The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1941 Page: 3 of 4
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fORAKGB. TEXAS. THURSDAY, JASTAftT 30, 19*1
T-"r4, "*•• uswr i'-
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Pli^
THE ORANCF. LEADER
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fjgSGE-mREE
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Mr. & Mrs. Sander*
• .*
'., . ....
.
Are Honored At
Surprise Party
Members of the Fortnightly Club
honored Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Sanders
with a surprise party Wednesday
evening at their new home on Cherry
■ Streefcx^
Dinner -was served by the club and
bridge games were enjoyed. High
pgcore winners "'were Mrs. Russell
Fleig and D. E. Roach. Mr. and Mrs.
Sanders were presented with a gift
from the club • "x ;.
Only club moinbers were in at-
tendance. 'rs
Mrs. Sanders will entertain the
club at a bridge party on Wednesday
_ afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at her
home. ~n :
Mrs. Tom Rogers
• •
■~m a
High School Honor,, - - .THE OLD HOME TOWN
Roll Announced
The Orange High School Honor
Roll has been announced as follows:
; Honor ^students for, the j fourth
month:
5 A's: Marjorie Ann Arledge, El-
eanor Beaty, Bertha Constantine,
Leona Constantine, Billie Jean De-
Lane, Eleanor Edwards, Carl Eric-
son, Betty Sue Hail, Dorothy Lee
Linscomb. Robbie "Jean Martin, Re-
becca McCoppin. Anne McLean, El-
aine Olsen, Beth Sholars, .Jean Sho-
lars, Jimmy Thomen, W. D. Weather-
ford. T
4 Ajs and 1 B: Joyce Beaty, Dor-
■oUiy Brown, Necil Cochran, Johnnie-
O'Banion. Ann Raborn, Eloise Scott,
Vein a* MaeVeazey, Pat Raleigh.
3 A's and 2 "B's: Allle Emmert,
Helen Gillet. Ityary Lou Pachar, Es-
sie Mae Regan, Juanita Sarver, V.
J. .Zeto.— "
$ w
Is Hostess To
Wednesday Club
Mrs. Tom Rogers was hostess to
members of the Wednesday cjub and
additional guests at luncheon on
Wednesday at 1 p. m., at her home,
907 Pine Streets
The luncheon was followed by
bridge games with four tables of
players participating. Mrs. Edgar
^Brown, Jr., won the club prize and
>Mrs. Robert Turpin won the high
score prize for the guests.
GuesUs besides club members were
Mesdames Oscar Dancy, Graham
Maurice Kjick,
C. F. Raleigh, .Harry Pharis, Gra-
ham Bruce.
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
4 A's: Juanita Armstrong, Wanda
Bertrand, Gloria Borel, Jarvis But-
ler, Barbara Campbell, Mavinee
Corkern, Charles , David, Abbigail
Eddings, Barbara Ferguson, Edna
Funchess, Mildred Goodsell, Bonnie
Jean Gunstream. Hugh Lea, Doris
McCoppin, Miriam MacFarlane, Cla-
ra McGill, Dorace McGill, Mollie
Miller, Elizabeth Olsen, Ruth Pa-
char, Mary Prejean, Pat iRaleigh,
Helen Reid, Celeste Smith, Homer
Stark. Louis Ulm, Shirley Webb,
Harold Wright, Jerry, Wheeler.
3 A's and 1 B- Evelyn Brown,
Marguerite Clark, Betty Jean Crew,
Mary Ijtodd. Edna Mae Goldfine,
Ruth Granger, Aby Green, Norman-
:wrtstm« riirfehe' ma^'MSry'IS?
Chronic brwiehiiiS Nnmy .:devclop-U-.iT^ mi ■
our cough, chest cold, or acute bron- L>crra^-Wirm?
vinia Hogg, Nora Ann Locke, Forrest
McDonald, Nora Evelyn McDonald,
{Catherine Myers, James Oliver, Vi-
vian Ousley, Wallace Pachar, Bar-
bara Jean Parrish, Betty Perry, Jac-
queline Perry. James Ryan, Irene
Siau, Ollie Mae Spaires, Billy Sul-:
livan, Lunia Trawhon, Catherine
Ulm, Clare Ulm, Yvonne Walston,
[Jean Weaver, Mary Lou Wiltshire,
By STANLEY u
I SHANT -TO KNOW- OUR"
CLUB VOTED THE CLARION
VS "THE OREATEST FORCE IA4
TBWN T=Ofe. CIVK
IS "THAT
m
, (*?■:- * i v %
Y.r —v
BOUQUETS ANt^BRICK BATS
, FROM AUNT SAfeAH PEABOCY
IO-2fS
:<w wm: itiNorritrwrcT'SVNWCW: 'GrWiSiiB' Si^rfiitUSvto
I
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BARCLAY
By Shepard Barclay
"The Authority on Authorltlea"
SSI
AN INTRICATE FORMULA
TO MOST food players, a dou-
ble squeeze ia an Intricate enough
proposition to understand. Those
who learn its component parts, so
that they can build one them-
selves, are not always able to rec-
ognise when an opponent la trying
to build one. And those who get
so that they can usually spot such
an effort by the opposition if not
necessarily familiar with the ways
to thwart it. Sometimes It cannot
be stopped, but if a player knows
the formula for beating it. he may
be able to grasp his chance.
♦ A 6
.' f 9S4
fAKT1
48754
4 8 8 2
V Q J 10 6
♦ Q 8 4
+ Q02
4 10 4
V8732
♦ J96 2
*J63
4 K Q J 9 7 3
fAK '
' ♦ 05 *L
« * A K 10 T*?
(Dealer: South. Both sldss vul-
nerable.)
South West North East
1+ Pass 2 + f Pass
4 NT Pass sv Pass
6 NT Pass 6+ Pass
7 NT
Declarers at two tables of a
duplicate faflie triad to maka
> ! *
your cough, chest cold, or acute bron-
chitis is not treated and you cannot af-
ford to take a chance with anv'medlcinc
less potent than Crcomulslon which
goes right to the seat of the trouble to
help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender. Inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes.
Creomulsion blends beech wood creo-
sote by special process with other time
tested mcdicincs for coughs. It contains
no narcotics.
No matter how many medicines you
have tried, tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Crcomulslon with the under-
standing you must like the way It quick-
ly allays the cough, permitting rest and
sleep, or you are to have your money
back. (Adv.)
Per cent of students having all
grades C or better,, won by Koom
202 with H2 per cent.
Per cent not absent, won
by Room 205 with 70 pet.
Percent not tardy, tied Room 101
and Room 208 with 9fi pet.
Per cent neither absent nor tardy,,
tied Room 101 and Room 205 with
80 pet.
The final examination honor roll
for'Orange High School has been ani
nounced as follows:
Five A's: Eleanor Beaty, Necfi
Constantine, Billie Jean DeLane,
Betty Sue Hall. Robbie Jean Martin,
Elaine Olsen, Beth Sholars, Jimmy
Thomen, W. D. Weatherford.
Four A's and One B: Marjorie
Ann Arledge, Joyce Beaty, Helen
Gillet, Dorothy Lee Linscomb; Re-
bccca McCoppin, Anne McLean,
Johnnie O'Banion. Ann Raborn. Pat
"Grapes of Wrath" Ends Today at Royal
r'"T
Tfr
,s.d
y
-r-.
if
tt2tra cui[c
Raleigh,'"" Essie-"Mae Regan";'"" JeiftT
j Sholars, Verna Mae Veazey. .
j Three A's and two B's: ,-'t)orothy
i Brown, Carl Ericson, R<rj Wingate.
\ Four A's: MavjiVbe Corkern,
j Charles David, Abbigail F.ddings,
I Barbara Ferguson, Joyce Fleming,
I Mildred Goodsbll, Bonnie Jean Gun-
I stream, Jessie B. Gunstream, Hugh
Lea, Nora Ann Locke. Nora Evelyn
McDonald, Clara McGill, Mollie
Mjirer, James Oliver, Elizabeth Ol-
sen, Vivian Ousley, Betty Perry.
11 vi' rt n: c.ieanor neaiy, iNeen i l ''
Cochran,. Bertha Constantine, Won* J Mae ,°ll,c Spaires Ho-
! mer Stark, Jean Weaver, Shirley
Webb, Harold Wright.
Three A's and One B: Juanita
Armstrong, Fred Arsenault, Gloria
Borel, Ervine Depwe, Mary Dodd,
Mary Ruth Emmert, Irene Funtcs,
Lindy Garrett, F/dna Mae Goldline, i
dine Gunter, George Jones, Barbara J •" '■
Mark with, Doris McCoppin', Forrest
McDonald, Dorace McGill. Mary Lou
Pachar. Ruth Pachar, Billy Patty.
Jacqueline Perry, Mary
Scientific EYE Examination§
red Optomatrists always
prorida tha beat
posaibla
PROFESSIONAL
GUIDANCE
.to assure
proper
SERVICE
and :
COMFORT
Weakly
Begalar fU Valae!
Begalar IB Valae!
■tati* Vtun
OlaMM
IsrMlii
■xunlnatlM
«8
lavlilbla
85 • ««wiii
• Includlns
Csamlnatloa
SI285
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
TEXAS® STATE
PORT ARTHUR
Terminal llldg.
I
ORANGE
103 Fifth SU—Holland Hotel
Phone 1017
I
1IEAUMONT
049 Orleans
• ' A
' ; >•' >' '
•!.:y.-.
:-;v •• . • -k •... .
I ■ A.
stUO I
■ f
their contracU by means of dou-
ble squeezes, playing the tricks in
the apme order. One made the
double aqueeze. but the other was
thwarted. In each case, the first
nine tricks went the same—two
hearts, four spades, the diamond
K. the club A and K. Each left the
diamond A-7, heart 9 and club 8
in the dummy, and in hla own
hand the apade 9-7. diamond 10
and club 10 *
To thia point, the defenders
also played alike. West holding
his heart J. diamond Q-8 and club
Q, and Bast his diamond J-9 and
club J-6. But When §outh played
hia spade 9 to the tenth trick, the
Weat players choae different dis-
cards. At one table, Weat toaaed;
off his club Q and Bast, of course,
his club 6. The declarer then :
played hla apade 7 and the double
aqueese waa on. Weat had to keep
hla heart to guard the dummy'a
9. mo thrfcw hla diamond 8. The
heart was then tossed from diftn-
my. Baat now was squeezed be-
tween the club and hla two dla-
monds. so declarer got the last
two triekar-
•i.. -i.'.vjj'yso
mm
■
' VI!
■
•— / /i
..
—,
At the other table, when the
apade 9 was played on the tenth
trick, Weat discarded his diamond
8 and kept the club Q and heart J.
Thus he protected the singletons
of the enemy's two holdings, so
that his partner then could safely
guard the diamond doubleton. As
a consequence.' declarer had to
lose , the final trick, no matter
what he did.
■ • • •
' . Tomorrow's Problem «
♦ 97 3
*K4 2
I 4KQ64
v- *1085
♦ 10 8854
vmsm
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f
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m
■ ;.;'i
♦ K78
~7T
♦ KQ3
m
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W ♦ J 9 5 3
S. ♦Q 9 3 2
♦ A J
« A 10 9 7
4 A 10 8 2
♦ A J 4 ' &—
(Dealer; South. North-South
vulnerable.)
How should South try for 3-No
Trump* oh tti^i deal after West's
lead '"nrth.best spade?
.....J
..-I
-->sS
The Nerve General
.. * * *
New Facts About the Hypothalamus >
Hy LO(iAN CI.K.' DKNING, M. D,
• For a year or more now I have
Iw-i-n hearing my friendx who de-
vote their interest to the functions
of the nervoytf system, refer to a
mysterious/region in the brain
called the "hypothalamus." t gath-
ered it was a sort of regulator. It
ha* much to do wRh all those
normally unconscious activities of
i&nrt.KMmcmc*et^mOamntM
Henry Fonda who aharen the starring roU- with Jane Dar\ve,(l and ('liar-
ley Orupewln In "(.rapes of Wrath" playiiiK for the lust time's today at the
p . | Royal theatre. Is pictured here as painted hy Thomas llart Itentonm fatn-
„ _ , ... _ , «'cjopn, 10|,H miint, who vit.ited the set while the film, was heluu made.
George Raborn, Helen Reid, James | .
Ryan, Celeste Smith, Bill Stark,
Louis Ulm, Helen Wilson.
The high school term honor roll
includes the following students:
• Five A's: Marjorie Ann Arledge,
Eleanor Beaty, Bertha Constantine,
Leona Constantino, Bllllc Jean De-
Lang, Betty Sue Hall, Robbie Jean
Martin, Elaine Olsen, Essie Map
Regan, Beth Sholars, Jean Sholars,
Jifhmy Thomen.
Four A's and One B: Joyce Beaty,
Necil Cochran, Eleanor Edwards, Re-
fine, Aby Green, Doris McCoppin,
Forrest McDonald, Ruth Pachar, Bar-
bara Jean Parrish. Billy Patty. Bet-
ty Perry, James Ryan, Irene Siau,
Celeste Smith, Flora Mae Smith. Ol-
lie Mae Spaires
old Wright.
MtiSIt: DEPARTMENT MEETS
ON TUESDAY EVENING
The, Music Department of the Wo-
man's Club met .on Tuesday evening
at the club house with Mrs. Forney
Jean Weaver, Har- j Fleming presiding. The meeting,
| which was previously unrufunced for
— | Monday night was not held at that
time because the .club house was be-
ing used by another orgaln/.utiori.
During the business session plans
W68Mgjfegji
/ ..
"ilfefes
Si*1
irssaEmts
* ' ''TPa
MIX-UP SEWING CLUB
MEETS WITH MRS. LEHMAN
Members of the Mix-Up Sewing
Club-met in regular session on Wed- I were made for the next general
b^ „MfiC.oppin, Amt..Raborn,'. W..D,.| QftSEta... afkroom^...at-2Jltt^
^Weatherford, Pat Raleigh. I "K' home of Mrs. L. Lehman. Sev- ! ruary 7, at the club house. Members
Three A's and Two B's* Carl Eric- i en members, the hostess and one vis- of the Music Department will be hos-
son, Helen Gillet, Dorothy Lectins- ■ llor- Mnt- BllL'k errttKrm:-were in at--f
comb. Anne McLean, Johnnie O'Ban-
ion, Verna Mae Veazey.
Four A's: Gloria Borel, Jarvis
Butler, Mavinee Corkern, Charles
David, Abbigail Eddings, Barbara
Ferguson, Mildred Goodsell, Ruth
Granger, Bonnie Jean Gunstream,
Normandine'Gunter, Hugh Lea, Mir- i . rt . ...
>, _ „ . „ . .. i in Brunei- Addition
tam MacFarlane, Nora Evelyn Mc- | , ,
Donald, Dorace McGill, Mollie Mil-1 V
ler, James Oliver, Elizabeth Olsen, I UOGFH WILLIAM-K CHAITKK
Jacqueline Perry, Mary Prejean, Hcl- j MEETS WITH COUNSELOR
en Reid, Homer Stark, Louis Ulm, j The Roger Williams Chapter
Shirley Webb.
:™Tbrec""AJtr-and™-Oikt-&r~ "TOumiff
Armstrong, Fred Arsenault, Mirian
David. Mary Dodd, Edna Mae G6ld-
Southwestern Greyhound Lines
Bus Station—505 Green Ave.—Phone 252
Open 24 Hours
EAST
2:59 A. M.
4:55 A. M.
9:34 A. M.
11:14 A . ML
1:55 P. M.
4:40 P. M.
8:10 P. M.
8:55 P. M.
11:29 P. M.
WEST
2:15 A. M.
6:23 A.
9:00 A.
lliOOA.
11:43 A. M.
1:30 P. M.
5:10 P. M.
7:50 P. ML
10:28 P. M.
ma
PoK Arthur Division
Basses Leave 17:20 A 11:45 A. M.; 4:35 P. M.; 8:05 P.M.
Arrive From Pt Arthur 9:30 A ll:10<Hlif.; 2 A 8 P. K.
BUS STITIOW TAXI—PBOira SU
m
m
fp1
■a
tendance.
Mrs. Maurice Garrett was honored
with a shower after which refresh- j
ments of sandwiches and a drink j
were served? ~
The-next meeting will be held on j
Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock I
at tlic home of Mrs. Maurice Garrett i
Icssck'at thiit -trmf
The program on "Contemporary
American Music" was led by Mrs.
E. D. Parmer. Mrs. Fleming played
a piano solo, "Sunrise and You"
(Penn).
The next meeting will be held on
Mondaj evening. February 10, at the
club house. All members are urged
to attend as a special musical pro-
gram yfiII be g^ven.
of '
| the North Orang^^auUaluJ^bJiCShLj
FI N CLI H MEETS WITH
DOLORES IRION
• The weekly meeting of the
Fun
New l}ndtr-arm •
Cream Deodorant
utftly
Stops Perspiration
met Tuesday night In the home of > was TTeld on Wednesday nfter-T
their counselor. Bill Strother, with j 'K>,'n at (oul
six members present. J Dolores Irion
Carl James gave the devotTonarrPr«;9eH4:i ,
and'iSam Parrish Cooper K-d the j.f""'W'd by games and light refresh
IVclock a (the home of
with six members
Dr. Clendening will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column. 1 ■
the body, such as the movements
and secretions of the digestive
tr«ct, the temperature of the body,
sleep—well aa moods, emotions,
personality reactions, it perhaps
even regulated the regulators of
the(body-~the ductless glands, the
hypophysis which lies hear it in
the brain, the thyroid and adrenal
glands.
As I was profoundly ignorant
of this region, 1 was happy to llnd
last week that I could purchase a
book on the subject. It is a very
large book for such a very small
subject. But I have found it most
interesting and as far as a man
can who has just read D70 folio
pages, I now know about the hypo-
thalamus. 4- • l
. .. JJmall Piece .of Nervous Tissue-
It is, as I say, a very small bit
of nervous timue—this hypothal-
—uutus, It is -a very-old- part-of the
nervous system—present in ani-
mals far down in the scale of life
before they have acquired a brain.
It lies at the very bast; of the
brain, near the hypophysis or pitu-
itary gland, ft has nerve connec-
tions with the hypophysis and
with many parts of the sympa-
thetic nervous system which con-
trols blood supply, stomarh and
Intestinal movements, temperature
regulation, blood pressure and,
through them, emotional response.
"Here," said the late great L>^.
, Harvey Cushing, "in this well-
conceaied *pot44e thtr-verr w«inv'
spring of primitive existcnco —
vegetative, emotional and repro-
ductive."
prayer. Installat^f>f) of "officers' was
held with last year's officers being
installed with the exceptiori of Earl
Cooper, the new secretary-treasurer.
The meeting will be closed with a
■"■I"' "
The next meeting will be held on (,'LtJB MEETS ON WEDNESDAY
rmruary— '
ments were served.
The next meeting will be held on
I Wednesday at four o'clock at a place
' to Ik? announced later. 1
t
TT.'"3t"trf f?™Wimf "nt—*art
Cooper. All members are requested
to attend as the mission study will
be started at that time.
1. Does not rot dresses, does
not irritate skin.
2. Nowsiiingrodry.Csnbeuscd
right after shsvir
l.twwartj
for 1 to 3 dm. Eeinovcs odor
^ m mm ^ A1 ■ ■ m i,
trom perspirscion. Ti i^
4. Apure,wh>te,gr-sseless,stsin-
less vanishing cmm.
id has been awarded (he
eal of the American
f Lsundcring fot
) hibrici.
ART DEPARTMENT MEETS
FOR BUSINESS SESSION
| A business session was held by
| members of the Art Department of
the Woman's Club on Wednesday af-
flL
V lara of Arrid
LTryalastodayl
ARRID
TTdden presided and led in the
discussion of plana for a trip to New j
Orleans, La., on February 19. Other
plans for the coming year were
made.
Eight members were present for j
the meeting of the Christian Ladies j
Sewing Club bn Wednesday after- I
noon at two o'clock at the home of j _
Mrs. William I cke. '
During- the sewing hour garments
and fancy work wore made to be sold
lor the benefit of the First Christian
Church. Thes<; articles are for sale
at the home of Mrs. W. B. Boswell in
Bruner Addition and at the home of
Mrr*A~7;"KTinir/c!. IMIfl Fifth gtre^T
nerve physiologist, Dr. FosUr
Kennedy, it is "an instrument in
command of vital rhythm."
Symptoms of Disturbance
To put into ordinary language
symptoms that are associated with
disturhanee Imwm—(A^-4—waed-
sleepiness when it is depressed,
and insomnia when it is stimu-
lated; sudden heating or cool-
ing of the body; (8) unnatural
weight increase, especially in chil-
dren (Frdhlich s syndrome); (4)
wnter imbalance in the body —
great thirst for no obvious causal
(5) motor irritability, even con-
vulsions. ■
The temperature responses pre-
sent n condition that must bo fa-
miliar to many.
TIie clinical picture ii,dramatic.
Most striking is the rsptd mo of
temperature, the relative warmth
of the trunk and tho icy dryness
of ti « tutlMmilMa.' Vwoim-WotA'
ing often appears in non-depend*
ent portions of tho skin of tho ex«
tremitics and less frequently in
the trunk. The small hairs stand
on end and there is Complete ab-
sence of sweating. (anhydroaia>.
Thus it is evident that heat loss |a
reduced to a minimum as there ia
no sweating, and blood flow in tha
skin of the extremities is greatly
reduced.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
C. M.:—"I would like to knot*
how many pounds a week a pea-
son would lose by having only 3fW
calories a day. (2> Could a pen-
son lose weight by drinking only
a pint of milk a day?"
Answer—(1) On .lOO caJories la
day, a person should lose abouit
•thretrptrtmdlls^ilelcr'TRtircal^'*
'MM
lation is based on the assumptloi
that the body will use its own
lat to replace energy needs.~ity-
A.pint of milk a day is certainly
a reduction diet but not a we®
balanced one. It should not ha
continued for more than a week.
V, S,: "What are the different
ways goiter, may be removed?
What do you consider the safest
way for a very weak person?"
Answer—A goiter sometimes
goes away of itself. This is par-
ticularly true of the small enlarge-
ments of the thyroi<4 occurring in
adolescent girls and the small
„ gQlters that apngtr In —ylnna-
where the Iodine in the soil is
poor. There is no ccrtain way to
remove a hirge goiter except by
surgery. Kubbing medicine on
the -ontstrhrw paiiiljng -it with -
iodine will not decr«ase_thfl sice
of the goiter.
EnirOK'3 KOTE: Dr. CWUnlns.
pamphleU •vhlrh can !>«• be
r«A«f#rt. Et« h fiem'phlet MtU tnr^yf rcitU.
with • thr^cenf iUnt|>, ia
r.l^ndwinir, |njAifm nt thie P ]^«
. lirmmii n<i f'nii*tip tiofl",
"Kolurinar "Inf nt F«M-
ln«". for th« Trmttnuxtt ol
Di>IxtM1 «rnIM'n Mwion*" anil'"1m
Car* nt tin ntlr an<t Stkln".
m Mum
BLANCH ROSE WALKER
Y. W. A. TO MEET
The Blanch Row Walker Y. W. A.
of the North Oraftlfc Baptist Church
will moat in regular session on Mon~
. ■ .. day evenibg at the home ol Mm
ifci,tm >e/ LaUV (&•! ..' BU«n Nelson. The program is to be-
0a Hi 7:30 o'clodc. ^5.: ,Wh-4S -iity
At the Close of the meeting a salad
course was served with coffee.
Next Wednesday afternoon, at two
o'clock the club will meet at the
home of Mrs. Schnitzel.
North Orange Baptist Church meet- r ZZ7 wi
ing at the home of Miss Marie
Strother at 4 p. m.
with ^District Ju<fi&t .■ If.
Adanis fh vhiirge. ~ "Court wTIf con-
vene at H a. m.. on the <>penlng day.
it was stated.
fi
f
To Open Monday
Social Calendar
FRIDAY—
Friday Sewing Club meeting at
the home of Mrs. Gus Oulley at 9
p. m.
.Mildred Lm /unor O.jA. of the
February term of district court op-
ens in Orange county Monday. Feb-
Nervous
Girls! Can't Sleep? The «a*l
Cranky?
■n't Rkst^HOI
lv* lltM-atiae of female
(unctlonal "tllsorderK" causing
monthly dlstresa? Then try l-ydl*
B. Plnkham'a P«getable <!o
ponnd, Ptnkhani's f'ompoaad
fantous for holplnu ach ri
nervous ri.ndftlows
iali) Jor. woio'e . „
I NO! Any dragster*.
RestlMar
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1941, newspaper, January 30, 1941; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth308043/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.