The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 27, 1941 Page: 4 of 4
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10 GUIDE
> Aagust KFDM
Ireene Wicker
The Bartons . p f$; 1£3
Gilbert and Sullivan •
Movie Menu
Wings on Watch
Easy Aces
Mr. Keen '
Mandrake, the Magician
News and Sports
Quiz Kids
Manhattan at Midnight
Hemisphere Revue
News Here and Abroad
Ted Steele Orchestra
The Nickel Man
Army Maneuvers
Modern Musjc Box
News Highlights
Ray Kinney Orchestra
Johnny Long Orch.
Dolly Dawn Orch.
10:00
10:15
10:30
10:55
11:00
12:00
News Parade . SSyS?
Benny Goodman Orch. •
Woody Herman Orch-
A. P. News ' .
Rugcutters' Club
Sign Off
Thursday, August 28. KFDM
6:00 Home Folk* Frolic
6:30 Musical Clock
6:55. Associated Press Newa
7:00 Breakfast Club
Time Out - "
Sabine Tabernacle
Market Reports
Sammy Kaye Orch.
Prescott Presents
Around. Beaumont
Richard Kent
Song of the Day ;
Movie Menu
Morning News
Bob Douglas
Stop to Think
Southern Playboys
Market Reports
8:00
8:15
8:45
8:50
0:00
9:15
9:50
9:45
9:50
9:55
10:00
10:15
10:50
10:45
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THE ORANGE LEAfcEB
ORANGE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1941.
'That Night In Rio" at Strand
*RINGSIDE MAISIE** BRINGS
ANN SOTHERN TO BENGAL SCREEN
ting only four hits
Today's Schedule:
Dallas at Houston, night
Fort Worth at Sa Antonio., night
Tulsa at Shreveport, night
Okla. City at Beaumont, day
succumbed to the third - place
Sports at, Shreveport by the score
of 6-0, thanks to the four - hit
pitching of Benson Brillheart, who
whiffed 13 Oilers.
In the only afternoon game, the
Oklahoma City Indians lost to
the Exporters at Beaumont, 4-0
Lemuel Bumpers, a southpaw
winning pitcher,"Derm it
Revolution
The French
1789.
EXPORTERS
You'll Be 0-0-0-L Here!
OPEN 1 P. M. DAILY
ONLY!
FROM INDIANS
Alice !• >«•, i ou HBinhc and Carmen Miranda itrovlile the roman
and songs for "That Night in Rio," the glamour-filled Technicolor1
musical of th<< gav Latin American capital. It's ttOth t'entury-Kox'sf
latest hit. wlilcli o|K'nn at the 81 rand Theatre Thursday
MAIHIK'H X10W HOMAM'K—•Ann Hotlverp lias a new romance In
her latest M. G. M. starring film, "Riqgnide Mainic." (h'otue Mnr-
pliy plays a fight manager, opening today at the Coril Bengal.
A GOOD USED
mm
If you need one or two, come to see us.
We have tome dandy good values that
you will not be ashamed to drive.
y™AiwwiGSXGSMTKSraF
JACKSON BROTHERS
• v .
Texas' Oldest Dodge-Plymouth Dealer
TELEPHONE 1265
Orange, Texas
10:50
10:55
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
12:15
12:30
12:45
1:00
1:15
1:30
1:45
2:00
2:55
3:00
3:30
3:45
Barnwell Com. Center
Swing Session
Between the Bookends
Modulated Moments
Tropical Moods
News -
Southern Playbays ,
Jack Berch and His Gang
Singin' Sam"
Orphans of Divorce
Honeymoon Hill
John's Other Wife
Just Plain Bill
Club Matinee
A. P. News
Town Talks
About Radio
Wayne Van "Dyne
Last Day - GEM
and Stamps, go to the nearest
post office, bank, or savings'find
loan association; or write to the
Treasurer of the United States,
Washington, D.X., for a mail-or-
der form-
Lovers Richard Arlen and Lin-
da Hayes as you will see them at
the Gem Theatre last times today
Methusalah was said to have
been 969 years old at the time of
his death.
y
Defense Bond
The two great Japanese cities;
Tokio and Yokohama, were great-
ly damaged in the September,
1923, earthquake.
y
"Baseball Defense
To Shop the
Want Ads!
ia.
"We bought a complete
kitchen..."
Mays Mr. and Mrs. «. B. A. "Wo
wanted an electrified kitchen. "iit|
we couldn't afford to pay full price*.
A friend tolil us about LKADKIl
Want Ad* and we started shoppim;
them regularly with the result that
we frtkind exactly what we wonted
at a tremendous saving."
"I enjoy trading for things
I want
« *Vi>
•ays Mr. W. A. K. "It amases me
that no many thing* which I no long-
cr use can he of value to someone
else. But It's true. And what tickle*
Me even more Is the fact that I can
get things I want Just • > "J'0''"?
something i don't want. LKAnMt
Want Ads sure have been useful to
W>."
"Junior wanted a dog .. "i
*a>s Mrs. B. P. "Naturally wd
thought it would be nice fc(r hint to
have one. Hut we wanted to be sure
that any dog we tonight would bo
gentle and accustomed to playing
with children. That was a problem
until a friend suggested Want Ads.
We placed an ad In the lil'ADKH
and ft neeined to me tliat I had liard*
ly gotten up when the phone started
- Itjimlt: wc found the
eet dog ... one who had been used
to children. Junior is craay aVwut
Q. What is
| Bond Day'.'"
A. Tomorrow, Thursday, Au-
gust 28, organized baseball willl
demonstrate its united support of |
the Defense Savings Program. In
all major and minor league parks
where games are scheduled, um-
pires, players, and spectators will
join in brief appropriate patriotic]
exercises to focus national atten-
tion on the important part which
Defends Bonds and Stamps play
in National Defense.
Q. Is the Government con-
cerned over whether I buy my
Defense Savings Stamps' at post ]
offices, banks, savings and loan
Institutions, retail stores, or else-
where?
A. No. The Government is I
interested in having as many'
net-soils j as possible take a hand
in the National Defense Program,
xoward that end the Treasury is
making Bdnds and Stamps avail-
able for pufchase in the largest
number of places possible.
Note. —- To buy Defense Bonds
ae— - i ,
'HAT OUTFIT
BUDDY?-j
THIRTY-THIRD DIVISION
Yellow
By the Associated Press
The Houston Buffs know very
well that the Dallas Rebels have
their hearts set on being in the
Shaughnessy playoffs, but that
didn't sjtop 'em from beating the
Rebels 8-7 in the second game of
a double-header Houston last
night- The Rebels won the op-
ener 5-4, but the loss of the night-
cap put them only three games
ahead of the fifth - place Fort
Worth Cats.
Meanwhile the Cats—who also
have some ideas about the
Shaughnessy playoff, won 3-2
from the Missions at San Antonio.
It was the 34th Mission loss by a
one-run margin. Earl Caldwell
allowed the Padres" 1,2 hits, but
went the route- His opponent,
Pat McLaughlin, gave up 14 safe
blows.
The second - place Tulsa Oilers
LAST TIMES TODAY
THURSDAY ONLY—
The MARKED WOMAN of
The ORIENT
With BRENPA MARSHALL
•It'a thm champion
luh'hit ol all the
Maime man-adventures!
Man-wiae Maisie vsv
girl-proof Murphy
and Maisie wins again
in a laugh knockoutl.
ALWAYS COOL
ST-RANDEC
3d
PHONE «01
10c & 15c
—ENDS TO-NITE—
GENE AUTRY IN
"RIDiN* ON A RAINBOW"
"THE DEVIL BAT"
THURSDA Y and FRIDAY
AMECHE
AUe*
FAYE
C*% «M
MIRANtyA
IT'S TECHNICOLORFUl/
Jmeph Conrad f
\ VICTORY
i An hlanti hie
GWKMURPNYI
I Robt. STERLING
Virginia O'BRIEN
L Natalie THOMPSON
—Addrsl!
More Fnn!
Cflor Cartoon
"Cuckoo I. Q."
Parade .Voveltj "Willie and Mouse" — News
Black-
13,398 MILES ON 5-QUART FILL OF OIL
Jgt DEATH VALLEY DESTRUCTION TEST
Revolutionary New Oil tested against 5 other big brands.
6 new cars Destroyed to prove Economy and Protection.
m
'-h:;
"I did over my living
room...*'
saj-h Mrs. L. M. "My old living room
was teri-iV ly oiit<lated—frankly I
couldn't spend ns nnich as was re-
qulred to do It over with new access
ijiies and all. It Just seemed hope-
less until I liapiH>ned to pick up the
LEADER Want Ad Hection one day
. . . and there lH-for i me was thw
answer to n y iirolilein. Now 1 shop
the Want Ads PlItHT for everything
1 neetl."
Every day more and more
are fIndTng" oul TTrat the
people
T/KADEIt
it him.
so are we.'
E 'f&kirzr
Want Ads' art- more than "help
wanted" ads. They are rnrnlnlilnx
homes, tiuylnjt cars, radios, dogs
this easy way. ^
Want Ads for fun and pleasure.
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
-
VARIOUS National Guard
troops of Illinois were
welded into the Thirty
third division in the summer
of 1917. The division, known
as Prairie and Illinois, trained
at Camp Logan, Houston, Tex.,
previous ^ to its ^ service A in
France.
The division served in the
'Amiens sector with the Aus-
tralians from July 19 to Aug.
20, , 1918. From Sept. 9 to
Nov1. 11, some units of this di-
vision always were in the line,
serving north of Verdun and
west of the Meuse during the
Meuse-Argonnfe operations. It
served 27 days in active fight-
ing areas and 32 days in so-
called quiet sectors. The lads
from Illinois captured more
prisoners than any other Na-
tional Guard division—3.987,
including 65 officers. Ninety-
three artillery pieces and 414
machine guns were also seized
from the enemy. The division
advanced 36 kilometers against
resistance. . ___
Tho Thirty-third " now "*■ ial
based at Camp Forrejt, Tenn.
The insignia is a yellow
cross on black circle, a combi-
nation of the division's colors.
Yellow was chosen because It
was the only paint available in
Texas when the4 division was
marking its equipment. The
cross, long used to distinguish
government property, had ter-
rifying effect on Philippine na-
tives. ' J~
Distributed by Ontml Prtu AssoelstlM
IW.a. Army $m l Corps jPboto) -
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The oil that reeled off an amazing
13,398 miles on one regular fill, in
blazing Death Valley, was proved to
be an oil of the N"> degree—an oil of
new high character... Hence its name:
CONOCO N# MOTOR OIL
This dramatiotest, supervised impar-
tially and Officially Certified, was sim-
ple, yet harsh. 6 identical new cars
wcro taken to Death Valley—where
tho heat hits record highs. 5 of theso
cars were each assigned a different
widely-known, highly advertised
motor oil. Tho sixth car usegj^new
Conoco N'A motor oil. [
Each car was broken-in on a brand
assigned by lot. Then, one 6-quart fill
of this same oil went into the crank-
case—kept under lock. The cars were
driven fi7 miles an hour until oil fail-
ure cracked up each engine—utterly
Wfecked it! AU of this under impartial
official scrutiny, as was every step in the
tut, right on through the dramatic finish.
Hera is what happened
New Conoco N 'A oil went 13,398.8
miles. Not another oil came within
5,683 miles of this. One outstanding
oil failed 8,268.6 miles sooner than
new ConoooN'A motor oil. So it out-
distanced the five competing oils by
74% to 161%. - ■« ,
Why this Astounding result
was possible
New Conoco N'A motor oil contains
a Conoco originated synthetic (U. S.
Patent 2,216,132) called Thialkene in-
hibitor. An inhibitor in motor oil acta
*^ ' ' 1'' ' ' f'' ' ' j^ /1 y'.'*'
pretty much na an inhibition acta on
you. Inhibitions hold you back; police
many actions. And so Conoco's Thial-
kene inhibitor policcs Conoco N'A oil
... arrests pollution that otherwise
comes from normal operation. And
that's your aid against a dirty engine
with inferior lubrication.
Are you an 0IL-PLATIN0 "fan"?
If you are, more power to you! Don't
for a minute feel let down, for Conoco
N'/i also contains tho famous synthetic
that oil-plates engines. Oil-plating
comes from tho magnet-like attraction
that keeps it bonded to inner engine
parts, so that it can't all quickly drain
down to the crankcase—not whila
you're using Conoco oil., TOIf.;
same famed oil-plating is still yours
. to guard against wear.
Because of oil-plating and Thial-
kene inhibitor, one 6-quart fill of new
Conoco N"i oil went an astounding
13,398.8 miles. Of course, you'll never.
Death-Test your Conoco N'A oil in
sinister Death Valley, nor repeat any
other proving-ground tortures. You'll
still drain and refill at the intervals
recommended by qualified authorities.
But bow you'll expect to stretch the
distance before you ever add„a qwift f
judging by this big fact:
6 heavily advertised oils in the Cer-
tified Death Valley Test were out-
milcaged 74% to 161% by ConoooN'A
oil. Economy Like that counts up into
&•
dollars! Change to N*A oil today at
"Your Mileage Merchant's Conoco sta-
tion. Continental Oil Co.—Pioneer*, in
Bettering America's oil with Synthetic*
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 27, 1941, newspaper, August 27, 1941; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth308194/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.