The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 77, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1938 Page: 4 of 4
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r to v
part oi our
the peak of
[•pofcrnm am
cmi«lderni|<*fi
jr>c«at children
vehement
m
do concernlnn
ItttH been silli-
My, auper-
,,, M
t of human ji>Sr can
tirttnr education and
Jtrkx.
nl crafts" aitd skill*
we need more ni'J"
fellowship, mpre com-
•it. mare value }n oar so-
lTiWte recreation- and «du<
we shritM wnm see u gtmif
' ifiA flfl* ■
of tra'tie an ■ well. Kduca-
is 'lid, also creation la
incomplete. half.done
iw Whleh 1*
thru ti'o ideational vntik^
«'H> chnjientfin* statement* will
ultftfli' c.-ftdcrstood ■ if «
flic ordinary ift'or Ot think*
r.f -rfcr ntion «ntlrely as pinjln#
nlf, bridg*. tennis, imseliatl,
. - plnywl In- ehii-
and ndolltl. Tfet;r'eatlon also In-
kll**', crafts and hoWilea.
M^iem classed at "higher
nitons." ' Thintrs that ore crea*
itfrtfco deeply | m t|t# make-up
"I 'quarrel With no nwn'i
ti.HKUt Kir Walffr ifafttt, "Plent,
•* community has
tur <l -*achm-nund,
:A>'JWHWCf*I MPM
v«s." 1 lobbies runk at
i cflmmunltJF recreatIon
, '*M recelvln#' ;
.n jlpwll-:.P$
I^W#irnB(w^OWn)te ad
io Inspection
an essentially cul-
the recreation <ll
vision W seeing to, it'that ttvhns ade-v
qibute lH.tary fliltUte*. r Thcsefacil.
(ties lit* nMijeft to puftll
at' a«y (Me; Vfii-
./ loners rrimrt develop
the fOllnwihjt triUtst .'fntethful en-
thusiasm. -group marfft)jrerfiOnt skill,
aluiiuffim pner r.r and health. Heml-
ine fondness for pe<u>le, service and
moroi id en-is. n desire .. secure
knowledge, courtesy, t'flrt ttntl _ alert-
nc.*rt. P ot>!« i(rtm>t •'damped'-' on-
to a pluvground set up. They are
ch«>!fi>n. . 'Phcr# In atWay* a gotid'rea-
soft for rhO?ee. The.v have many
ihliiKH, such aii high mantis' and
rtcfi.rt , aWd \<WHes<s(i1fl living stand-
nfifs. *. JMHtoita' of such pro-
ject* carefully ■ oheck ,thJS ofi^tht-
project . iHinduct of Ms people: ihey
know their dlftifwlties and their alS_
sots, (b'nlhuiiiiion often • make* frrettt
i lmrncters: lf 'i.- they who feel; and
lnHfln>-ttvely see. It la not always
Hp m<*ft with rfitimtffotJw tfeirreew who
understands. It Is the man vfho has
at some time «utfefeil Atrtt now see*.
It is he who uhd^rsifojrtd*.
U ndoi n I a rt <!l rt)f lS hoeess/tf y Itt" t.h«
handllnjr of <:hlftlren. arid educathin
i j 'I iil—Win iiiimm"i iimi
- i, A,
by IttfMfff fttorts
Hollywood - y oun git en
who might envy Dcanna D«r-
bin ought tolcnpw about the meals
W'a'&w.
' KS bWt *ets no «- .ppe*,'
suppefless every
when she Ungt on the
rCiM6t, nearly every
lurday whefn she records for her
Hips, and on odd nights when she
l.afl IWnquetS of benefits.
msdnys she takes a gtans
ot&ngt Juice About 4:i|jnB
.m.. arte,
s ftft the
iift# at a
lurrounaf'd
eats no Ml-e until sh
air, abtoit 9. When sh^
banquet she may be su
by food-pbut can't touch H bite Un-
til she flnwtrt*lrt* oumbers. lofr|
Iter other banqueteers have
off their meal. By then it's
o Mi food, as .she mustn't
ndavy me«l before retiring.
Sh® drinks £ '6ut> tit hot chocolate-
and ^oes to bed.
Conrad Letters Lost
Ralph Bellamy, whose house
with practically everything in it
went crumbling off down the Los
Angles riv*f dui'ln/t the Hood, ca'ft
W6rk hafd and in time tiptoe
most of the valuables he Irtst. AH
he saved Wa* three Suits ofcinth^i.
and a typewriter. But h« cart't r**
place Mrs. Bellamy's ootleotlon of
'''iftJW „ i iv'%; Hi, ■ 4:
s:.
W JFffiBfflf*
rfAV*r? ti uii an* iiiainri i:
i
lOU/3
Bf tot/ra^**/*
MM fiat nth & PHtna SrttdltMt
fTlHE dance bsndman constitute j
1 clique. They «M W
casting tiarM ** * i
consld-
l&uu ft*m
AHUM «ki
more m«-
tsafto&ssrssa
andicap to the solution pi tite BW*
his next number. It Is never "Alda."
Seldom ^"^7 Anvfl them
Os'IfW&a.^
■ fc extensively in murteitt
etewns,hev#,«ll but
**• in its
-the .Anvi
MANHATTAN
..to. ..s.^..i ...I
the laws
ance rtu
\
/
' Hi whltlir
hlfnself today
tan*
A18XAMDM KOTRD/I
j mmmk
MERLE OBERON
flf
SSHRh
a eomtor in tiCHNieoto*
with lAURKNCf OtIVieit M
ninettNEt - uMMtom- mm*mrtf
Wwktf *t m MMiAft' «tMDW*t|lw«M>Mw
%i. Logan'*
MSi:
H
I Ma m
into the
man-
art'
RHMKRMr'i
htrMf "at
ra otter
iWpiete-
^FmMbord
to etiMmge a
wrt/e, vshc ttxu
rntH f* 4H/IM'*
ttie
wwgmm'mm ■<&>*,
i nam* teaman, p*f M+* d// So
j goes to court to argue one of Me
divorce cages. On the bench it,
::
iji * "
Or old? Neither —
at of one thins she
e man did not Mve
., he might have had a
small mustache!
elada rushed In from the
r&rttt to Whisper in LogAn'e Mr th
intelligence that iord Mfire's Wlf
was wilting to Me him. The young-
barrister, with panic slowly mount-
ing In his breaat, stammered his
" " S, bade them wait for &,
led out to s4e her
....— k m
ntly in a package. Burning wit£
the news he had Seen recelvirtp bf
Lady Mere's checkered romantic
caredjn.JliWM) received them With
ou " said
originat Joseph Conrad letters.
pro-
wucffr Mlvfit Olfl, . tnf^ j
pictufe that markd iames Can-
ney's return tfl the Tamer 16t. *
film got under way, immedia
after the flood, with no Special
celebration. heralding the prodi-
gal's return. Ingenious souls hatf,
three trumpets ort th6 4W6rd-«:
iog to more or less reliable report
the idea being that/three Warner
brothers should sound off a WM-,
come to Cagne# But no Wgfrter
brothers'showjra. Cagney andcrew
uti trumpeted. ,
vo Speafi*
Savo, the pantomimist,
.. an example his famnnts
-spfcialist, Chaflif Chaplin,
it watch With j«fd#est. In
kless Livirt*" JjiWrtirie is
breaking his lortg professional si-
lence for a speaking role.
The transition, hbweVet, fe not
„ 'without its difflcUHies. SfeVty has to
I talk around or fhfdu/fh <he Cigar
' which is as much his trademark as
'Chaplin's shoes a fid c Stttd, artdf—
"Juggling eight Wdhjifci wWte
walking a tight wife is easier," he
Atntains.
went to
is set
wwP;;#i..-x^ HI
is in Whrttew# (fMtlttmt at rtlythm
he old-fashfoned notions
of romance. The competition ts
severe, for the general run of ar-
jSts la standard-
fffefe'/ofe, th'4
aim ft* art
itty. aW tfte spe-
slcal ttmph and
i bandman pa*
sesswiK ,i
Not TittUi . j
iiii Pari Attzlh-
ittiftft Mw mMrt* ft alt v
wood more thart lt tloti
UroutUeny and a<i%eent
mt sfrteti, conid naf ve
the problem mere it
turn out more tunet),
lint tune* — good tunes
—aril tetO ttitd
\
The HMt of
.iMNftff ntftXl
■tetitt&A t(t jit 0 MOvtf
tt mfntbftt toddf i
v ll it of ion
Clara Cdwarda
k.ff.e.>
A,
art
or
. Ndftlrt* datfrtta the musical hi-de-
ho Dteyrf. To demonstrate their
prowess (Bey dtteh wrestfc with the
masters. We recall when Cph Callo-
way dished <wit some,Mendelsohn
on the stage of the Capitol Theatre
by way of cetcbrating.Urt.eopt-
poser's birth. Cab ahd F^lfi, f^ell*
and Cab! You could have knockAl
us over with a roll of ropslc. Callo-
way was a little stumped at flrst as. " ••
to how he should pay ftis respects.
Be consulted Sfgniund .
Spaeth, and the lat'fer
adviser hftB — Jtf«t
'enough of the "Spring
S"6ng" to get the idea
across and then a good,
snappy arrangement of
"Faded Summer Love''
by Pert* irferidslssoljn
(aftd Irving AertWr:
Old SdOtCh
lad* havt managed
until recently to escape
the teafing influence of
the forcfalngera. Alat,
iht torth-Hngirx are do-
ing weird things to
"Loch Pjomond."
tlf OEOKGE ttiCntlt
NEW YORK—If you bustle into
el Chieo about midnight you
are very likely to find yourself
gaping at a cock nght, and if you
with Benito,€<
enough to be sittir
jolfpda you afe in for
i very interesting evening.
. Collada was once a lieutenant
under Pahcho Villa and he is
arffontt oth^l" things, the owner of
el Chico. tfrhieh is i
hico. Which is most flsstrr-
grandee afWdrtg Spanish
m. _
restaurants in Manhattan.
Each year about this time he
departs on a leisurely talent hunt,
combing the concert halla of Spain
...„3._.. . . r.
KSA, ApHI 2. (At*) Vlto
' ndetennlned orlicin ilcstroywl 43Od
hales of KOvenimcnt loan cotton lastj
ulalit. In the plant of the IM'IW1
Cojunty Warehouse coinpany. , *
The (otton wii Insured. %t\> '' ' "
1 in ■Tiiiui I r it j *
f.A.P.
Perhaps, the m
the key to the problem. They Could
go itr for mof* frtOnefrtof. They
Could Mtt out special MMMs for
the c/Mtprt af nfw ttMce music as
they Kttot Aftd Oitt atftMy regards
to the cOmpostrt of classUM viutic.
They Kilt 6# <M1W« music . frllckly
tftraum fitter repetition. They
shoaftt be Mtitkt to replace—if they
(an—tfio cdituatttts.
f.ity fioAH' vdtce, as well Os her;
na.ite. always nuggests the ripple of
htoOks.
a curt "Thank you."
"What's happened to
Leslie. "You're not
Chapter fofr
l to yov
nearly bo sweet
ikfast."
ur husband
sardonioal-
ller, ot tM
latest, Lord
m
Logan, after pausing to make
tats thrusts bad found
k, resumed' his excorla-
least favorite s«x
. . AW.TISaAff
and . granting tier emancipation
that modern woman
Womanhood, but re-
obllgattons. By lnde-
t means idleness; by
she should carry on
—- Catherine the Great; by com-
*nd,jroot. "
"What
wrestler. It's your
Mere." BsPPfflP
"How do you know he's my hus-
band?"
"He told me so. He's told me
-erything! You'll be surprised to
And out how much he knows about
what west OA at the Bdyal Parks
Hotel. And now he wants a
divorce!"
Astonishment, understanding, and
augment flashed in rapid Juo-
issiefi through Leslie's mind.
"He wants a divorce?" she laid
calmly. "Well, youll help him get
It, Won't you?"
"Help him to divorce you," shout-
ed Logan, "when / am the eo-fe-
Wlthout it cannot draw out the
th« 'ughta and actlnns of a child, it
Ik here that Oriirtge'ij leaders e*<;el;
some parts of sohie Itvert have been
hurdensoiwc. but ^the siririt remWns.
Thpro is no substitute for spirit It
defeats its adversaries. It caft
stand alone. Oran«e has ft. Taken
Out of Oraqge are its playground peo-
ple, and In their years of habitat In
UrariBo. they have absorbed a firm
Sljlrit. a dctcrnilnatloiV not to he
"whipped."
.
In his stride, he apondent?" But Leslie, callous at
"Jtve* though I Know the horHbto truth, I'm trflrf about youf
V Without.
MM.ced up
P|PHV iP
I mslevolonco of his at-
HHRL. _ ^Mission gradually dar-
ksalng with resentment and. # de-
Ctfetlfiatli
in* it
bound
There
■■ spectators'
I Leslie Steele, di
in, sitting as it spel
le, he spoL...v..>, ...
ri5t^ th" ®°n51n?eU P'ay ,*t
spell- slon
■■ Ion to avenge
tor maligned Raters
fVWhlpersnapper or * WOmsM-hSter
a,.""""" *" P
iJTS,HSt,S! -VJZZ'Ztt!?,:
WOT nts oration. Modern woman
has no loyalty, decency or justice;
mo Mduranee, reticence or ~ —
>v
J no affection, fine
raunfrtn *** U
tiess and
ins11
self-con-
itnga or
X
m
wm
productive, and tedious; unimagin-
ative, humourless and vain. And the
r man takes down Ida Whip
, the better for sanity and pro-
~ " lh# tha^U^tL? °
attW
-M '"g "P
face elo~
Of a *o-
M hkl office,
that
onthat fa
y Mere's maid. !
"Ihell Hmmfil'
•nvii-runmru
fjamo
•ion in the pool1 yo
«W«,'U Lord Mc
voroe," She pointed
free, and then you an
•**?*
to foster the confu-
suth's mind,
ere gets his dl-
out. "I shall be
id I
so to
icak -- could get together."
"1 ean certainly understand how
>u trapped all those men," he re-
i Brii
ah«
you trapped
torted. "Ijiuderdalc—an<
do Brissao — and wild
mi I
_Aa the Baton
nnd wild man some-
. X
stle i
tt ttUfiL ,
— those," sMe murmured,
gradually getting it
"And now — me!" \
"You?"
"Yes. Why shouldn't I admit lit
I love you! Even now, this mlnv
when I know all the horrible tr«
I'm absolutely wild about you.
want to takn you in my arrah-f
"Then why don't you?"
He did — suddenly, fiercely,
holding her close to him and kiss-
ing her. Then, as if awakening from
a trance, he suddenly let her go
and backed away. , t
!R*Wth your hu*baikd In there —
and Saundera who saw us botlf...
WaH! I've gut to go back Ijt thaw!"
He rushed hack to
resumed his q
pSSE^iPEDF*?
aMeneo, as if
new hurt he received
out further dstailji of
|>Mt adventure*, i
Mae West Comes
To Strand In Every
Day's A Holiday
Mae West reti)fna to a rOlp similar
to the one In which she Won Inter-
nfttio.nsl fame in "Every Day's a Hol_
Iday,'' Hie new Coimedy, which opeiis
today- at the Strand- j theater. I^i
West-.is the buxotft Iwlle of the nine-
ties with an accent on the, wlse-
cinxcks — the same dartie she Iwas in
"She Done Him WrOng."
In "K'vei-y D-.iy's a Holiday^" TtftW
West is a hard boiled lass who is
torn between a desire on the part of
Walter Cutlett to star her in it new
revue and the Insistence of Kdmund
Lowe, a captain of detectives, that
she get out of New York because ,of
an alleged deal In which she sold the
Wi-ooklyn bridge to a would-be-mll-
Ib.'ialre. • , ' '
The story Is laid In Little Old New
York at the b:rn of the century atid
Tllken in its stride a New Year's cd_
ebration at Hector's famous restaur-
ant, a mayoralty campaign, Into
which Iji West injects some show-
manshlp, the New York theatrical
scene in the days of "IMnmfMrtd Jim"
Brady, awl the Introduction of the
automobile to the big cty. The
story |s an original by Miss West.
The big cast of supporting players
includes Charles Hutterworth as a
butter who is not averse to using his
master's home and nutiVmobUe to far-
ther his own social ambitions; Char,
les Wlhtnger, the master, who Is hot
averse to tempering a cwisade for
social reform with a little love mak-
ing;' IJoyd Nolan,, ft had politician
hut a good judge of women; iWman
Iling, Chester Conklln and many oth-
ers. The film was directed by A. E.
Sutherland. It was produced
Kmanuel Cohen.
— IVest Of alt the gigolo's theme
son#*, to iluf ihttttf, ti fteVinaht
Patsy!he's ' Serenade for q. Wealthy
WHtote:*
0 0
Mivtfo Toscanini rtf*de his debut
(It: u coftdflctof just M years ago. It
Was lrt lS8fl at the age of 1# that
tftc maestro stepped from the cello
section of the Rio de Janeiro Opera
orchestra to conduct, in an emer-
gency, fl performance of "Alga."
The World today is so rail of
maestri. Tnerc is Beniamtno Ser-
We, Who calls MmSelf "the oM
maestro." ft# steps tegtMrM from
t«e Vloll* section Of his orchestra
to cipftMi a hope that yo# will like
iii-.itMH mi.e nil I mil migisi
Reeordi of Adrian Rolfihi ar# Mid
to outsell lW6se of Andre KOste-
lanetz by far in Loridon add Paris.
PfODdbly,
5
it u beam*
i is easier (or the feet.
KOllifil's
he pfe-
e« band are more <
the ear than the tee.
# * 0
tot rn jUM time i* m history
fdlls, t*e Other
g#*f* . .. n "
id fttmt&L on the stage. .The
if The pHtfoflS were com-
mainiy of a^Wdg atfdiefs itsfen-
fd the speciafxwft&ofreroo of
idol, ttetmy (tootfmti. a keen
Ooodmmi Krid the fore-
engage a irtemwr of NeW
musie ttritie Wftthe>>hood to
Ifir notes of w* con
mmSMwM
priee. \
\ . \
At * ftttther indication oi (food- A
««ji'^ cufrent popularity mth the
ievoteee of st. fttwt, a pott of fm-
oriie OtchcHtras by patrons Of New
York's paramount Theatre revealed
Spanish entertainment w6fld. But
though they frequently are undbte
to speak one word of English, they1
are top-flight artists and irtvari-,
ably graduate to the Met ballet
or the conservatories.
JMgSFi, ■ • ' * ■ •
BEING an impulsive fellow .with
A lively Imagination Senor
Collada made a hasty pilgrimage
to Cuba and returned with a dou-
ble brace of fighting cocks. These
were the champions of the Ha-
varta pits and their spurs were
like surgeon's scalpels.
Mindful that
legdi,
fve Behi
into
A cbuple itt clowns on the
floor with a rooster in their arms.
When they see each other (the
roosters, that is) their desire for
mayhem knows no limitations.
After their rage reaches the satu-
ration point a third clown arrives
with an artificial game cock that
is wound up like a toy artd per-
mitted to hopf about tlfs flo6r. One
of thd cocks, usually the1 ofte that
^ iting is fc,
country, the Tmagi- •
drew his colleagues
hto a. huddle ana emerged with „
i crdckef-jack floor show riumbef.
seefns the an'grlest. is tossed free
jd he promptly overwheltris his
phoney antagonist, spurring him
unmercifully and winding S spWh-
did vietoryi After this mechanical
rival is vahquished the victor is
66 pleased with himself he struts
about like an European dictator
who has mtccesstuiiy engineered
a pufge.
OCCASIONALLY the mechanics
" of the show are varied and a
^Sraj
pen the
f mi
an
*4 .
the 1
tions were
(fray and
<Hlet t# first p
nd Bhep field
'fred faring.
ilace. Ouy
'ds finished
spectivety. In
ijt the three top posi-
rhbardo, (lien
MONffcSQt/IEU SAID: "Mosfc is only one oMf
(6e a#N that do«s not corrupt the mfndf."
MM
■ K
fflcc. and
-h2L*s:
nipot p9t>
ln« In every
aa he found
jacks. . For t he Week spent in shoot-
ing thin st*f|iicftce, a tank of real T*Xtrav«cancP(
pancukc batter Was mixed, cooked
ttrtd eaten ever^ 'day. i^he dally'cost
of the food used In this restattrunt.
bread, Initter, tea, coffee, doitigftnats,
cake and pie was amanlng. A re-
plica of Atlantic City hoafdWrtlll wus
built estending - over ' 350' feet1 and
furnished, with shops and booths.
An apartment furnished In mod-,
emistlc style Wait built for Wan-en
William's hontc and the New York
foWn house wSlifh w'as Miss Col*
Itert's home, wjla furnished In every
room in Adam Style, from ffrc< lacerf
to picture motfIdln|H« ^
All in all, "fmttntion (if Life"
ranks among the most wiptuous pro-
*
by
Imitation of Life
Conies to Gem With
Claudette Colbert
-^♦•Mhgnlflceivt" may
nmised word, *ren ill
ho
iim*
be a much a-
I Hollywood, hut
nothing «lne wlH. ndequfilely describe
"Imltnilon of l.lW* the .•. Pannle
Hurst novel which John H. rtnlhl
imd« Into a picture \fi* Universal,
Rtai ring t'landette < 'olheh| and W«r-
r n William coming today to the Oem
■ healer. . V
It la a magnificent production
Home notion of the scale on Wtoieh
thl* film Mi l>een produced can he
gained from the feet thai one wlngl#
setting coat *l#,tllnn. Nothing i
this set mt axtntordlHarf. The
perfect nnd
In all. 4*
tallon of Ufe."
<ooipl«He town
City, containing
♦ #♦# 4o****44**00 *
Today A Monday
e 4 *' ******* *****
40 make the
The thi Who M d« Tb«
HiMtOMtfay
Mae Witt
HoUda^
—With-
Edmund tow#
Oharlos Cfcarl«t
Butterworth
Lloyd ITolaJi
Silly Symphony
"'TfitE OLD MtLL"
Cterl Uttfi
fit jl . ■> J«
JWewS
4
Coming Tuesday
For
,
1
ductibna ever
ma<|e. This Was not,
bat ei'Onomy. F.-tnnie
Wurati in ".limitation of Life/: wrote
n magnificent story, rnlvcraal hha
Strained every nerve to make It it
magnificent picture in a rna n!fl'-ent.
setting.
The term jingoism, denoting ag-
gressive miiltar.v policy, was origin-
ally applied to a ftrohp of flritish
politicians who In lUff 7X uai-.u-l
the government to take sides "in the
Wiiatto-ffirRfSh war. The chorus of
a popular so tig of thrtt time included
the words, "We don't itnni, to fight,
l.i :t. by jingo, if wo do, we've got. the
shlpa, etc.'1
.. Japanese plan to harness Xorth
t!hina> rivers fftr eieetrtcal power.
rimWro1! !■■■■■■
h« is coping With thin air, attacks
the newcomer and smothers him
tut tri existence. Suddenly there
is a loud exploslibn, leaving a
fttighty puzr.ted rooster gaping
and wondering if he hasn't made
a mistake in leaving the barn yard.
Note: Senor Collada's fighters
6fk only everv other week,
lere are four of them and they
end the off week on a farm in
lonnecticut.
Ska
Today & Monday
her pin has dippid
deeper than IV6R tnto
thi tiars and laughflft
op life \
> upon the fieort of if sty
human iting! '
FANNIF HURSTS
with
WARREN WILLIAM
ftdeftolle Hudion
Ned Sparks, H«inry Armeilo.jUfy
Jdn , Alan Hoi*. '
I'lils Oilr Added mite
"NO SAf/K*
A Timet 41 and Amusing Musical!
•SKI FLfftifT"
This Interesting. Variety Will itold
Vou Spellbound:
rnUm
ALL THIS
■s\
''WEEK^i
WHh Each Suit Cleaned and ftrested
V At Regular Price.
-WE WILL.-'".'"'
1 i rsf' #1
CLEAN
Free
0
1
(2) NECKTIES
JviSt sefld them with,
tifully lr.nnd«f6d
f \
mr cleanir
■In
„and they will be beatt-
?ou.
returned
ever
\iilUW
:■
s\if* mxw At pontiic *nil sway
V/'.to alt eM idea* nboilt low-
sirtNW e#r —swept
the roiifWe's hr
the map by
esiity, rettl«f1eiw
I ft a s ilt^T a BjUu ,
pTWfff MinOlll Inlrfiwi0« . ItllRi4
Action rWe. IVit|"re tafrfi
in n I'nntimc. fWl
iik ndvanceittcrtt*.
JM*
*tf M chsnge $fin. tfs better
than you ever thou(jht a low-pricM
car imiM lie—in wty msr. Om
I you'll decide.
.... -
(yftvr
mi
'm
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Smith, Mrs. Frank R. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 77, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1938, newspaper, April 3, 1938; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth303242/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.