The Orange Daily Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 133, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 5, 1923 Page: 1 of 6
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' Mil V SZl■'■'?..: 0«ANGE' TBXAS, TUESDAY, JUN
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An Innocent Sufferer
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or Tell. Official.
Tracks
Safe For
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Traffic
s$R '■■■sm w^ytwMffl ijg^iSii
Officials of Jth« Golf CoAkt Lines,
owners and operators of the Orange
A-l(or I h western** Railroad company
must get busy and repair «|e trestle
A their paae«ger and fright atn-
tlea on Water street, and W several
other weys 1 improve Hiat portion of
$\t street upon wbicb their rlght-
wuy touches or move off.
T ta was tl e ultimatum handed
officials of that Une Monday afier-
noon V Mayor W- B. Lea at a con-
lei once held I* hts offlcfc in Which
officials of the Gull Coast
Participated. Tht conference
*aS the outgrowth of diacuaaion by
the cHjr commission during the past
mfii noalhi over the condition of
the Orange ft Northwestern (tail
road company's trackage and Water-
£rqm. Improvements, resulting in au
^investigation Into whether or, hot
that road held a franchise granted
by the city to geenpy nay portion at
the eity's property along the Sabine
tfm ehannsl.
'"F^tty Arbuckle
Stages Come Bade
As Cabaret Star
CHICAGO, 111., June 5.—-Roaeoe
'♦Fatty'* ArUtfcklej "enmo back " to-
day.
j A crowd, of 2000 from Chicago's
c . - • - • r ^ | 'fashionable gold coast crowed the
Secretary or i reattttry In Marigold Gardens, a nortb shore
Sympathy of Repeal of and che*nd •
Declares.
The elty commission at a recent
meeting, by the passage of a' resolu-
tion introduced by City Comuiiasion-
er K, V. Folsom and seconoed by
Commiaaloner P. J. Dearborn em-
powered Mayor Lea to deal with of-
ficials of the Hue in regard to the
franchise and uecessary improve1
meats, which were aet forth as Im-
perative to the continued operatiou
of (be Orange & Northwestern roll-
road over . Its, .preaent propertels.
Solution follows: '
t the Orange and Northwest-
llroack in return for any fl$u-
may be hereafter evented
be- **« e#f the VtS*S*r la#
I I
\
f
4.
n
.ffijMlfltoMI wit* n per-
manent structure .that .portion of
street extending from the
HIM Of ENyialon street to ber
the south line of Polk street,
the *'present Orange and
NiHthyreatern Katlroad trestle leaves
tha rhrer to- All to - street levei with
rfnkebl material from top of rctuin-
';IjMtMfll- «t hnttihaad, to • repair or
rahpild the praeeat trestle, to Hush
alt' rails on aaid trestle with Water
.^IrOet; level, to cover said trestle to
Walter's ' edge with cfeoaote planks,
to drive adequate fender nnd tie
plHng on the outside of present tres-
tle/and to pave or pay ope-half the
expense,of paving Water street from
t&r uorth line of Division street to
the south line of Polk atreot, all
tie foregoing work to be doae un-
der the approval ahd direction or
the City Engineer of Orange, Texas. "
The conference Monday was held
between Mayor Lea, acting for the
board of commissioners. W. <3.
Cboate, vlce-prealdeut and general
manager, A. i. Kennedy, attperlp-
tendent and J. D. Yates, construc-
tion engineer of the Oulf £oast
Lines with headquarters in Hous-
ton. At the conference Mayor Lea
ckl'lnd attention to the present con-
dition of the right-of-way nnd trea-
(Continued on Page Five) 4
n' r.i... " A \v/ . he dldt hla old time utuff.- ;
rronibiuon Act, Writer; "Fatty" appeared 111 it lb llrst
real "teaf for a' return to pulillc
| favor f since the 1S21 l.ult«r ila.v
^ My LAWKRTVOK MAltTfN' 'tragedy In . Sap FranCfstu. Tl„
United Piosa Staff tv m-«pomlent amUHPrnont rew,,t KnhHptes of Vti
ttopyrlght J933 by t'nMed p,eHa «l,ia home loW11 dfefared
WASHINOTO^, June 0. S.«cW-v ln twelve-minute ovation of e*ee*
tary Melton's rum regulntioiu were applnusc that -they were rea '.y
purposely made & .drnylie ns yos-,t0 for^et l',e a^airv
sible, t force a showdown wlih •Soopr8 ot ('on'{r1lti,l*lorv te,p'
greas on the whole question of pro «ran.18 w*rei rP<0,v<,d b>' ArbucttH
today. They canie mostly Jrom the
movie .colony In New York and Hol-
lywood. ''
hlbltlon enforcement, on land and
wttar.
Motion's regulations forip the cli-
max of a series of events that go to
make rum the biggest douieatie'«nd
International Issue before the Amer-
ican government and people.
Paramount Question
Domestic politics, foreign trade. the brldgB* juBt north of Quthrie
International relations all revolve thlfl mornl„K nnd ,nto thp cimmaron
TRAIN WItBOKS
ARKANSAS CITY. Kan., June 0.
—A Santa Fe freight train carrying
No. 426 regular train went througn
now around the queatiop of prohibi-
tion gad Its enforcement. Not sine*'
slavery has any Issue so dor^livilcd.
Politicians of both parties have
abandoned all hope that vth<> Issue
can be avoided In 1924.
New York' repeal of the stiite en-
forcement law emphasises the split
In the democratic party over prohi-
bition. Mellon's regulations reveal
a division in the republican party.
Mellon Is a wet In hie sympathies.
He feels that congress wfent beyond
the 11 tli amendment when it passed
■^PWrWr.'He favors Ilber-
alisatlon of the enforcement ft. Hy
mating his regutpflons on the su-
preme court's interpretation of that
aet ao dniatlc and rigid as to IhretiU
en serious international complica-
tions he haa forr.ed congress to con-
aider whether to stand on existing
stringent provisions or to modify
those affecting foreign ships.
laane Stronger
river. No fatalities or
curred It is reported.
injuries oc-
ROYALIST TALK
TO BE PROBED
French Cabinet Takes
:vw ^ Qblriwtl ■ -fp
CONDEMNED
j>erson3 were killed when u special
train carrying Masonic Knights Tem-
plar to a state convention at Klinl
' was wrecked «U.ju11£ north ot here | ^
PARIS, June 5.—-The French cab*
inet met today to discuss the ttiil-
tude of the deputies of I lie lc.
who determined to force ptthllc dis-
cussion of the alleged royalist plot
against the republic.
These infembers of the left have
resolved to briug up the subject at
tho flrst opportunity in the chamber
Governor Al Smith of itaw York of deputies und demand, to know
intensified a domeatlc isatte by sign- what the government Is doing to
lag the repedl of tho atate enforce- break «P the monarchist organixa-
ment law. He put up to tlhe federal , t'on•
government'—which will bate to put1 Deputy Daudet, royalist leader, in
up to congress—the question of an interview published ln L-Action
making prohibition effective through 'Francaise declared that Premier
the federal courts. He tore the lid Poincare'B opponents were taking ad-
off the question In domeatlc poll- vantage of this opportunity to over
tics. v,• v ■
But Mellon wont much further.
His regulations flew in the fnce of
eeyen of the lending maritime nn-
tloaa whose laws require their ahtps
to carry liquor, some of them In ra-
tions for the crew*. At the very J
time when another branch of tfio i
government is launching m plan to
ltd
throw the government.
t
extend foreign trade and capture
new foreign markets, Mellon strikes
a blow at American commerce and
raises a new international issue,
Mellon and Smith sro equally the
mouthpieces of those forces In the
nation that demand.
^ i ■ '
'm
iW-to'i
M - ■
I ' f , .
■I . i ...H
f-M
BORDER TO BE
MADE FRONTBY
FEDERAL FORCE
'Almost Mile of W
Front Drive Wou!
Opened if P r e«4
Plans Are Realized.
A plan for a rivet-side dr v.-< wi
' has for several months on
course of preparation will rroba
he realized within a short time,
r* 1 .i . . cording to information obtain*#
Government Prohibition <Ja> i„ the office ot Mayor w.
J ust how far along the a
The baby knows nothing of crime. It knows only that there is
nl£!it and day and that the world beyond ita mother's arms matters
little. The mother, Mrs. Mary Creighton, 24, is held in the House
of Detention at Newark, N. J., awaiting trial June 18 on charges
growing out of the death of hor brother, Charles Raymond Avery,
who, police allege, was poisoned. The baby was born two weeks
ago. after the mother's arrest. She says she will name him after
his father, John Creighton. ,
Five Killed As
Masonic Special
SECRET ORDERS
Agent Will Be Sent To ^ - ™ w
r*Z J- D J • !has Progressed, or the exact date un
Canadian DOUndary in .Which It is expected to.be completed,
New York State. was not made known.
■ . ' ■ ■■ ■" j I'lan for the propttscd river-
WASHINOTON. June 5. — The ",de dr,ve was originated by Mayor
tlrst step of the federal government L*a "ev,'ral months ago when it be-
toward nssuniing full respond.1"!??!cttme apparent that the city wee
for prohibition enforcement in New ,a<k,ng ln sufficient driveways par-
York state will shortly be taken al,eUnK th* Sabine river. It M
when a large force of general pro-* !l street through the old Mtller-
hibitlon agents of . the mobile force Wnk ^nmber ^ompanr s property.
will be concentrated on the Cana- ,akt,n ov,'r Bevera! n onth« ago hy
dlan border of the state. th* P« w-Moore Lumber oompany,
Alarmed by the rapid revival of ostt*ndlnn a driveway from the bus-
runt running; over the border since ,nw,B 8ec,,on the city to the Lnt-
tho withdrawal of state support fed- chvr home> a distance of apnrorl^ Qll
eral prohibition oiricials are prepar- !®a'e'y °ne mile.
ing to act speedily before the l>or-i The Pr°PO««d «iPire ^rill cat .
der situation gets out of hand. Sec-!through !^e Miller-Link property la
rotary of the Treasury Mellon who,such manner to not Interfere with
considers the border problem the!,nduBtrU1 development of that sec-
most serious of all raised by the re-|t,on of ^ c,ty Mayor Lea doelStP-
peal of the state dry law will con- od" ^ would, when completed||be
fer today wltb Commissioner of In-,0"6 of thp mo8t beautiful drives to
tcrnal Revenue Blatr and l'rohlbl-.<he aUt®- overlooking one of the
Hon Commissioner Haynea, on aim0Bt b,a"tlfnl sections of the Sa-
plan of action. {bine river channel; 't^t?''
jslders and those at home Iffi 1
Hl'SIt NlflPMKXTS jtunity to better visualise the im-
MONTRKAL. jCan., June 5._' 1'O'tance of that waterway to the
development of the c.ity.
It In understood from reliable
sources that the Pea vv-Moo re Lnm-
*i noon today. u •
The dead Include two members O* i Harding Upholds Jr ra-
<h.!«., «ich.. Ot i ho j terna, Organizations in
Knights Templar, the engineer aih' .... -
iircmnn of the tr«in, and a news! Address Before Shrine
boy, according to
brought here.
report. ; Meeting
—— : • i ' ' I
" • *
KANSAS CITIAN
THOUGHT SLAIN1
Prominent Business Man
Murder Victim
WASHINGTON, JOne G.-Pratt i-
j nl'ty among nations based on "1&-
stantant" demands for Just dealing,
respect for the rights of others,
and the ideals of ' brotherhood, re-
cited in the golden rule Is President
Harding's aim, he told the imperlaV
council of the mistlc shrine "ere to.
day in a speech at the opening see
slon.
Lauding the purposes and acaieve.
KANSAS CITY, Mo., June . G.-
T. Chancellor, oil promoter.!, con-'
vlcted here lato yesterday on mail
fraud charges will not
ed until tomorrow, United
District Judge Willlani if. Atwell
ments of the American fraternal «announ,,ed ,odav-
movement in general and ln Masonry! " *>e,,er an<1 Chancellor, promoters
American boot|<|ggerN from New
York state are fuelling their ship-
ments of CanadBu liquor southward
hoping to smtTwle heavy cargoesli"* ''OMiPony is receptive td a
ovcf the lino'before federal officials <M,,tion 10 seU a Portion of the
establish a "front" along the Inter-!?n'"l,l,k pr°perty. mid
national boundary. [appears to he no objection to
These bdotfegRcrs are seizing th«S \
opportunltv ofTe^d by th^ roponl of I ^tion of the rtt v.
New York state', dry taw~ nod con-j*°'d,n* ,0 M"Jror Loa"
sequent slackening ot; prohibition j veway .would be go irtfpr
enforcement by state officials. 'J° ma'te oua,. of the. mq^t 1).
tul In this section of the stato.
Street Is Narrow;
Another idea in opening a striset
thro'ngh the Mlllcr-Llnk property, it
whs pointed out. would bj the? uddl-
l tion of a ■ thoroughfare tb tlie city ,
wharves, not only shortening the
j distance, but at the same time m.awMI
^ A|'ng it a street free of obatrttettmr^
DALLAS Tex. June 6,- sentence jwhh.h (loeK Qot a, th<i f
in the case of B. H. Peeler and Wade,^; M.fkk 8tre,lt ,t wu„ sa|d
m
Sentences Will
Be Imposed On
Oil Men Soon
has the T. & N. O. tracks and the
.Orange'& Northwestern rlght-of wajf, ,
|'ro"""n< which makes that thoroughfare «$«-
alted ^atos lge8tpd at Umej(- 1.1
It is understood that tho Peavy-
Moore Lumber company inuy l c np-
the Kansas City Board of Tradejjy abated aeerot organisations l^sed ,he Wr8t oM m*n to be convicted n '
Love For Sweetheart Of
Slaying of Cardinal May
Bring Trouble
l MADRID, Spain, June 5.—A re-
ligious wnr is Ikreatenpd as the re-
sult of the asnassination of Cardi-
nal Soldevila. arch bishop.of Zarn-
gossa.
j Authorities are taking extreme
j precaution to prevent street out-
' breaks In the major towns nnd c.lt-
!les throughout Sixain while search is
On bigotry and malice.
Such secret organizations, be said,
arc not fraternities, but conspira-
cies. \ : V.-'V' - '■
Forty liVat prostrations ninou^
Shriner marchers oi'currcd here to-
day before half the parade had pass-
reviewing
was robbed and murdered by
tramp and his body thrown in the
jpath of an oncoming train .accord-
ing to the theory of police"^hveritl-
gating the mysterious death of the
Wealthy grain dealer today.
Moore's mangled body was found
hy trainmen Sunday on the Mitwau-j^'
kee railroad tracks just outside the j8tan(j
eity. According to police there wbs
every indication that he had been
robbed and killed und his body
placed on the tracks.
Several residents in the vicinity
aaid they hnd seen a man anawer-
ing Moore's description walking
along the tracks. Shortly before,
they said, a roughly dressed hobo
was wandering near1 the bridge.
Escaped Prisoner Traced
To fieaiimont Where
His Arrest is Effected
By City Detectives.
——
dlctmeniNfor car theft, la once morejh,,u BO niaterlally In making the
v of tho iftw. -r-: (enptnre of the men who had ehown
la n«r languishing, be- uob cunn,«K"0M
. .DHL. ,
Hickman, 11, who was held
m
afternoon with the prisoner, who Is
lamenting the raet that he haa again
been deprived of hla liberties and
I being pressed for the assassins.
Some minor rioting already Tj
Bald to hnVe occurred in Barcelona
I where the cnrdinuly was greatly
revered.
The premier Catholic churchmen
of Spain was slain when assassins
ambushed his automobile outside
Foreign Ships
Must Comply In
Booze Statute
WASHINGTON, June 6.—Noble
Warren G. Harding dropped his of-
ficial role as president of the Unit-
ed States, welcomed his brother
Shriners today as they passed him
In the greatest civilian paVode the
capital 1tas ever witnessed, officially
opening the Shrine conclave.
A little later the president made
bis welcome still more personal by
sitting the flrst meeting of the Im-
perial Council.' ^ '
Representatives from nearly ev-
ery temple in' the country garbed in
their gay flashing costume? return^
WASHINGTON, June 5.—Vessels jed tlie welcome of the president as
oeoa aeprivoo or nis unertieB ana .. , . _ . vineetit De! °' 'ore'Kn countries whose laws" ro-ithey marched past the white house
the association of. his 'youthfulI„ mo',a8tary quire the Issuance of a liquor ra-'where President and Mrs. Hardlag
places -behind trees.
M«weetie.*'
Deputy Sheriff Stakes had noth-
Ing bdt praise to offrr In hel^jjUi' Of
cTdTtVTill"following hla in-B?!,,~?:,t^df1t°ctlt:efl_ Z*° .collapsed dead. Hl„ chauffeur and
Nrlllet were -wounded
■■ ..Jit:
breaking Jail.
It wee said that Hlckmnn and
Johnnie went atralght to Beaumont
on a freight train soon after their
As. he alighted from lll(' far t|on to ships creWB may obtain per-'sat overlooking the garden of Allah
-vomica- mrmsw.fww.rn ... tta to^to* Egyptian columns.
Freqnenf" stunts qf comical nature
thV three or four supposed to brlnK the necessary liquor
lists opened flte at hint from their i
' ^_.. . i Into American waters If tttey- can
The cardinal
Orange county prison Burs
Mid Vernon Johnnie had
tkemMlvee on Siiturdsy
in hla Work
■ Min
WOIIK DKLAVKW
The Prank P, McBlwrath com
pany 's forces engaged In paving on
e contributed to his capture er prisoners regarding the time of gotith College atreet, was forceu to
hment to his tfi- ««cape from the county Jail Satur-
and her mil her day night. Storied told by the olh
found wlth them « tteir wcape are Conflicting.
• in Befcumont oil Mon-j 1
mix\-*M& 'WiKileMM'at
Sheriff Baail Stakes, who night Saturday
with xs. % * W
Itlock, parfecUd th« been
to
The cardinal was the chief repre-
sentative of the pope in Spaitt and
hftj official spokesman before the
Spanish court.
.. — 1 \
stand !<*1« through Tuesday on <"•*
count of being out of sand. A gpe-
nitt- rlhl effort Is heldg msde to complete
the paving to Jnckson street 09 Bor-
der atreet by the latter part of the
>Tl!'"s whon the work will be trana-
,to Grewt avenue,
mM
convince, public health service offl-
eiala in charge of issuing permits
that the Uqu6r la necessary to the
crew's health.' yv' : -./x' • j
' The gapping Mop hole was fi
covered by government offleiala to-
day In the regulations Issued by the
mail fraud since a government lur
vestigatlon w«a sorted wore to have
been sentenced today.
erty at an early date;
1
ItLl'K SO\ WIN
SHIP MKI.OXS BOON.
According to reports from J0U0-
I«OK'
1 will
Dlue Sox won | port of Orange by the boat IO«d by
victory -fromjtbe middle to latter pqrt of (he
The melon crop wee
I's Bayou tbls^ week, that section
I be shipping melons into the
The Presbyterian
another consecutive
the Wllford Wild Cats this morning: month of June
at West Had park by the score of 20 somewhat delayed In the season on
to 10. Batteries for the Sox were!account of high water that prevall-
Younx and Cllver; for the Wild Cats led in that section all through tha
Wolford and Hllliard, 'spring nioutha.
— ) — tt.—
Newly Elected
Of Oklahoma College Is
Target Of Graft Charges
Wilson Still Firm In Re-I*"«* h0*s and T10 cot~
f . \ it /-.i . 1 ton per acre. That is the reason
fusing to Allow L>lassi- ,1U.V are bore. The clnssicaf latig-. .
be uages are dead issues and there la
no necessity for their ihcluslou In
enlivened the march.
;Philadelphia's «00 NoWCT attract-
ed attention with their anappy nnl-
forma. Syria Temple of Pittsburgh
also filled the Ivjm with Ita- natty
Languages to
Taughtt.in^\. &
School.
M.
STILLWATSnt, Okla., June
George
Whnr, anmmcr aults. ©Mn Bekf of,,et,.w,.
Slotfx City, la., htm a mounted Pa-jupon aaabmptlon of lo^derahip jglon and other organisations.
pres
5.—
C. ' Wilson, newly elected
, th tjw down the gaunt-
Caesar and Aristotle
treasury department for enforcement trol of pure blooded Arabian horsaa.
of the supreme court's deofslon ban-1 Variouf cities today begTn to put
ning liquor from ahlpa within the forth their claims for the 1034 con-
thc c.ollegd curriculum he ^." Wil-
son declared. 4 Ksv' y$Wk
Wlleon, a non-college t man, en
prominent In state politics, wea
elected head of the state follegs sev-
eral daye ago In the tece of atate-
wldc protests of the Americah Le-
^ n
three mile limit.
-i'
MAIHUAOK LITKNHK
J. D. LeWte and Alice Ruby Mc-
Lendon. * '^V ' * " r'i'; ■ %
Charlie Red nnd Mm. Addle Lem-
vention. Kansas City, Philsdeipbla
und Denver were the strongest con-
tenders fpr the honor. Boston,,
campaigning for the ll>f4-"<Wnc:
mMSm
H, Jlfekeoh.,;:|||0lWtehd«ni ts
the Southern Pacific Lines, Ip here
Joe Weidel end '<Nlp^ looking hft# buslneaa.
• ' ■ • -i- . ^v;;.
of the afate agricultural t«nd mc-i Wilson took charge of the colk
bnnical college here. 1 ? (Monday, accompanied;; h>
That the college would wlthdrawltionalguard officers
from tiRe Stield of classical langttages ,a red flag from the col
on ifhlch tee coll
and devote its major attention to
t|ie studies of agrlctflture and *lrt-
<lred professions was Indicated by
wiiHou today. x.cw?" ■■■■:/ v
ri r>" |t i« B T Intention to taheh the
students of the farm h w to ralae
m
half mast.
:W*m
■ T
of HtrUi^ti
KM Hfl '
■*iTOa-
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The Orange Daily Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 133, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 5, 1923, newspaper, June 5, 1923; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth330456/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.