The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 31, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : b&w ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
M -«i , iV.,,'/ <*&.
1 *.
v,'-
—
Hi
4-FOR SALE
And So
HKK • n|;' for ' PXIK
ClUCK : Sexed or
Uuiln Co, Phone
F.VMOEH
lH «*e<l;
2;t.
The rates tabulated below
to adS nririnnting with.
ide territory,
rour, seven and thirty time
[ Quoted %b %ds
i for consecutive dayy
i|®!
T«w
TltnM T«aw« *1 e* fliw
•v.JW I no
M
Ltat* 5 Wart*
Sp. M
kW V* Is M
n ii to 15
4 MUM
"« <• S.1
i f M t* M
1 SI la U
f « MU4*
The Orange Leader
|. Ptibll*he-I fV+rr nftfrnnnn except
^•UNajr. n-ii S'indnr mnrnl"? at
SOS -S Profit etreel hv the Orange
I>nder P«1>!tsMn P«mn#ny. '
Entered at Ora" e P. O- *■
rid TPU «* "SI«II Matter T*nd«r
Act of .Cr f- ■ «.« Mareh S. 191M.
X B. Ol'Jnl.KY E-lltor * Puhll-ber
Anne Brandt Qilrtey. City Editor
Mlta Eula M-* Turner. Bor. Editor-
orrrrB riorum
Editor In 1 TVnt. • a. m to I p. nv.
Uttalne*. OfHeea * a. m. to I p. m.
Circulation n-vt « . m. In « p. m.
• Kscept Snedav fl a. m. to a- m
SERfWHTPTION RATRS
Bt Moll or Carrier. 1 month .••>
AdvertUlnr Rilw Will ha FurnUh.'J
Aonli-nll.-n
JU*~OCIATEO PRESK MEMBER
mm*
A Mi ••• -Xftf*1 hU
FUU S.U.F AT A H \R< \IN
• I'M) POUTAHLK Typewriter —
w vyhiAt you liiive been, waniUn.*.
A." "ifiWeii" ' "" '
By UotfBLN COONS
Wanted To Trade
U« At'KK V XATi't lITi M '11 KM I'A-
rixh fvtr place ire or near Oratis^
V. C, MHilf.tXt Itovv ■ m Kl<>i*«. 2-t
6.- Help Wanted
"malis Instruction
HOW \v<<ri.vi via' like r< ii\vx
H iittrj mrttlnx yao up to
#15 tle t ve<.|< 7 I'll how ,yjfU h *v.
Xo expert' see n if, t^rmi* iii
nxy riilliftl. iVinlV* nialli"'! lit*,
7*> 41 Jioo'SMiuiU.
Notices
8AB1NE MATTRE88 00.
0'"R HOT !fP
Mnnlota atccic of hlrte trad#
f"rnl«hln*a liuMIni o.ir
FAMOUH INNER "PMINO mat
We ran %tao arMiitltlaaii*
• u«r aid mattraaiww b>'«
in* matira i All «r«r«
ataM. On# da* «r -Ua.
at IM or Ttolt our aho .
Ill flrrM a " ana.
SINGER MACHINES
1938 Home Building
Rose 10% Over 1937
Throughout Nation
X'KW OK1.KANH, Jin. 31. — Nvw
huirM* n>n*irutii<m In th* I'nttH
K'.uVn l.mi )W*r nhu«cd u kiI > «f tt
Nmi ttrn |K r if*if o(fi lt JT. tmd ih<*
■ gain iqay ri-nLh lilitfii imt cent nh« m
all fl^ui for !h- «« nu:rj ui • rrnn
pkoifl arc'intlng tu u mir
V# y i f ImilmKM (o'liiltloiu
t<i ihf nn tiiil ctjnvm'.luu of Itivi <Hini
Myhi'lc* <• htro tiMl i>*.
In i)w f *<*> of m «tr«ip In ff-ncnil
bullying c Miftrurll«m in nwiit mt
t| nil, /«« U'M I') fvporm fritm 41
* In ten ntnMMt rm/ h4'«-;i«*ii In (lit
rimnti'V |inxd un lapwmd In
rwlikTrw In Idlti.
"Ur«;i|te* In itViiPllcalty all
olli<*r bu«tliu«ii indice* liixi >t«nr. >t
Cuntju«rel ltZ7 hu n l>ulMini
nuit tnl (onuhl t*ifsi<lll> M1«I Dutk-
and Hotly Crabtc; Stan Laurel.and
Illiana.... r
iitstory «epeat# iuolf: 1832 —
Frank Melton of Pineapple. Ala.,
ka^gStlUt' *
Texa*. embarks en ---rr,
after apprenticeship a. a Valley
gas station. . . .
"Our mither. the stage — as
Helen Hayes caUpd it lew years
ago in her clarion call to movie
actors to come back-Ms *ltb gettin?
along without most of the movie
actprs who keep wlkms about aw-
ing back .. . has Helen Hayes, will
?ct John Qarfleld and Franchot
one, Fredric March and Katha-
rine Hepburn and J. Edward Bt om-
bera. . . March and Hepburn
tried it Mw?. to their sorrow, but
. Visit mdvie stars
are still geme..Ms
—who k£co talking a
—insist on a critfc-
Tpaul Mu
stilT ii
it M
aoout the stage
a cntic-orao1 vehicle
uni. wh
UJES AND BEBV1CE Hlnr*r
Bra In r M<rli|m Po. Phom- 41*.
ORANOB FLORAL SHOP
fERB FOR ALL OCCABIO**
Pot Plant* m« ahruba OttAKOR
. FLORAL SHOP. Phjna Tt. Oraan
•8~rL0WB> MOP
I LOVRLT CUT rtxtWERB and l>oi
planta for all occanlona. phona
7S. Wa dellvar. Located Etglitb
and John.
yTORRES
■TILL UilVUNl at * CirRTO
MER8 and (rienda. tic Fifth
'Phono jo's ' W?, - ' M
—
i-T-
8HQE SEP AIRING
POVT KEOLECl TOUR SHOES.
• liar* them repaired at Ooo<ljear
Shoe Shop It* Mala -
Sundown
Stories
—By Mary Graham Bonner—
Tiro Of Thr*r
"I MUST be leaving, quack,
* quack," quacked Mrs. Quack-
er. "But 1 have had a lovely visit."
The penguins were not paying
much atuniion to anvthing now
but their nest and Mrs Quacko
waddled ot withers. Quicker for
a Uttle distance. She left her at the
edge of Puddle Muddle and they
smacked beaks affectionately in
parting.
"Now don't be a stranger, come
♦ vehicle
o hrsn't found
one. Is stilt in our mic.st. . And
wasn't it Muni who. couple of
years back, was all set to shake
off the Holl>wool gold dust?
Majority of actors, if they'd only
admit it, are so thankful to be free
of that "stage glar.ior" and live in
a house they'd nave U be dragged
back to Broadway by wild horses
—or lapsed options....
• v T 1 V a •
TriAT splurge jcam-wign on "Th*
Great Waltx" may not have
been so far wrong. . Eleanor
Powell says the three-c uarter-time
is eomini back. . . . And Dave
Dreyer (RKO musii department
head) says swing will be a goner
before the I'Mi> whistles shrieY
Dteyer calls for ballads *nd music
with a definite old-fashioned flav-
or. .. . Reminds me. that new
thing called La Conga is a guaran-
teed prescription for making the
looker-on feel his years Cuban
orchestra gets stuck on a phrase,
does the old oeedle-in-cracked-
record routine interminably, while
the dancers hop-skip-and-Jump
and play what looks like London
Bridge is Falling Down. . . . The
young things love It. and the
sters (who oughtn't to) do it
gamely.
Vic McLaglen working with
Chester Morris in • movie has
taken up parlor magic — which
makes two good men gone wrong.
... One of tne things about Miltcn
Berle that depresses m«. is his card
tricks—or anybody** card triQk*.
Latest official census of Vic's soo
—which tn'n welcome to inspect
when you're up La Canada way.—
shows eleven kangaroos. Ave Aus-
tralian ant-bears, two deer one
antelope, one ostrich a brace of
porcupines, aeveral odd Uttle don-
keys from over the world, a snake
pit. and 23 jumpers and show
horses.
..w au
V INVirAflON
TO A RAINSTORM
SOU CtNTORIIS. HOPI INDIANS
HAVE DANCED WITH SNAKES
IN TNfll MOUTHS, MATING
TO THfIR OOPS SOt tAlN...
AND STRANGE t* ENOUGH IT
OPUM DOES ggllf.
"BRIDGE OF GOD"
A TINV ff«|A* CAtVlB
TNI GIGANTIC HATORAt
• RIDGI Ot VIRGINIA..:
WASHINGTON SVRVCTCP it
. . . KSSfRSON OWNED IT
...*|f TOOAT IT WORKS
fOR A IIVING. CARRYING A
• UST highway.
/
OVtR 40.000 AMERICAN
TOWNS ARB VILLAGES
HAVI NO OTNIR PUtllC
TRANSPORTATION THAN
GRETHOUND AHB OTHCR
BUS tlRMI
f*
TRANSPLANTED HOLLAND
IN HOltAHB (MICHIGAN! WOOBIH SHOIS ARC
STIU SUN. TULIPS BLOOM BT TNI M(ltlONS.
BUTCH IS SRIOVCHTLT HI ARB. AHB iVfH TNI
ARCHITICTVRI HAS A PORIIGH ACCINT.
By PRESTON GROVER
,TT7'ASHINGTON — Evidently Europe never will understand
VV us Araericant.
The other day Ambassadors Kennedy and Bullitt told a con-
gressional committee of the terrible prospect of war in Europe.
(It was told in secret session, but *
enough leaked out to everybody
knew something of what they had
tald.)
And what happened? The Euro-
pean stock market sagged in alarm.
European Speculators evidently
thought Kennedy and Bullitt knew
more of what was going on in Eu-
rope than Europe did. Mn; be so.
But the New York stock market,
hearing the same reports, bubbled
right along, u
Or rumors of wars.
T , by wars
all Street at-
tributed the.Bullitt-Kennedy show'
to "politics."
r •
Easy To Be Well Read If—
ONE of the privileges enjoyed
most by wives of members of
Congress is their priority access to
new books in the Congressional
Library. Before the new members
had been sworn in several wives
were at the library desk explaining
who they were and insisting on
taking out some of the newest and
latest without so much as a day's
delay for identification.
A half dozen or more copies of
ev' ry book copyrighted for sale in
(he "United States must be sent to
the Congressional Library whore
copyrights are recorded. In addi-
tion, the library buys extra copies
of books likely to have special de-
mand.
Bequests by members of Con-
gress. either for themselves or for
their wives, take priority over all
other requests. If lay readers with
library privileges happen to be
ok,
■!r
able in The com
certs
fttab: . .
CnOlidgc
~ ""[es)
i financed by f
alished by Eli
idge (not of
Break For Music Lovers
"PUCKED away in fine corner of
* the big library building la ■
conccrt hall seating perhaps 1,1
where knowing ones enjoy
of the choicest musical treats i
. These are i—
oundations, one
lizubcth Sprague
if the President
wfimdE'
\YHittall concerts are played dp
Stradivarlus instruments Mrs.
donated to the library ior.
historical and .educalional
value. Stradivarlus instruments.
S&3
their historical and .educalfopal
mm ■K
the
r«H r«P by u*n
Ttii* Mtu v«*>
a l> c
lo flfirru i ^t «*«*ni
l > Mi r irr
of .urciim uimI
hi tl
llOlli'
firt fM V
rifM
I •sources IUn h
At ihr ! • kinnl -
|Mtf"l •«# •« It!
< iit ihf I rtli** I Stut« *
itiMiifi untkiiMUtm f
firoV|>lMI*l l l.i l In- (li xt
)«jnr.
It«*i** |. lltf Im thr ««
Ihf |M«i (ui HWUCt*
tiillm.". Mi Kan «•
conipd i) p i« i. l r -••ui*
% 1 3 2 IilNi.ttuU ft! I ir l «l
i\ t*ln < ( iiM rv limn 52 1
i %-s*« tirvt« ni i'ip •• «l • (
i i'
\#w Tcp
I Mi!) ,i, . t-e
• it m tlpnugls-
iiiul r«u«4'i
«iUtinci Im
U.A If Ml ftl •
II
Pilot
lnvr«l« rn
ih «. Ihf
« VCVHUI.MI
• I
ll'r
m'U.
1 'J 31
> € «. .
UVIT
fret aiul |>urciut#ln^ i|p|hii tiniMii.
Th« Kftler il Kt^i |i|iiM i
< I'Ul i«>t| lf« Ulol*'t «hl«H Hull «•! in-'
I Vj>ai L:u«* 1 * f Auric* irttirt* Tt- M < —
l- t« in*l| htn u'M pi.-
^ U«"*f I.llp I V | • i rii IP ' ^ I.in-I '..I
I Iuim*m. ibfipliv li« -11 • I u i'« I •« . i • v i
SPii IIS ul'liriK .li«*
>irir<'lluii of t* (• r- lUo « '
immalii ui d irltTi ala « f I Mr ih
(« r s« ik U I'A untl
XV A IM tiMO | .lll «•! ti *« lilt
klv* •<( I lie* T***a* I * ' M«lll|| *Mi« :S.
Probe of Affairs
Of Judge Manton
Being Made
happen
reading the book, they can be told
to bring it back on 24 hours notice.
A messenger may be sent for it if
tfje congressional lady is impatient.
hearing 200 years old, are
choicest in existence and the group
of five donated by Mrs. Whlttall
are worth many times their weight
in gold. Some Stradivarius violins
cost up to $50,000 at present and
the price climbs steadily as they
disappear into private collections.
The Whittall group includes
three violins, u viola and a cello.
They are kept in an air-condi-
tioned chamber when not in use
at concerts or rehearsals.
Since violins lose their tone if
not used regularly, the foundation
requires that concerts be given
frequently at which all the instru-
ments are used. The curator of the
instruments sits at the elbow of
the musicians during rehearsals
and performances.
Tickets, priced reasonably, are
sold out months in advance for
each concert The musical menu is
completely classical, and congres-
sional wive6 don't pack THAT as-
sembly. Mueh of the audience is
made up of music teachers of mod-
est fortune glad of an afternoon
or evening with the masters while
they escape the screechy sawings
of their pupils.
! RadiOddities . . . . by Squier
LEAVING THE NAVY
IN I9KJ WITH STOCK.
\AU0CVIUt L BAOADNMV
sia6i cioeaiENce w-
HINOMM.HC JOlNtD
THE BUDDING MOVIE
•N0U5TRV - HE FUftT
APPEAtEO IN THE
fiiMvnir WOMEN:
PROFESSIONAL
MUBC1ANS. VOUN6
cdnbad gpew up in
keokuk.iowa.. planned
n KCOMt AN AACMltCT
But Chose TWC Stagc
imsteao.
OOT.IA
quacked Mr*.
MONUMENT WORKS
C. 81 MAR apent ror 'sremonata
'10 yenpa axaaiienee. AI o clean.
Ine and atralahtenlnt of monu^
tn?nt S(#t Eighth Mreet. Phono
171. All rrnrk ettaran
WE REV. SELL AND TRADE
ITOOS and Cattle. Froah Jersey
milch cows to sell or trade. Claud
Wlneatc, A- 4 P. Market, Real.
ice Phone 8S7. 18-10
BlTs STATION TAXI ,
1N*9 ?«1 or t>«. 4. A PETER-
Exrliit<I e H thta. Driver or.
. duty day And night.
WHEELER, D. 0.
lOPRACTtC PHY«OTHB-
Itmllotherm. OalVft-alne
jiifral-od ' 'amE .Violet R^y,
etro A.- Vlhratory Mawsaeo. Foot
;ij(hfl Spinal AdJuftniontH. 9«2 Or-
' 'Ave.
and see me soon,'
Quacker.
"I'll do that, quack, quack " an
swered Mrs. Quacko. "and you
mustn't stand duck ceremony
cither—come and see me when-
ever you can."
Mrs. Quacko waddled back to
Willy Nilly's house as she was feel-
ing a bit chiily and knew it was
almost supper time. Kip was there
and so was Top Notch and so was
Sweet Face, the lamb, and now the
other ducks came.
Only Willy Nilly, the penguins,
and Christopher Columbus Crow
were npt with them.
"I hope Willy Niily will be here
soon. I reel just in the duck mdod
for one of his good suppers."
quacked Mrs. Quacko.
"I thought he was on his way
with us when we started up hew'
quacked Mr. Quacko, "but tnch he
turned back as though he had for-
gotten something."
They waited and waited and-
Willy Nillv did not appear.
"I should think he would bo
feeling hungry, to6," barked Rip.
as he gnawed on an old, smooth
hone.
Suddenly there was a cawing
shout and the voice of Christopher
Columbus Crow cried: "There are
two of them."
Tomorrow — "Ksdlti Puddle
lei B, E-irr. chulrinnii .'f the Im:ir4 of
luu-at'ira SjiitlivHte In ooiumeniliut
on the Btirri-y "The Uln-rnl pulley « f
the EJIA, eotpMoeil wj; it n ginning
nnlhutnl c^tnvlciloii th<it h UH' n« tier-
•blp la a ia<' UiV<-HimttiI. Imv piny
e«I a l.nrtlug part In th<' reveranl ol
llie hualnea* t ren.l liy home cor-
atrtx-llon"
Eoracloaura Hit Racord Uw
Mr. En rV a; ld that from present
Indlratlona. -and from r.nxirts from
hi- cnniiwinya S.SMI repreaj-ntnilvea
throughout the country. 193!l realden-
>lil l.nlldtnK clioutil exi-eeil the 193n
1938 Activities of
Relief Commission
Commendable
Mr* l.uli White. I** i'nun'J
fasp \V mki*r ha* lirs^n nniplM the
iolin«lnn mnt|* n !•> Vlotm' XI
tp« «sr. n<tmlnl imlor ih" Tf\n«
Ii#*iii*f t'onmiiss^n explain!n* tlir so
lUllk* nf Die ui litnlialloj. In 191*
An iiM*:ai;p «•' l.llftlM p u« l«
f f MUri'lw* ftxnl ColHIHwUlli^ UIHl
413 &«1 rkithlng nnd household nr
ilclfn wcrr (tutiliiutnl en<h moniVi
by Ih*1 cmiDMI'v t|Uirlliutl< n de-
pnrtinent f the Tr'^iiis ll«*lleC 0 U *
mlnflivi to nn 4Vemifc f r. oio fnm
lllen which bad u aionthly %vcm*e
value o( |M ruilnutvl) |H0I,|9I.II.
icrori'a iliowpd.
A i proilir.ttt ly 99 W«
pIiouii to In* ilie r« tiill value of the
c*oiiivttimI111* m ilisu ibulctl ilui hU the
year. TTie -weraiee retnii rntue nf
fno«l unit clothing Ik^ik^I to the nver-
rise f i mlly |M r month iimountftl Iit
SMtla Sii|n lle* are aecurftl thmuah
the Federal Surplu* Coninioilltlew
(%n Iioration. th** XV. I* A. cannlnj
plnntJ . newlng roonu*. mnttref«s pro
XV.\V VI ifSK. J nt. Jl
Two fp<|pi 1 M'hI twi' mu'"'
Meif pynhiNl (odin ln.« ♦!*••
lualr.ett nfT^Irs i-f Martlii
toi . ifslunpf! pen I •!' iu-tfi*' •
M, riitult eiKiil of
I'm* |ntMtlgnt|ons w ii ••
ken li> ihe I' S. ikiwriui"1
tire. I' H I >1 *1 ik i A Hoi ne %
K. \miM|n, the "tlti la\ I'
in«l Misdiri At* irne> T' «
I ki\py
The ." « > en r ul <
fftlt'lNl Jiol^e I the mlloil
Wits apfxilninl to tli
i(ter u killiani law
hln | « sit v«^ter«tay
ly d^n>inK « hnrg*
M'l
I «| I i
I I* oil •
T \ln
( ih* I
UH«I« r* '
* i«f itim
m h
l
te«*'
1 he
i :i i
i% e Up
Mf lC.ll
e|it M|
from
tieftiiv
1H'
ri r<-'r s
a till** ralr
he r>.l it
more than .'IW I*w I.I toa:n
fH i mihh Inteiealed In i.IT.ii k
hla eourt
Juilgi- JUanton ai'Ul he pi-eferred !>•
• t<-p ilimn rather Hi • n tmrome ";h-
central figure tn a c >a:rovi raj
ahlch nt^hi "•enUcn pillilic r .-.fl
dance In ih<- ailmli Wltntl"ii •>( Jt'"-
trrr ~ ,
In u h't'er to Preal.tenl llmnrvel1,
the $12.5(10 n-yenr ju>l2<-. hlgheaT.
rnnklnt; jurist n,**T to Iho tilni- au-
preme court juatlrea. aaki'il l" fie re
lleve,* hln ilntkn n. t later thin
Mftrrh 1
SILVER. THEATRE
STAUCING
«t ABO
|«(V
>r xou wish
[it VI J
o*E a oo
RU* ROUS. HE SOON MTaoOULD
nc ooueu M(Mr«a*trria anp
01X8 mnwahons n bcmmquc.
TWISLEB, HIS MOBtV tS
BEA0IN0 A COLLECTING BOOKS...
UNLIKE SOME D«t£C TORS.HE CATERS
10 STABS' ICX05VNCRACIES... HIS
TOUGHEST 0IBECTING JOB WAS TO
COACH CHINESE CHILDCEN TO 5PEAK
ENGLISH wrm A CHINESE ACCENT/
TTiTTI .I„t-,-^7.,n nuirletivOnaT^
rnntic jibe* U Oft,nrirt Attorney I)e-
wey, who rhr r*o«1 In :i letter to the
house iurllelarv coninMtee that Man-
tnri had m^iitptl |ierl*i nifT1y or
through e<irt*onitl« RR controlled ' >'
him i«i\ lonnn totaling $ - of
u'hleh only 1^0.000 w«s r«*i ild.
■mi
[
r
I
■mi
fl
'I
PERSONAL
By Gene Bymes
He Must Be
Contortionist
REG'LAR FELLERS
Vougj. looaf
•foo
kCTCHA
% &3
CAfi fH* w' AltTH
N
vMS.Otlt/
>ffH r
tASY!
cttora1.
BgTtHa
Too'
CHCPPW
A*
T )e. WocD V/lTll
-p*. CTHcA
U -,HC f* sum*
VDesnniJ
rutawtgAA
American News Fenlurca. Inc.
I'*'i*
DAN DUNN - SECRET OPERATIVE 4t
N THE ADOBE HOU*E IN TNE HILL5
WHEttE KAV IS HIDDEN. JOSE MAKES
R-ADY TO RETURN TO CUAQA—
WE'RE HOLDING HIM UNTIL
UP JOSE'S GAMS
I BELIEVE THAT JOSE
HAS HER HIDDEN IN THE
HILLS—WE'LL GET BACK
TO HIS HOUSE AND WAIT
FOR HIM TO RETURN
THEN WE'LL PORCE HIM
TO LEAD US TO HER.*
BOYS. I'VE FOUND
WHO IS AT THE
HEAD OF THE
SMUGGLING DOWN
HERE —BUT TME
FIRST THING WE
MUST DO IS
FIND
WE ROUND UP JOSE'S GA
WE MUST PE CAREFUL
THAT THE NORTHERN END
FELLOW
HERE*?
I WILL
CONCHITA- -TAKE.
C ._ , ,
GIRU7
OF THE SMUGGLERS t^N'T
TIPPED OPF THAT WE ARE
CLOSING IN/
WHERE
et-etrw
iv 11't.
r,ORFH
n
W a---
i TROE^LE. LOVE on . ntlSI
*. M roe help ypM Rendln«.
Klly, a. m- to * p.
patroftaee aollelated and appi-ed
led, Mary ij. Jleaa. 4-103 Pfl*-
f. M.E I.AEVDRT. Weal Park Ave.
"■ "iefh $jfth. Mrn. Pop"
jThnniO"
pOifRENS
■ ■■ ■■ >. |'| ■ I *M *. taitf 'f"'* •-
n,W« K^itT"Fv^ -o TWEl.FT't
ftl" r'" V"'
f.-l^e.*fr.«a.. . at*
r«yTf*MW| J^^lnTM'tSX'T.
♦ lea pH'l A tfo h*Jr<xim
II —^II |] IU*I 11 inyiHi'Vi
fVRVl>HED HOtTNE
111? Mflln 9t
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 31, 1939, newspaper, January 31, 1939; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth289890/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.