiliriratini; service. Free cheek up service, ct>tiiuul<u>
-gladly given. We cull for and deliver your car.
WRECKER RKRV1CU DAY OR MOIIT
THE MODERN CHEVROLET CO.
DIAL <110
OltA.MiK'S OLDEST ItKMAULK DEALER
TIIIIll) AT GREEN
>b
DAVIDSON *
tiA£ BEEH JuP<j£ oF
CROCXE-f-f tCouM</(fE^AS,
48 yEARS, AMP HAS
NEVER. ANNOUNCED —
VE<iE<ARIAM
FISH -
*™E qcLOEN 6'd/Ntk
C fOUHO OVER Mos-f OF-THR-
UM |-fED S<A1ES ) IS SAID <o BE
, TITLE'BOUND * «? Jade Sato; m u • * <&• «•
' * i tent of eggs by supplying laying
hens with diets rich irt such sub-
stances.
Wild strains or pigs in China
produce the best bristles for high-
quality paint brushes, says the
Department of Commerce.
*yles of women's handbags are
b ing developed to reduce to a
mlnmum the use of mqtals and
plastics, according to the Depart-
ment of Commerce.
-jfcrTME OHLY VEAETARIAN FlSH-
jr^r, /Jr _cr i>-c - * 9S PER. CEN-r OF Its
FOR 1nt OrrICE—tentwi,Wftifumiu s>)-mJiri««,ta WwUrighuicNmU. ^OOP 46 PLA.H*f LIF*
Decision Is
Rendered In
Pa veil Case
A decision was rendered here
taturday afternoon in the case of
Mi's. Agnes Pavell vs. F. J. Pav-
el!, suit for divorce wherein the
divorce was granted and a com-
mission composed of Geo. W. Ban-
croft, J. E. Millikin and J. H.
David, to advise the proper ciivi-
'Sttm of, Texas community prop-
XT
IT PAYS
To Shop the Want Ads!
city.
In this suit, the defendant hus-
band had contested the petition
oi the plaintiff wife, who alleged
incompatibility in a general way.
The case occupied two dflys of
district court the past week.
i
a
"I enjoy trading tor things
I want..."
jsajt* M . \V. A. K. "It aniu/.es me
lliati-sii until> lliiniis which I no long-
er use can 'i>e. of vutun to someotio
else. Ituli it's true. Anil what tickles
me even mor6 is I ho fact. t|mt. t can
get iliiiiKH I want just liy offering
Niutielliing I don't want. liKADEIt
Want ;\<N sure have iM'en useful to
' me."
'We bought a complete
kitchen ..."
says Mr, and Mrs. It. \. "We
wauled mi electrical kitchen, tmt
we couldn't allord to pay full prices.
A friend told lis nlxtut. I<K.\DI'Ill
Want Ads mid ivc started sliopiiing:
them reuniliii'ly with the result that
we found exactly what we wanted at
a tremendous sating."
OPEN FORUM
To the Editor:
We appreciate the efforts—and"
help given by your urban and
rural readers in the various pro-
grams that are helping get out
iron and steel scrap so that the
steel mills and foundries of the
country may continue to operate
at capacity.
Approximately, 28,000,000 gross
tons of iron and steel scrap are
needed from the scrap yards to
make (19,000,000 tons of steel in-
gots and over 20,000,000 tons of
iron castings in 1942. That will
make guns, tanks, ships, planes
ai:d ammunition to beat" the Axis,
and also provide for a minimum
f our civilian needs.
We want to assure you and
through you your many readers
that out industry will prepare
and expedite the scrap to the con-
sumers without delay-
The scrap yards may be count-
ed on to help auto wreckers dis-
pose of their surplus stocks at
prices approved by our govern-
ment.
The supply of scrap is govern-
ed by federal regulation through
the War Production ' Board and
therefore there can be ho hoard-
ing. Prices of all grades of scrap
are set by the Office of Price Ad-
jvtinistration which has the au-
thority of Congress and therefore
there can be no speculating Tor
h inter prices.
Our sole object is to Win the
War!
Yours Very truly,
Edwin C. Barringer, President &
Executive. Secretary Institute
of Scrap Iron & Steel. Inc.,
Washington, D. C-
1
"Junior wanted a dog ...
says Mm. II. 1% "Naturally we
thought it would be nice for him tu
have one. Ilut we wanted to he sure
that any doK we bought would <be
gentle mid uccustontiHl to pUylug
children. Hut was it problem
suggested
placed
ringing
"I did over my living room
M«yN Mrs. Ij. M, "My old living room
was terribly outdated-— frankly, I
couldn't s|K'iid as much as was re.
<|uireil lo do it over with new access-
ories and all. It Just seemed hope-
less until I happened lo pick up tlib
liiCADKlt Want Ad Section one day;
. . and there before me was I lie
ausuer to luy prgrtilciu. .Now I shop
the Want Ails KIKHT for everything
I need."
Kvery day more ami more |ieopte are find-
ing out that tlie LKADKIt Want Ails are
more Uian "help wanted" ads. .They uro
furnlwlilng homes. Inlying used-cars, radios,
dugs, thin en*) way . Kven If you aren't In
tbr market fot anything, follow- the Want.
Ads for fun ami . pleasure.
FIRST TEXAS
(Continued from pagp one)
by people not permitted to enter
the gates of the ship yard penin-
sula which presented a scene like
that of a great industrial city.
Representatives from all large
daily papers in this section of
Texas, also representatives from
Paramount News, "News of the
Day",-by MOM, wore present in.
addition to radio broadcasting
groups.
Among the guests on the plat-
form were Mrs. Sam Houston
Jones, wife of the governor of
Louisiana: Lieut. Commander E.
E. Kerr of Sabine Pass Naval base
and Mrs. Kerr; officials of the
Consolidated Steel Ltd., and nu-
merous other notables numbering
more than a hundred.
The Bengal Guards Drurti and
Bugle Corps and the Bengal Lan-
ccrs,. Orange High school band,
sponsored by H. J. L. Stark played
patriotic music during the pro-
gram which was closed with "God
Bless America" played by the
Bengal Lanccrs and vocal led by
Ralph Leon,
Immediately following M the
launching program, a luncheon
was given at Sunset Grove coun-
try club to honor Mrs. Thomson.
Admiral and Mrs. Van Keuren
leave tonight by plane on the re-
turn trip to Washington, D. C.
The next vessel scheduled to
be launched Is the USS Ausborn.
~TEXT0F
(Continued from page one)
realise that this great, thriving
in whose midst we stand
.Was but 16 short months
ago a stretch of barren swamp-
land.
'Within a month of the time
when the contract with the Navy
was signed, the first seoopful of
dirt was lifted into the air.
A scant seven, months slipped
by before the keel on the ship
here before us was laid.
"Less than ten months later the
vessel which has grown around
that keel is ready to slide down
her ways to meet the sea-
''For military reasons, I cannot
tell you how short a time it will
be before this sleek hull will be
ready to sail out to take her as-
signed post in our far - flung bat-
tle line, but you can be sure that
there will be no relaxing of the
record - breaking pace that has
brought her now so far-
''Here is another demonstration
of the fact that it is not machines
but men that we must rely on to
to win the war.
That wus true wht'n the bat-
lies foi Texas independence were
fought over a century ago. and it
is still true today.
"For the age of the robot is not
yet.
It takes men to build
and planes and tanks and
and it takes men to put them into
action.
''The ultimate responsibility for
our success or failure rests with
the men in the shipyards and the
men in the mines 'B'fid mills and
factories.
"They must somehow be made
to feel and accept that responsi-
bility.
'"They must not quit because
they are asked to add t>vo hours
to their normal peacetime work-
ing day. T~r~'
"They must not quit because
orte of their fellow - worker? gets
his face slapped by some t.hort-
temperad foteman or becaus.- he
calls thorn names not used in
polite society.
"Wc have to get guts if we arc
going to save necks.
"I would like to hold up as a
model and inspiration to workers
in the rest of the country the pho
nomenal accomplishments of the
men who fashioned this ship.
'I know the hardships you men
endured in the early days before
adequate'housing facilities be-1
came available. <
fit is to your enduring criidit
that despite these hardships and
difficulties, you have hung high
a record of achievement for the
rest of ,the country's shipbuilders
to shoot .at. — — —0
"Because of what you have
shown yourselves so capable of
'-.Xv'v.
■frPSfia
am
&
whites
hombrt steps
■kf the
Fpankaim
^5
608 PASIoR. isl
ctevei-ArtD res.
AnlP tMe
pore CAWS
Foft AsiofMeR
KAIocKOOT
"TAB- o/Je most
LiketV -fo socceeo Joe
toot-s as MeAvywei&Mr
i CMA^PlC^
wilK
DICK fORAN
HO CARRIHO
ANDY DiVINI
Starts 'IT KM.
Hreiula Jtiyei
lis. .Allan, Ji
lu
one of
HHtHT TO Till-: llAItT'
-Mm
NOTICE!
OttA.XtiK <>AltHA< K HIHI'OH.
AL Hl'SI X'KHH
Now Under
New
Management
l-'Olt (JAItBAOE SERVICE
Phone 4378
Alii. I'lltST ltt \ PICTURES
9c • GEM • 17c
TODAY
A hard-hitting
WAR ECONOMY
Cleveland. (AP) — War econ-
omy has reached the wardrobes Of
babies cared for by the Cleveland
likewise a destroyer
first World War.
"She has sometimes since been
joined with the forces of our
great Ally, in whose service she'.Humane Society.
has continued the fine tradition I The society has adopted a dl-
of the name she first received. |aper pattern requiring only about
"It is most fitting that the
strength of our alliance should be I
half the usual amount
and Calls the result
pants."
of cloth,
''defense
symbolized by this linking of our
Navies through the U. S. S. AU- /hey are cut out m hourglass
LICK, old and new. hc e*£a Piece8 mg used
to reinforce the garment.
'It may strike you as most ir- Mrs. Laura S. Parmenter of the
onical that the name whose honor society said today they are easier
we mark today belonged to the i to apply, and do not interfere
Commander of the East India with the "leg action of babies
Squadron, which from 1B51 to learning to walk
1853 prepared the way for Per- | ———-
ry's consummation of the
Door Policy with Japan-
Open In the near luiure, housewives |
jmay be able to purchase "enrich-1
ed" eggs. Poultry research has
'There are those who feel to- s|lowtl the feasibility of increas-
TODAY & TUESDAY
day that it would have been far
better for all the world had that
door never been opened-
"That, however, is a judgment
which must be left to history.
"Suffice it for us to say that for
our part, that door was opened in
ships ja spirit of friendship and good
guns, [will, a spirit which it is our coun-
try's honor (whatever may be
said of its discretion) to have
maintained up to the very last
"Now it is our job to get that
door slammed shut!
"It is, I think, a first-class
shove we give, as we push the U.
S. S. AULICK down these ways."
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
Crconiulsion relieves promptly bo-
cause it goes, right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un-
derstanding ^ou must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you arc
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
MiCKey
Rooney
Judy
Garland,
-ln-
"BABE5 ON
BROADWAY"
It'h JuiiiiiiciI with Miiilr,
l-'iin and KMmiiire!
PI Us — News K "TANKS"
—PRIGEH—
II A. M. to I I*. M.
plus :le Tux
1 I*. M. to (1 I'. M.
ilth' plus :lr Tn\
41 I'. M. to ('lose
•IOc plus -It- Tux
doing,, there may be some of you
whom others may seek to lure a-
way by more attractive offers
''We arc all partners in this gi-
gantic effort to win. the war, and
we gain nothing when we rob our
partner Peter to pay your partner
Paul.
''This hijacking of labor must
cease. ■ <■
"I hope you men will look oh
your jobs here as the sailor looks
on his watch and the soldier on
his sentry duty.
"They know there can be no
excuses if they desert their posts.
"They know there can be but
one answer and that the answer
of death.
''Your duty is as great as theirs,
however less severe the penalty
for its breach.
"I know you nefed no aiferner
sanction than your own conscience
to Insure that duty's fulfillment.
"1 would like to add one final
word about this vessel's name-
sakc.
R is the second ship to bear
the proud name of Commodore
John H. Aulick, whose 57 yews oi
Is one of the brightest
pages in the history of our United
St** Navy.
"The fir-d V. It S AULICK
- - •>
aia$!1
'•-V--".Ml
■ ■ ; '■
Make defense against heat and friction your first
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Opaline. Opaline contains no "5th Columnist" wax
and petroleum jelly—lion-lubricating substances
that thin out in heat and cut down on oil's lubri-
cating ability. Wax and petroleum jelly are removed
from Opaline by an extra refining process. Play safe.
Use Sinclair Opaline Motor Oil. It lasts so long it
saves you money.
:
MM —
mm
''Mis
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Wmmmm
saw
iSl
SINCLAIR REFINING COMPANY
-lllsO^ CRAFT, Ag^it t
Orange, Texas •
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 52, Ed. 1 Monday, March 2, 1942, newspaper, March 2, 1942; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth220971/m1/4/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.