The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. [81], Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1938 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
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• ■ r:..:s* :,*T ^'WftWViWMWWMl®^~.r««
Notices
:7.
Hollywood Sights and Sounds
The rates tabulated below
apply to ads originating with-
the Orange trade territory.
)ur, seven and thirty tjjgpe
quoted apply to ads
luled for consecutive days
HiSTBi
ifTuiii
( "« (Ml*Ml JM
Onutfe
Orange Leader
| Published every afternoon
Saturday,* And Sunday morning fit
•011-2 Front Street by thi
•aader Publishing Company.
Entered at Orange, Texas P. o.
I Second Claaa Mall Matter, Undtr
ot Congress, March a 1 TI.
B. QUIQIJBT ... Publisher
l FRANK B. SMITH ^BaRM
OFFICE HOURS
Kdltorlal Dept. 8 a. ra- to 8 p. m.
. *m Offices 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Circulation Dept. 8 a.a. to 0 p. m.
pt Sunday, • «i tt- to f a. m.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES'
Mir Mall op earlier, I month
Advertising Rates Will be Famished
Upon Application
ASSOCIATED PRE8S MEMBER
^Announcements
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
blication Kates—Cash In Advance
State or District Offices ..$17.60
Ctiuity Offices fiSOO
Except aa Followa:
Mint*., Commissioner ..$10.00,
Justice of the Peace : 110.00
stable $ 7.00
Mayor ...$15.00
City Commissioner ". 8 8.00
The Orange Leader is authorised to
announce the following candidates
ubjeot to the actiwn of the Demo-
cratic primaries:
County Tax Assessor and Gel*
lector— . ...■> • fr.
O. D. BUTLER -
#r Shariff—
i K. A. MITCHELL
L. Q. "Dick" BTANDFIKLIi
C JJOKBON MERIWETHER
• County Commissionsr Pet. Ne. 1
JF. TOM SOILEAU ;t
SID J. CAILLAVET
Commissioner, precinct Ne. |—
R E. IIANKAMKK r' "
Commissioner, Pet. %—
CALVIN PEVETO
CountyNpammlaaioner, Pet. f—
" H. MERRILL ' ' ' ™ -''H|
e*nty Cli
OUNNINO
Coant
W* If HIJKPHBHO
ciiarles Cottle
State Senate
H. L. McKEK,
ALLAN SHIVERS
Flotoriat Representee
JOHN H. DILL of Orange
District Atttrnsy—
K. E. DAVIS '
PHONE 353' or 628. J.
SON. Exclusive lights,
duty day and night.
A PETER-
"Driver on
Beauty Shop
BEAUTY SERVICE
l)uart and Nestle Per-
manent wave. Beth
Mure Cosmetics., Com-
plete line of hosiery
and Lingerie. Phone "84
or vlait ua at 500 Main
rgESH
SEA FOODS
FRESH SHIPMENT SKA FOODS
every Tuesday and Thursday p. ro.
Frealj Shrimp, Oysters, and Klsli,
I'ncoa are right; W. L. Baylor,
Red and White St^re, !W>2 Border
«trcet'. Phone 844.
Sabine Mattress Co.
M. UjiM aAflSC I EN TIFICALLT
iTlalMCBSCJ* RENOVATED
WE RENOVATE EVERT KINB OF
MATTREBS. Latest equipment,
work guaranteed. One day Service,
as at 180 or vlalt our shop
Green Avenue.
Phone aa
It fo E.
ORANGE FLORAL SHOP
FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.
Pot Plants and ahrubs. ORANGE
FLORAL 8HOP. Phone 78. Green
avenue.
HOTEL DINING ROOM
HOT CAKES EVERT MORNING.
Mother Fuller'a hot cakes, aweet
cream butter, honey, jelly, maple or
pure can syrup. BANQUETS ami
PARTIES A SPKCIAlLTY. liOLr
LAJfD HOTEL. - -
HOME MADJS ROLLS
4-
BOME MADE HOT ROLLS, 8un-
day, Wednesday and Friday nights.
Holland Bote! Dining Room.
Pre-Easter Bargains
Select Your Oar Now and Get
Ready Por Easter Trips.
1935 Chevrolet Ooach $325
1934 Chevrolet Coach $295
1934 Chevrolet Coupe $295
1934 Plymouth Coach.... $295
1933 Pontiac Sedan,
(0 Whepl) $275
1933 Chevrolet Sedan ,....$275
1932 Chevrolet Sedan,
<6 Wheel) $225
1932 Ford Pick-up Truck $175
1930 Ford Fordor Sedan $175
AS-IS SPECIALS
1929 Ford A Tudor, As Is,
Cash ....... $20
1929 Chevrolet Coupe, As Is
Cash*.., $20
1931 Dodge Sedan, As Is,
Cash $20
1930 Ford Roadster, As Is,
Cash $20
These 4 As Is Specials Run
OK, Battery, Tires, etc., OK.
But does not include 1938
License. ;
MODERN-
CHEVROLET CO.
3rd Jk Green Phone 99
SALESMAN WANTED
YVANTKD — Man With car. Uoiuttf
—preferred hut unneeeM-
ar y. Uuwleiuh'a, Dept. TXJ)-
tHMI, Memphis, Tenn.
WANTED
SPECIAL
THAT GOOD MALT ICE CREAM.
ISc quart. Sandwiches, 10c. Oys-
ters, 66c qt. PAYNE'S CONFEC-
TIONERY, DIVISION STREET.
-a—
SHOE REPAIRING
DON'T THROW SHOES AiWAY!
They can be repaired at atnal! cost.
OOODYEAR SHOE SHOP, Main
street. John Romano.
^.-TORRENt
FIVE R0OM HOUSE. Newly pa-
per ed. All conveniences. 1612
John, l'hone 642.
. if
NICELY FURNISHED lied room lor
one or two men. Hot and cold wa-
ter facilities, garage. Centrally lo-
cated, near cafe. Phones 452 or
904. *
f'UR.VISHBI)
keeping rooms.
Wife ,
LIGHT HOUSE-
1108 Orange Ave-
good colored farmer with
own equipment to farm„80 acres;
rent free for first year, next year's
rent on share basis. Five room
house,- iauns, good soil. Mrs. L.
Schuh. B7 Schuh Place, Port Ar-
thur, Texas.
Man About
MANHATTAN
•jr ROBBIN COONS
IJOLLVWOQP—Among the nu-
tnerous actresses mentioned
for the role of Scarlett O'Hara was
Bette Davis, who is now the only
candidate who didn't get it and at
the same time did get a chance
to show what she could have done
with it.
"Jezebel" is Miss Davis's oj
Ity, and while her Julie S ■■
den isn't exactly Scarlett O'Hara,
>pnor-
Mars-
play-
Bros.
the two ijirls are cut from the same
pattern—wilful, tempestuous, wily
and unscrupulous gals of the Old
South.
Miss .Davis gives a thumping,
strenuous and interesting inter-
pretation of the Scarlett type, ma-
lignantly dominating, reckless and
unconventional, pitiable and evil.
What It's About
But "Jezebel" is not—as
fully sugges jd—a Warner
version of "Gone With the Wind."
It will take nothing from that pic-
ture when Selznick gcts around to
making it, and it will stand up on
its Own reelage as an engrossing
piece of theatrical fireworks.1
Julie is a New Orleans belle of
1853, wild as the colt she rides, de-
lighting irt flaunting convention.
When her wilfulness loses the love
of Preston (Henry Fonda) she
comes to her senses, mopes until
his return. When he brings back
a northern bride, Jotfe,, schemes
frantically, foments a duel which
kills off the wrong hian (George
Brent) and generally behaves like
a hellion. The. yellow fever epi-
demic gives her the chance of,re-
demption, gives the film some
memorable scenes.
"Jezebel" excels in capturing a
period in southern life, in the cal-
iber of supporting performances—
by Fonda, Brent, Fay Bainter,
■' ' ■
Donald Crisp and Richard Crom-'
NKrifet
well m particular—and in coasts-
tent attention - holding, dua in
largo part to William,Wylay'^po-
largo part to WiUiam Wyler'a. po-
tent direction and (of course), to
the (tar.
f • Better Than Expected
"Condemned Women" is one of
those pictures intended as a Class
B program-filler that emerged as
something better.
Undertaking to picture life in a
' on where
ie is
osvehiat
ing, the film succeeds
women's prison w]
is'jiving
xhiatric understand
old strong-
way to
sn's pr _
arm discipline
modern psychi
1 admirably
unTil romance intrudes. Louis
Hayward as the young prison doc-
tor revives Inmate SaUy Eilers*
interest in life. Persuaded that
marriage to an ex-convict would
ruin his career, Sally takes part
in an escape plot which xesult? in
the death of a matron nndjkJittle
convict (Anne Shirley) who is
taking a rap. for her student lover.
Recaptured, Sally looks set for a
longer stretch until Louis forces
revelation that she did it all for
love, which seems to settle every-
thing for a happy ending. Despite
this unreality, the picture has
xntsch tenseness and excitement,
drab realism in its prisonlife, and
a sensitive performance by Miss
Eilers that might lead her back
from the "B's.* tjew Landers di-
rected. \
"The First Hundred Years"
(Robert Montgomery, Virginia
Bruce, Warren William, Binnie
i Barnes) is a light comedy- tidbit-
about a much - in - love husband
and wife and their conflicting ca-
reers. „
Directed by Richard Thorpe, the
film kept the preview audience
chuckling with clever incident and
sitiytion, bright dialogue and gen-
erally good-humored spirit.
► *
A Washington Daybook
By FEESTON GEOVER
WASHINGTON —A day in tiie
senate:
Senator J^ewis of Illinois: I may
illustrate the application by tell-
ing the Senator (Mr. Tydings, of
Maryland) that a lady from Mary-
land, from his-great state, who I
understand wa.«t a school teacher
and a reformer of bad customs,
■I tend
step;
Sideline Slants
ay
Frank Maxwell
♦ ♦♦♦ M
2.-Special Notices
tUQE FUBfolTUB* 8T0&E
Bra to new and second-
id furniture. We buy. trade
sell. Also have
ic Refrigerators,
104.95 up and Orosley radios,
$19.99 up. 110 Border
Bt. Phone 439.
SPECIAL NOTIOl
HRftS SCMUOti or MUSIC
i8 SCHOOL or MUSIC offers
Instruction on all band and orches-
tra inatrumenta, violin, gultMt and
mandolin a specialty. Private and
elaaa leaaona. Hales representative
C. O. Conn Instrument Co. Kea-
aonable prices. Cash or Install-
ment pay menu. Prof. Edwin Hess,
1403 Curtis and Thirteenth streets.
Phone 856.
BELILES
1EU LK'H — WlIBKE OUANOE'S
amnrteHt eroVda fo for Juicy
nteaks, excellent sea foods, fineist
wwvlce at all times. Fifth atreel.
OPEN AUl, NKJHT.
mrsT adeljTweil
7aF"a IlEAt/TiriTi, HKLECTMW
ot Easter Frocks at 14.95. DAILY
Altltl VAIjH of HBAHOtfAM.E
mim.ixkry, •
MARINE SERvioST
irller makusm hervtcu. ma
contraottng — Tugs — Eargee
Piatt
N4
furnished APARTMENT, with
garage, reasonable, ?08 Fine, l'hone
6i2.
FIVE ROOM HOUSE. Every con-
venience. lively ahado trees. Six I li
and' Cherry. Pbune 45 or i*«,
4.-FOR SALE
^1X ROOM DWELLING on
colder loO by 150 feet In West Or.
ange. Fdr quick sale, price' les«
than iMUling ooat. Small down
payment ^acceptable. W. H. Ma-
lone. Fhonei 422.
PINO POKO TAlJfl.K;
tlon; will sell rhenp.
K<>o<l
l'hone
IBDROOM
O ted condi-
FIVE PIECB MAPLM
.Sujjc. Reasonable,
tlon. l'hone 329. ~
LA FAROUE UFRIOHT IMA?
Excellent condition. Priced ? 1 o"l
Phone 4lJ.
BABY OHIOK SALE
tJEE UB for Famoua DIXIE IJaby
Chlcka-~aexed or unsexeti. CAMF
ORAIN COMPANY, 5iSl First
Street.
By GEORGE TUCKER
MEW YORK-You can talk to a
dozen explorers, travelers, and
scientists and not find a more
primitively intriguing story than
the one Charles Rochester brought
back from Hawaii.
This is the one about—not, as
you suppose, tropic maidens swim-
ming in blue lagoons—but about
birds, the minah birds which flock
in the streets of Honolulu just as
our sparrows do here.
They live by a strange code of
ethics, Rochester says, and when
one bt them gets in bad he is
brought to justice. They hold
kangaroo court in the street, and
it is a commonplace to see them
fathered angrily in a circle, de-
ating the case, while the culprit
stands alone and dejected. If they
decide he should be punished they
peck out his brains. However, if
his good name is cleared they fly
speedboats—Quarter Boats,
•et docks. • Phone M.
JTTIE'S FLOWER SHOP
or
PLANTS.
Com
m
vJPWAt
Flower,
Tomat
4.1
LOW EOO PRICES AM*--warm
weather cut hatching coats. lV«M
Rock and 1^-Khoni Chicks, IR.OO
per hundred. We feed, recommend
and a«H ifclEAL feeds. CLARK'S
Hatchery. phone 488.
5.-Wanted To Buy
CATTLE and
Lee Rurresa.
HORSES any
Phone 007-J.
time.
• 4-«
CATTLE AND HOOS. Have Brah-
Man bull yearling to trade or sell.
CHAH. FAIRCHILDB. 104 Main
street Phone 168. 4*10
6,-Help Wanted
HSLP WASTED
WOMEN Address and mall adver-
tising material for ua at home. We
aopmr • flood rata oC
pay. No selllns. No c i>eiiencc
necaaaary. Merchandise Mart', Box
5)3, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
SPECIAL WORK for married wo-
men. Earn to 931 weekly and
yoftr own dt-eaaea PVta, • Ne canvaas-
Mp, otve ,'jigpi and dreas slse.
Frocks, inc.. Dept 0-7548,
Onto. ..vtu
fashion V
Cincinnati.
away happily together.
* • •
YOUR correspondent can re-
member another bird story
that deserves a place next to the
minah. This concerns penguins, of
which it is claimed there is no
more curious fowl to be found.
In thpir Arctic habitat the pen-
guins live on ice-floes. Each morn-
ing when they waken they waddle
down to the water to take a bath.
However, they like to be certain
nothing will harm them. So they
get together and 3 lowly press
towards the edge of the iceberg.
Finally one of their number is
jostled overboard. If nothing hap-
pens to him they all dive in for
a swim. But if he disappears, they
jtnow a big fish is waiting for his
•eakfast, so they hurry off to a
safer spot.
Question: why doesn't some en-
terprising cameraman make a
motion picture of minahs and pen-,
guins? Such a film would clean
up a fortunes
THERE is alwaW a couple of
new gags born when John An-
derson likes a play. FoVjie is more
frequently displeased than any,
critic in New York. Long a'ga-he
formed the habit of tumlng'ap his
nose at the drama, and this year
has been ho exception. Of 90-odd
first nights he has been placated
by less than a score.
All of which is by way of ex-
plaining this fllip overheard in a
45th street eafe:
"He certainly is hard to please,"
observed a gangling after reading
one of Anderson's derisive screeds.
"So tough," agreed his pal, "that
when he goes to Heaven and
knocks on the pearly gates, St
Peter wilt say to him, Tou can
come in, but you won't like it.' *
Morris Gest, one of the last ex-
Cents of the flowing black tie,
finally been won over to the
conventional four-in-hand. He was
observed thus garbed dining in a
midtown eatery this noon.
2.-Special Notices
WILLIAMSON'S OAT1
THE PI>ArE TO GET THE BEHT
oofTen in town. We aerve both
debt and dark ooJt*
Rack again, after u tow day* ab-
sence from this section of the paper,
during which time J spent a
plo of days ut A'uatln u.t the .Texas
relays, its did a score or so other Or-
unise people. Th« relays were fine
and 1 .believe that everyone had a
nice time. Earl Kelly and myself
were the Kiiests of the Delta Chi
fraternity, ana quite , a few of the
boys were guests of Stanley Depwe
and Frank Zetft! Where the rest put
tip 1 don't know. We fill saw some
fast track and field performances,,
especially when Wolcoit < of Rice set
the unofficial world record In the
high hurdles.
Familiar faces around Austin:
Riith Phillip* talking to a friend in
front of . the Union building; Evelyn
Turnage hurrying to some claaa or
another; Frank Zeto trying tu get
Into the relays on my puss "StTd fail-
ing miserably; Eal'l Kelly missing
the track meet in order to see Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs. .1. P.
Milliard at the meet ill=essed like a
million dollar playboy; Harry Smith
hanging over a steak at the Morn
cafe; Jimmy Dykes holding forth in
his fraternity house: Lyn Chllders
taking a siesta between classes; Mr.
and Mrs. Craham Sexton walking
down San Antonio street to their
apartment; (llenn Terry, Orange track
roach, yawning in his V-8 while his
•pi-Sieges are (lashing hither and thi.
ther all over (own; flool) Taylor and
Arthur Hurst at the' track meet
dressed in pretty Orange high sweat
suits; M.itchell Stark, former yokel,
acting im host at a* huge chicken
dinner, for which Whtc; Wlllard De-
I pwe doing some window shopping at
the excellent men's sliups across the
campus; where was 'I So Cohenour.
Shorty . Stansbuay and Woodell
Orubbe?. -
This week the fastest district track
meet in histoid' is sclu>diy}ed at Port
Arthur where records are expected
to fall, aud i suppose that they will,
hut 1 will lay odds thai the 820 yard
low hutdie record hung up by James
Headrlck of Orange In 1033 won't
be bettered. J foi'KOt just what that:
record is, but it wan .tni^hty good'
for a high school hoy, and there Is
not a record in the meet,any Older
than this one. ,
I)o(h and iJaslieal- 'Antxthei1 -well,
dressed young ti«Ty in otir city is
Florence .Iljwrton. while Buddy Oo*
a lociiVjrtfaln is. no sluuch:, PerstMi-
alltj^iius: Mavis llolliij^sworth also
jUewia Weaver; One hippy family;
The Sweet shop crew; Beauty' 141-
Ve^ne Itorr; Mandsomo; Harry t.'arr;
Ambitious: Billy Stark; a cinch song
hit tho near fotoro la a pretty
little ditty entitled "TWO Bouquets.''
A few of toy ipet hates j The Big Ap-
,p!e. Truckln, the Suisy Q. but oh you
Cajun hop; here Is a quip t picked
up aomewhevo quite a while Imck;
The motion picture ind'.atry has
made quite a bit' of pri Kfes« in the
past several years. At first pictures
were still, then they made them
move aa in Mkl life; a few years
back they nulde them talk, and m w
some of thj*m smell. I'ersonal wish:
that our football leaw,' next year
will J e a* good Ih thst department
as the Bengal Guards afe 'n •heirs,
however llial Is a hit to wish for, so
I'll settle for half; Wamlnr Be-
ware of running atop signs, parking
|n prohibited places or some other
traffic violations, or yoJ'H ba buy*
in« a ticket to the police bUll wheth-
er you dance or not:' Retlere It or
not; That young twin sweating otW
* lawn mower <heen avePve and
ronrth stmt ye*ier«lf r non*
other than our vlllagf h«>ro,
Hal Slma; Ralph lUrlwe
. m tSSSS aJSEt
Uncle Ham's army, and with condi-
tions as they are In Kurope, my, my.
If there are any football players in
Orange who are • contemplating going
to college .next year, let me "recom.
mend my old school, S. 1j. I. The
the varsity there you
sweater, the socond, a
and the third year.
Knowing you are
this ruhhish, although
I have an unlimited supply left, I'll
quit for today leaving you thla
thought: It is one thing to lie let In
on a deal and another to be taken
ir on one.
into the, state of my fricni
the junior senator from Virginia
(Mr. Byrd). She was there to res-
cue some of the inhabitants of the
benighted locality who needed
restoration from the unhappy state
into which they had fallen. But
when she arrived in a eortuip,.
snail community it was discov-
ered there was no hotel. So she
went for guidance to the only man
accessible. He was the postmaster,
and she said, "I am here, but there
is no hotel here."
He said: "No, madam; there is nO
hotel here." . ,
Said she, "What am I to do? I
must sleep somewhere. Where can
I sleep?"
He replied, "Madam, the only
thing l ean suggest is that proba-
bly you can sleep with the station
agent/1
She indignantly exploded, "Sir,
I am a lady."
"Yes, but what has that to do
with it? So is the station agent."
• ->• •
Pal, Without Mike
MR. TYDINGS: 3he senator's
colloquy reminds me of an-
other story, whereby I might illus-
trate that he is trying tcjustify his
position on the ground that this
lias happened before.
There was walking down the
street one day a certain Irishman
whose trousers were rather highly
gallused. A friend happened to no-
I tice that he had on one green and
i one red sock, so, going up to Pat,
i the friend said, "Pat, you are
dressed very unusually this morn-'
in*." t
pat said, "How soT"
"Well," his friend said, "you
have on one green and one red
•OCk."
Pat looked down and evidenUy
had been absent-minded when he
put on his socks that morning and
had not noticed them, but he was
witty, and"he said, "Why, by golly,
you are right, and the funny part
of it is that I have another pair ex-
actly like them at home.'
Mr. Lewis: Mr, President, it is
reported that a distinguished sena-
tor of the United States lately
called a newspaper oflire upon the
telephone to announce the fact
that twins had been born in his
family, an event in which the sen-
ator took considerable pride. The
girl answering the telephone did
not quite catch what he said, so she
said to the senator, "Will you re-
peat that?" "Not if I can help it,"
he quickly observed.
Thus, and in other ways, the sen-
ate debates the bill to reorganize
the federal government.
' r< • • ' f*
A Bit Timely? . ^!
EXCUSE us for being a trifle late
with this information^,but we
have just learned that when Mr.
Stanley Reed appeared at the
White House to get his certificate
of appointment to the Supreme
Court, the President, in-mock seri-
ousness, said:
"Where are your robes? What
do you think I'm paying you $20,-
000 a year for?"
And Mr. Reed replied, a bit
lamely, we thought:
. "Well, where are your tails?"
We do not know whether any
movie stars are planning to be
kissed on the front pages by sena-v
" t'brs this year but they may just as
well know it will be no use. Sena-
<■ tors: do not kiss movie queens in
election years.
There's never any
chiseling in Hanes
SHORT-measure !
first
get u
gold
Gold
darn
year on
football
football,
Teeth,
tired of
INTERNATIONAL ItlVKH BKI>
NAXA.MO, British ColuritbiR, —
The Kraaer river HiAvk through soil
from all parte of the world.
OUh sailing ships used to dump,
earth ballast when thery took on sal-
mon cargoes, and R. It. Payne, a
fishing company executive, silys he
can identify red sands from the
.Mersey, gray sands from Sydney
Harbor and blue clays from Rio de
Janeiro. __ ,
I—-r
VraKWAHSl
Get into * pair of HANES
Shorts, and you'll ••• that
HANES dottn't cut corners!
Gentlemen, here is a bushel of
comfort. You can sit, bend,
stoop, and walk without fear
of ripping the rear!
Yes, sir! ... You'll like the
HANES seating-arrangement.
But you'll find other good
points in these shorts. There's
genuine "Lastex" yarn in tho
waist. And we give you our
word the colors are fasti
Every pair of HANES Short#
needs a HANES Shirt. Light,
cool, elastic-knit ... it lies
comfortably smooth across
your chest ... tucks so far
below the belt that it can't
creep and wad at your'waist t
See a HaNES Dealer today. P. H.
Hanes Knitting Company,
Winston-Salem, North
Carolina.
AND BOYS
fat right) MM
Unien-Sutt*, $1
0 Unien-Su
leach. Other HAMCa
Its, Tic and ii|kB
Many historians rank the inven-
tion of the hand-mill for grinding
grain its the second greatest event
in the march of civilization. The
discovery of - fire la ranked first.
The marines. are the oldest branch
of the U. S. armed service, having
been established by congress in
1775.
Hanes Underwear For Sale in Orange
GREEN'S FAIR STORE
Department Store
Front Street Orange, Texas
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Smith, Mrs. Frank R. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. [81], Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1938, newspaper, April 7, 1938; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth303246/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.