The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 22, 1935 Page: 1 of 4
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WBsm
Kftlr, not,'*o cold (on lit lit, probab-B
h M WljT freexlng with front to the coast
I
' ednesday partly cloudy, warm*
" U variable wlndn ..m the coaat,
VOLUME XXII
Orange,^Texas, Tuesday, January 22, 1935.
NUMBER 17
YX'h : , f ■; .;-•••
w
|
romise
&i&!l
INTO SOUTH
s
GAIT
SPEED MEASURE
KIDNAPING OF
W.^HSflNOTOX. Jan. 22. (AD—
The Roosevelt administration's con-
trol. o 'er the 7-tfh congress faced
Its fii-Mt major challenge today after
'ft; plan to rush a $4,K00,00(1,000 work-
' relief men sure through (he house
under "Kits'' rule struck u nexprcted
obstacles.
The measure was already one day
behind Its fast schedule because In-
surgent democrats on the house
rtilrs ccmmlttee had declined to
agree to "passage under iron rules
limiting debate and ■ amendments
ThVre were indications that it eotn-
, promise might ro.sult.
After (i s.ec'ret conference, repuh-
^Jleins (induced a plan to scrap the
aitftti nlstra tiotv nieimuro which would
give the president the .$4,800,01)0,000
. , in a "lump sum'.' with discretion as
to hoW It should l>e spent.
Declaring emigres* would he glv- | —:
lug nway its power by delegating j PIlU.ADRI/PtHA, Jan .22. (AIM
such authority to tin" president, the -—Kidnaping of a Philadelphia v>hy-
'-°fgrrTTtTtTrnn 1 prfirnnrrt n . r.MUhmti I It-1-" 4'CMiiJl. |,('ji f'J' a jjfijy due . U> ..J In'
The chief feature of this, .they said,.; fog-nliscured trail of A'lvin Tvarpis,
; Sm. a i keeping the government out 'America's public enemy No. 1. it ltd
——<f—acnameji? i"11 with private busi-
ness.' Kadi ~sI:rre-wrnrW™-He~-g+v ou—a.
pro rain share of the appropriation,
to bo .spent only through private
contrnetors i n the' administration's
finnouneed dVlve to transfer 3.H00,-
'., Otfb* [U'oplc from the "dole"
■ ' "We (ire united against
• 'hit Would take away from
Final Action
OnTax Measure
At'STIN, Jan.
t Tovas legislature
TO KARPIS TRAIL
ernor James \
rent rosolutli'i
immediately
last special
<AP>
t.iday sent
.Mired It
to make
In\\ passed
session*
and interest
— The
Ui Gov-
coiicur-
elTertive
at the
remit ting pen-
on delinquent
altioa
tnxci.
The rosoiution would authorize
In v collectors to accept delinquent
taxes without penalties and interest.
As oi ig'lnnlly passed. the law would
not become effective until I'ebru-
ar) II. .
his corn pa nion, Marry Campbell,
X}i'. | r; i i! seemed t> lead west,
just us feiferal Vftd' MlHv 171 nHce;wfi h-
orders to . "shoot to kill,", hoped
again they had ■'bottled up" Kurpls
and t'aniphell in the wild llayeoek
region, near Qttnkertown,
Philadelphia,,
two "desperadoes
AI STIN
Tegbd:iilvc
today oil
limited late
■il I lei
■Ian. 2 2. " 1 .\ P >
:i lion Was r1h pi
a • resolution putting
clY' i I the i'1
i-iiil*
Final
-'pci't
into
toil of
FINAL DRIVE
TO INTRODUCE
LADDER HADE
FI.F.MINOTOV, X. J., .1.1 tt. 22.
(AIM—The ''lildnap ladder/' which
the 'state charges Wits used by Itrii-
no Richard llauplma'in to lake tho
l.indlterult baby from its nursery,
Wns finally "ailmitled as evidence I"-
doy in the trial of tbc (Jrrtnnn ex-
convlct for murder.
Of
Livestock Is
mercury
swinging front j
ril'Ou\d 31 iJte yester- j
ju:il
to jobs. I mountain
this bill I 40 utiles north of
congress j On Sunday,,, the
'lie right, to appropriate and legis-
W^'^TV'-Stoell said.
. Speaker livens sought "tTrffaty -tn
bring the rules Coin mitt cc around to
the administration view so tlie meas-
ure could go through the house to-
morrow. t'nder the original sChed-
tile. It wns to ■ have pushed today.
Though ltyi'ifei w«fc silent,' some
other leaders expt'essed fettr that if
it wer.e brought up without drastic
•curbs, the aiHiiinisirations' "lump
sum" idea \votil4 . be wrecked' un-
der a rush of "log-rolling" designed
to" enr-mark sums for legislators'
heme .districts.
f, as At-
p irtially
two
Ih-IOS
them
"7H1W-
Operetta Features
Story of Little
Orphan Girl
had sltot their way out
lan tic ('ity hotel, only
<jjBnKnnd, lea v In g boh i n d
"girl friends™ wl.o ftre
held by auth6ritii;s.
■The latest' clue ennic ahli^tiy .be-
fore midnight when word was re-
ceived from Wadsworth. Ohio, that
Dr. M. 11. llunsitkcr ,aQli gf a Ph.il-
ndolphin st.ate senatrirl ■ hail bc.cr, ab-
ducted In his' automobile near Quit-
kertoWs. s
It was iii that wooilwlr, billy ro-
gidn that the bullet-punctured car
in which Karpls and Campbell es-
caped wits found in 11 lane leading to
a farmhouse.
I Tired jtces of the department of
justice had been rushed to Po'J'eg-
QUati ortown,
KLKMINOTON, X. J , Jan. 22.
< A1')-~'Itruno Itiehard Mauptniann's
automobile — the car which state
testimony ■ lids placed at the Lind-
bergh estate the day of the kidnap-
ing —. wiia used today to give silent
evidence agaltlst its owner.
The state brought the car to. doni-
enstrate, in the closing hours of its
case, how 1 he kidnap ladder was d
slgiiM' '4^8ir. ttfi' • • TH
such u vehicle.
Tin'1 demioistr.it Ion, a preliminary
penalties alio interest on iniiiuiuem 1 to the state's final drive to intro-
t n-jtw: L-i Itlut 11.. I lie, liiiliicx-^ tMf.lJi'n<tP. mlh'J
Tile last legislature voted for re-j for the jurors to leave the Crowded
mission at Its flnai special session court room for the nearby alley
but not. by a majority sufficient to wluue the automobile was parked,
make the law effective Immediately. .'After 14 days of hammering in its
ilemissions could not Atari un.Hl charge thai llanittiiiann murdered
next nientli except for action by the 1 the kidnaped Lindbergh baby, . thtt
present legislature. / ' state considered its rant virtually
The'">10 mi tc ntnende'd and, adopted cmoplote.
tiOanlinously the house proposal to] "We will finish the cane by We'd-
t*Tin --i4m — 'Httinite'l piwd-iv .eypn _lf w« liovf I" rut it
amendments emphasised that penal- , short.'1 said Attorney TJeneral tlJtvId
ties wsmld hot lie remitted after j T. Wilentz.
next Julie 30 and declnred that ad- j 80 strong did WilenU Consider his
(litlentil remissions would be agivlttsVi evltletiec, after expresiug belief tlutt
tiound public policy.
of the resolution said j
difficulty in 1
d no
house.
to (tenofit the
is the new
Utile -j doubt
. oscapcd.
"Sunny
-to—tTC-
-pr
nf Sunnysble,"
H'llted—rt—Hre-
an operetta
f I ig.lt—school
.end
with
ties.
"I
«0W-
"A
gun
door,
lowed
auditorium Friday night at 7:30
o'clock, is the story of a liitln or-
phan girl named "Sunny,"
S«fifty, the 'Invahte—tittle—orpluUl.
girl, is the prime, favfli-ite of the nth-
ist ocfihan.n at the Sttnnyside Home.
nettirhiiig froiiv the--hospital where
site has* been, recovering from in-
juries received in saving the life of
another orphan, she finds her mates
excited over the news that a weal-
thy patroness of the home, Mrs.
Raleigh, is planning to adopt otic
of the girl orphans ns a companion
for her nloce Kileen, No one,knows
who will be chosen, but each ' girl
hopes It tvill ho herself.
• Sunny. ' however, putting aside nil
thoughts of self, finds pletYly, To do
settling disputes: among the orphans,
reinsuring Paul, the new hoy. Who
Is-afraid that his big tough hrrrrtier
Slim', will drag him away from the
home and compel him to steal, 'and
trying to comfort Jimmy, tho crip.,
pled orphan, whose o"ne -ftbsorliliiK.
slon in life ' is to the Ctired of his
lameness- lSittcfly disappointed over
the failure of Mrs. Raleigh to send
him a doctor, Jimmy steals her
purse containing a large • sum of
money% Jn a moment of belated i*l
morse, he confesses the theft to
Sunny, who. to shield him, sturdily
shoulders the guilt herself, thereby
Imperiling her chances of adoption.
The purse, stolen fn turn frontTfiT
hidlng plrteo by Aatnos, finds its
way info the hands -of the bullying
Slim, who Is prowling around ottt-
side.' the house Jooklng 'for Paul.
8HmV efforts to'kldtwtfi the terrified
younger brother is fWnrtcd by
Suriny, who gets kidlnnped herself.
Her escape front her ettplor and her
success in clearing her name, ...re-^
covering the- twice-stolen money,
and finding ^)erseK (U real hume with |
town, hear
clue caine.
There, seemed
-their quarry had ,agHin.„
location, tinte and the monger
srrljtlon of the"" men furnished
flie "kidnaped physlclati tallied
their
that
The
df-
h.V
with
Mrs. Raleigh and Eilees,- complete
the stirring cycle of' Her-natuipnturoa.
1. 1. - H«l I ■■■■ II III- -
P1CRSHIXG VISITS TT. WORTII
FORT WORTH, Jan. 22. <AP)—
General John J. Pefrfiing .former
AS. E. K. commander, was here to-
day en route to Arizona to spend
the winter months.
Cold weather caused a postpone-
TnPTtr tn thv trip, the general natlitg
he would cftjn.tlnue the trip , by auto-
mobile If the toinperoture sroached
higher levels, or by traltr, otherwise.
SI'S I ' II ■
««♦♦♦♦♦ ♦
:>>&: ♦♦
and
last klltiwii inuve
the men
men is.
■Dr. Ifunsicker said he was on h'^
way from his Philadelphia home. t..
The sTafe' hospital "at A lien Town, It
wits ■ nbiiut utl diil ght when, another
drove alongside his machine,
horn honking, he told authorl-
Sponsors
tiiey anticipate
, persuading the
amendments.
The ground work, for ,1 thorough
j Investigation of sdurces of income of
I leglslatdt'H was laid as a house res-
I olution asking that Five public b'e in-
j formed oil tlic .matter was referred
i to the sen ile committee of lite
j Whole.
J Senator, Frank flaw lings of Fort.
j Worth said the purpose of. thtx no-
! tion was to brjng aboitf a public
hearing "to let accTisers give la'cts
and reastitTRi!
* a spirited' contest was impending
■ti-t-i*— "i'"".""
tttt
r*rrrl-
stopped,'1 I19 said. "I realize
I did a- foolish illttTtg^ —*■—
man got out with a machine
and ordered me lo open the-
He rode with me and I M-
tho other ear for about three
road they nbnn-
mllea. Oh • n side
doned their cur.
"After that they did rfll the driv-
ing In my ear.
"They asked me If 1 Was a physi-
cian, nnd I told them T was. The
men did not ask for medical treat-
ment."
Dr. - Hunsiokcr said ono man sat
with a revolver in his lap. the other
with a machine gun its tb*y drove
west rapidly, v .
XOTED ATTOHNKV DIF.S
ORERXVIXjLE, Test... Jon. 22.—
Funeral iirrnttgcments for Robert It.
Noyland Sr.. 7n, noted membrr* of
the Texas Har association, were
held up today pending word front
his son. Major Robert R. Neylitnd,
-tonuer l.'nivorsily of" Tettnfssce foot-
enll coach recently transferred to
the Panama Canal zone.
"FTT
orn.inc.iided by n Hub-comniittee.
The siib-cotninlttec recommended
that n|trod'U|i'tion 1 of bills he permit-
ted fur days instead of the 30
snggested by the constitution. .
Retail Merchant
' Membership Hits
120 Mark Here
.Growth nf the Orange Retail Mer-
chants % association membership con-
tinues in 1 spite of the fact that it
Wns thought 1 tlii) peak had been
reached several days' ago when the
100 marl; was reailncdv Today finds
the membership up to, a total of
120 with outlook for continued
growth as bright as ever, according
to Socrot3ry-Mafingcr W. A. McNeill.
Many outsiders who .leajrji of the
large mem her ship marvel when in-
found that the total number of
members in the association was -just
32 six months ago when the present
manager took charge." ,
An lmpot-Uint announcement .is .to
bo, made .by the assoClHtion next Fri-
day, It was understood todfty.
ladder was considered
Major Neylntjd, now In Xdw Vork jcouse of .weather conditions, they
waiting 'tl. will for Panama, was |n> remained off duty today because of
formed of. his father's death. | the severe cold.
*
Real Workers Have Great Chance
To Win Six Ways In Leader Contest
IN A\TAUI S WITX ItE
MADE TO "SPARE TIME WOR-
- KKUS IN THE OltANGE IJCAD-
KR'S CONTEST
Four thousand dollars In awards
for work diirlng spare time in the
coming few wet-ks, yet only a hsnd-
ful of candidates! Do you wonder
that the Orange Leader feels inclin-
ed "to exclaim- about the situation.
, The latest explanation advanced
the- dearth ot entrants In mur
Isrly easy and outstanding mag-
nificent campaign—ti—so deadly -Jn
its error that the Leader notes It
here in esse It is responsible for
keeping away many of tho could-be
prise winners.
"It's the times,"
peetlre. campaigner
hnrd to get vales
1 UW'i " Today
m§M "hew/b Homr — - - -■
4tOI, 0:40, Jj«t, «:44 have a ehnwee. There arc p lot ot
"
■■*>£1**' V«"vV'i'v • '•« >.'
objected a pros-
Monday. "Too
I'd
m'mi
the al ate had traced th« cntlro Jfii0,-
000 Llndiierg ransom down to
1 laupt inu 1111. that lie said:
"Tb prolong the, case beyond Wed-
nesday would be iin Injustice.'1
- Defence counsel insisted the state
made no appreciable pTflifrosts in its
attempt to send Hauptniatin to the'
electric chair. Chief 'Counsel Kdward
J. Relllly dismissing as "ittslgnlfl-
fanf" the lest iniony about Ilaupt-
niann's finances.
"They allowed that Hauptinann
made dej^sits of several thousands
of dollars,' he said. "Of course, ho
had been making sizeable deposits
for some years before the Lindbergh
k liitin pit,ig."
. The kidnap
by the slate one of the most" dainag-'
Ing evidential exhibits against
ITnupftwtnn-
T imtptmntrn- -snhi—they-—retted—Ott-
their witnesses to placet tho ladder
"tight aronnd Ilatiptmann's neck,"
the attorney general asserting::
"I'll be disappointed -If--we don't
get It in, but the lumber Is already
in and what wo need is the luet{i*;,r,,
in • tho ladder."
The state witnesses in this report
were Arthur J. Hoeitler, federal
wood technologist, who reputedly
traced wood in the ladder to Hnupt-
mnnn's Bronx home anfl Stanley M.
Keith, Mostclnir metallurgist, Xhp
snld his tests allowed the lailiW
'nails to be identical with -halls found
in Hauptmann's garage and In his
carpenter's overalls. .
To link the .htiiHliio house .In the
Rronx with estate In HoueWeil,
the state also plitnnde \o ifrodttce
testimony that ,, a j^earcife - «jt the
1 faupttmthn "home tnrff^d up '^rWfig
pnpAt- of the same kind which the
Iddhnp note writer used for his ran-
som demands.
Detective John J. Lyons of tho
New York police Undercover squad
was expected -t-o produce "the paper
—a single sheet—nnd tell from the
witness stand how It was discovered
In Iln upturn tin's home after, bis ar-
rest.
The state h'ld on call Trdefiftowtl
witne e to teH Hauptmann'tf four
women and eight men jurors that
tltey saw him in the vicinity of tho
Lindbergh Sourland mountain estate
before the crime was committed.
Prosecution-, plans also called for
Mrs. SSlsie Whnteley, widow of tbo
Llndltergh butler, to come hack to
the stand to deny defense intima-
tions "Tfiat" her husband was, working
er ioiks tnar teei ure snnitt way." with—it—
Fortunately,' to chance this per- golden-haired baby.
eon's attitude it. wits necessary only
to point out that thp- "times'' lntve
nothing to do with the great gift
election, since they are the same Major II. L. Purdon, divisional
for all- (Mtmpalgners. and since the secretary of the Texas staff of the..
Individual with the highest vote to- j Salvation Army, with headquarters
taf will win anyway, ' hp., matter j at Dallas, will be here Thursday of
whether the total is huge-or mi\ll. tbis week for ft' brief visit of in
WItlj tho
an average, of
da.t, to the |ow lev\l of 1S above!'
<eru at 0 o'clock this , morning, Or-
ange county cuttle died.Hi.v the bun- j
dri'ds, according to icporHi received j
here today. V
* Tile- estimated number oK cattle j
that had died from the effect)i of I
the blizzard, .including rain, i>leet |
and SI111W. placed the total from fiWi j
to lOtltl head In the county, !
While It is known that, tbo Htnrk |
nnd I'rovvn Interests are the . largest i
stock owners is the county nnd sum- ]
l,I Inc.,I propiii t Innate" |o r<-pre 1
um'i. iiii;V1 ■"!.■ t,, fui fii-Hi ji nv4
(iccui'rtte estimate. ■]
t'attle deaths Vvere hy no mo'ips j
confined to any particular breed or j
-L'J— I^LLlaludi. ili.etl-.uj14.
frei|itcntly from the nuinbing cold as j
did the poor cattle. Ii wits said
that where cattle could he kept on
tiie move few deaths occurred.
1 1« many Instances" It was said
ilvat cattle drifted away from lite
herds as they vvere being rounded up
by stockmen for protection.
Indications were today that tre-
mendous losses would lip sustained
It y—c-i-t.LUiii1t.UJ whose ahitnivis graze
the marsh areas of iion+hwest-Louia-
iana, opoelally in the Cameron par-
iMlt section.
Hontnien coming here yesterday
and today from the Lotiislantt'inarsh
areas said they could nee numerous
dead cuttle from their vessels.
Stockmen tut id that as far as
knew not a horse had died
exposure to t he cold wont Iter
where In the county.
E. B. SIOVER IS
SPEAKER AT
ROTARY CLUB
^5: .
t
til
LUu...
ly II'. 1
It. Stover, jJHierilltcndent of
Vritnge • public schools, nttdrewMnl'
cub .^1 till' I'l'-lll 'r wccfjl-j 11,...
at noon today on the
'By tbo Associated Press'
The cbld wave spread east and
south t<ul>'iy, leaving behind ahotil
fifty dead.
Meanwhile, floods, fog, sleet, rninj
and low temperature* combined.;,. tf -
"delay traffic and endanger lives, as
tbo frigid, blast from the north rip- ? v
pisdj down into Dixie, threatening to '
bring'freettltig weather as far math 1
rts central Florida by tonight. :
l'loods- were reported In Arkao- --™
s'Ss, iytuislann, -Mississippi and Ton- ■
inwsee. nutl the Willow - river in "
Wisconsin had broken Through the
St. Prof* dam. damaging a power ",1
house'' Heavy proyierty damuge wit- ,
also reported when the Wolf river. .
burdened by evcssivo. {-slits, tore
Slant barges ami steamboats from |
their mooriwgs aldtiji the Memphis
Teiin., harbor, where the stream
joliiH the Mls«is ippl. The heavy
et .ifl suffered little loss, but thay ~4|
did considerable datn.ige to smaller J
bejn'ts into which they, crashed.
Temperatures in the far northwest.
I ho Rocky mountain area, and*, the
west central states, where the mer-
cury hid sunk ns low as 32 below
in Minnesota, were moderating. Titer
were followed , by warm ' rains alahj;
Ht'S
for
they
from
any-
subject.. \('urricillu.m Revision
the Schoo|s\of Tesaii."
Sponsored by the .SUtle To'tchers'
-tnww4s+itmr—t-hc 1 itrrfe—bwirtl 1 of" citn—
cation and Institutions of liigli., learn-
ing there has arisen 1111 Insistent
feeling tlllit tiie cotiXsc of study in
public schools needs be chfttiged,
I'rof. Stover pointed otK.
Among (he changes arid .••suggcu-
tions ad.vitnced. the following seven
have been selected for spech^i . at-
tention; ' \
1. Insufficleni attention to \ho
study , and ' hatidllnft iif motley tiitd lh-
veatj tents.
2. Itlsiifflclent slresa on current
"malm*"
Wasliing-
1
Issues.
to con trover.
formal drill
mere fuels as
for the u«e
WORKMEN OFF IH'TV
In most Instances where men were
laid off yesterday 011 outside jobs
be-
TO VISIT HERE
Neither the "times''-.nor any"
*uch fuctor hns Tiiiy effect upon
ehances. An easy start can be
lowed by an easy cTtmiBrlgn for
under the distinctive rules of
gl-cat event which not only heH>
in tho beginning by making
wrlptlons count more heavily
votes but also protect your own
other
ymtr-
spection of the local imst of the Kol-
ratlon Army, of whlcli Cnptnln Bft'i.1-.
fvl-
yeu
this
you
sub-
In
fair
ter Wilsbn l In charge.
play by 'forbidding arty candidate to
spend a penny for subscriptions
other than his own,
mmm
are
IK
Gem Theatre
- Today
"OWE ROPR liATE"
Feature: 1:12, 3:49, -,fl:42, 7:42,
• :4 a
HE ROBBERY
SUSPECTS ELUDE
political and economic
3. Li«k of nttcjitUin
si.'il subjects. 1-
•I. Overemphasis on
5. Ovcremiihnsis on
fact's alone Instead nf
of reasoning.
(!. Lack of attention to social anil
Industrial problems,
7. I.ock of provisiolli fur sludeiit
participation li> civic enterprises.
Kdueators. reall/.e that., education
must keep pace with civilization
which Is 'ever growing, I'rof. Sfov#i\
said. No set system can be.iulOplod
which will servejtfor all time or for
any given time, lie said. The world
Is constantly, changing* and we must
adapt our systems of training to
meet the changing needs,
I eel that
will provji of
*STON. Trvrt'
—"Three robhijl-y suspects who allot
their way .out .of a poiii'e trap, sc.
rlously wounding two detectives,
eltided sr-nrclvers today.
IHjy Dc tcctivcH j. Q,
nnd Owen Martin, 32, each
wounded in the hip as they com-
manded the trio 10 siirrender at a
tourist camp hero last night, were
reported recovering. The detectives
gave detailed descriptions of the men
and tiie automobile jn which they
fled.
llroUssai'd SIiil b<* nnd- , Mnrtin
went to the tourist camp after learn-
men' were there, lie said
drove by and. went Into a
t the ramp. ■
mrked our car and walked
up to t\c house," Hrou.inrd sold.
"Wo shoufM foj- thcttt to come out.
Hn grabbed otiKof them and . I start-
ed' tow-ards the\«ither two, holding
a sawed-Off shotgun' in my Tiands.
One man suddenly \nhlpiied out a
pistol. Me fired four Nsr five time-'*,
one bullet striking 1110 ki the hip.
"I tried lo ahoot tlio- shotgun but
it jamrnei). I slipped nnd ferk on the
icy pavement, I eiin'J,1 tell hi Xtnany
shots were fired but several xnen
"Were ''firing nil at once." _
lie said they were afraid to shoi
because of the presence of several
Women mid children who -ran • oi?r"
of. the tourist houses. He salt! (he
autoniobiio roared iiw«y. He said
lie believed some of their shots hit
the cor its the trio fled.
The car bore Louisiana license
plates alitT polico said they know the
Identity of two of the men.
iiclioof'i — yn nd'
tne propos
great value
tile' country,
H—elm ngci.
to the
he said.
asil We 11 ceil TTic iaTiTjTeFIiTnTn "iVf th
lutelligcjit citizens of -T«'m iHi .lui/ .jntike
these t'lwri'jjd'ii poMRlble.'' *
M. J. L. Stark mid/ tliat/111
(Tioiiglit the member.! ot tio>^ttoiary
Urousaiirdi club slionld thnhlt l.?iuf^Hl.ui:i;i:—tut
bringing to their, nttpnflon the mut-
ter of propound ^-efitinges in the
eourseH of thj> ^rfiblic schools and he.
suggested that'the club take tbo scv-
"en topic* ns subject's of weekly do*
dates oh it tnenns, of better familiar-
izing our people with the possibili-
ties bf the greit program.
The HUgges'ion wstt accepted by
the program [dlillrmnn, It. T. Wright,
and Alan' Cameron (Mid J.' If.. l>;ivld
were appointed lo present the first
dehnie,
The attendance prize was "award"
ed to Rev. Ed Marcus.
Kv^rett Fuller, a new member re-
presented to the
ciuii. ^
V
Orange Merchants
Oppose Bill To
Tax Association
Boy Scout Workers
Called to Meet
Here Tonight
Ail persons interested In boys'
welfare work are urged to attend, ft
—efflrliilw of—tbu.
•pMUU.it signed—by, ii jitrge .jlcd-
enfngc of local merc)iailt« and bus-
ens men. • pt otesting a bill. recent-
Introduced In the Texas legisla-
ture, proposing to tax retail mer-
chants nssociiilions in the sum of
$3fi0 annually, also for a pcrcont-
age of the associatlah receipts, will
be forwarded to State Senator Alan
Cameron at Aifstin tomorrow it Is
understood that Orange merchants
jind business men stamt approxlmatc-
ly joo per nent opposed to tho bill.
Steamer Oakman
To Reach Port
Here Saturday
wr;
- •
m
meellng-^of r. ffldalii „of—thu— Or:i ngn
County Council of Roy Scouts to be
held tonight at office* of the Orange
insurance agency. Plana for tho
year's work in scouting In this eou«:
ty are expected to be outlined at
the meeting. It la expected that
David H. Coers. executive secretary
of the .SahineTarcfl council, will be
here from Prirt Arthun headquarters
to attend the meeting.
The.
has boen substituted for the steam
er Weal Jfohorane, scheduled to ar
rive here last Hdndny lo lift a cargo
for Bremen and Hamburg, and will
arrive here by next • Saturday- or
Sunday, according to notice received
by local port officials this week. The
steamer Liglcian Is expected to ar-
rive the: first part of the coming
week. ^ 1 ^
, jttka . •
■■' i: . v'.v
new menace to lives and property
as the heavy snows began to change
it no ntgius floods. Traffic war
stalled In .Seattle ' and other Pacifii
■•ynvmrwesr^tTes
burs;. Rivera In western
ton wct-e rcpeirted rlsjag. .
Shipping was hard lilt., Foirt^-
five members of the crew of, the
J apane.w frelghler, Hokuman- ' Maru
were rescued In the north Ailan.tlc by,
the liner President Jackson. .
flales lashed .lueuU*,. Alaska.. ,,..«.tid
■One man was believed to lit* Vt-
drowned.
Fog along the Texas coast men-
aced shipping, while tho mercury
tumbled to below jsero ih the pan-
TwrnlCi- - Therej was ..aixqw in ..".west
TmSh. Five dctuha were aiiri^tftM ^
to the x'old wave, and heivvy damage
W cr<i|j«\a.nd livestock was reported,
V light skow fell (n New Orleans
for the flrsV tlmo in many years.
Oklaltonift reported1' "four deaths. •
Indlanif.tf. C'tn^JiyIvanta—two, MOtt-
tana three, Washington state two.
Illinois ten, Iowa ten, Michigan two.
Wisconsin three, Minnesota two, A
.New; Jj-rsey, Maryland \nd Missouri , ;i
jiljd Orr.jwn one each. 'lT.Ju,> '
and Indiana deablm included
es^Ju accidents \1 ue to 1 he Ht'e anil
d over tho week-end. Chicago,
wliWe most of the 1111 nok^le'ii 1 lis
curr\i, had sub-ssero^weathcr
Inls^fortr. v—g*
held nt the New-
the filVt
Airnlni
lime til in
Illinois
fatali*
H NOC-
es
ark airp'j
y.elopcd
fog, which also
of Maryland, tying
Local Bar Agrees
On Re-organization j
Plan For District
i'+fsii
||
*8
Orange lawyers attending a ape-
elal meeting of the Orange County
Bar ilrtfiocliitlon held In the chamber 'j
of commerce ball this, morning wpr#
apparently agreed on n pittn -fop..If®4 "-''l
organization of the first judicial <tla- ^
trfct in' order that more time may . |
be av illn'lde.. for district court., trials.
Tfio special meeting was called to
consider the bill Introduced by. Rep, , f
H. .K. Qulnn of Heauniont at the
present session of the leglBlature,- |
proponing to take Augustine i
out of the first Judicial district and
combine it with the lUUrd district,
now embaeing Panola and fthelby
counties.' _Orange lawyers vvero of
tho opinion that, they would 1
satisfied with three four-weok terms
and one three-week term of court a
scar.
A committee,' composed of S3. L.
fhiK-e, l). c. Hotthetl and: Munroe
('liiipmuti was appointed' with in-
struct fori* to draft that part of tho
hill ' as applying to Orange county,
nnd to try to avoid conflicting with
the 111 teres!« of other counties ot (
the di lrl<rt". v . •
The committee will report, back
to the association' at a special mM|t
Ing to be held ut 10 o'cles-k Thurs-
day morning at -fin; chamber of com« . &
uicrce hull. 7 : ^ '
' ''"'Kvj.feii
Indications Were today that Thurfw
day's aesaion. of the bar -
would be rather interesting, as oer«'.
lain resolutions haWng to do with! j
proposed legislation now pending IiU'i
tbc state legislature, alro expoctcd t
be Introduced, In the discussions to-
day references were made to pond- .
ing leglstmli&p concerning criminal J
nrocedure. J
, ■ • 1 jw-Bi
-f-
STRAND
MM
•
Today ( |U
"THR MFRRV WIDOW ~
i, aiOft, i'.M, «: , 0:94 J
' • " i"j ; ' > ■ ' • ■
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McBeath, J. S. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 22, 1935, newspaper, January 22, 1935; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth302625/m1/1/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.