The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 227, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 25, 1951 Page: 1 of 6
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r
AROUND
TOWN
and County
. . ' ' • . ' • . ; i . ••
Local Woman Swims River After Being 'Booted Out' of Show Boat
Mrs. Ruby Bawsley Takes Her Second Dip
In Sabine Following Kite Club Ruckuses
By Joe Parsley
The Sabine l’iver had ariother “guest” before dawn today
who chose the wet way of escaping what she believed might
be the addition of “injury to insult.” The insult came when
she was ‘‘booted out” of the Showboat, she said, the iniurv was
JOT PAUUT.
those unfortunates who find £?’ bawsley, who tinned
themselves outside in skimpy ““ last week, was the object
of a search in the wee hours
The Orange Leader
she —
today. A local funeral home
was preparing to drag the
river lor her body when relatives
reported that she was home in
bed.
Searchers found her shoes and
purse near the Louisiana bank
near the Show Boat. She said
later that she discarded them and
entered the river at the Highway
90 bridge near the Show Boat,
and came out ‘‘by Granny’s house
down below the Texas Creosoting
clothes have learned they haven’t
enough hands to hit all the mos-
quitos who want a share of their
^ blood.
Big mosquitos too . . . in fact,
Dickie Hicks came up the stairs
today lugging one on his hand
about the size of a small turkey.
“I just wanted to show you, the
extension on his bill,” Hicks said.
"It’s just like a car’s radio aerial,
and almost the same size."
lftre. Ethel Burton, deputy
county auditor and a woman
• 1™■S'gft
_____ You mean you swam ail that
Force at the courthouse Monday distance”” a Leader reporter
with her mosquito yarn: aS reporter
"I was sitting in the kitchen «i caught a log,” she deeter-
♦ 'as* hight when all of a sudden _ ed. “This was my second time
I heard a loud ‘ka-whop’. The
noise came from the direction of
the window fan, so I went over
to investigate.
t ‘‘There, on the floor, I found
the two halves of a mosquito that
had been cut in two pieces. He
must have been trying to get in
the house through the window
•’fan, but one of the blades caught
him.”
Her yarn drew snickers and
» side glances from the two men.
Then she insisted, "1 have proof
of that, too, ' because I called
everyone in the house and show-
' - ed to them,”
"Did you Stop the fan to see
if one of the blades was- bent?”
Around Town asked.
She started pouting, and
wouldn’t say anything else.
Deputy Sheriffs Red Bland and
W. S. Wagner were talking over
the mosquito situation down-
stairs. Wagner said one of the vwaj
O mosquitos attacked him, and was court has appointed Judge J. Ber
about to drain him dry of blood, nard Cocke of New Orleans to
• so he reached for his gun. conduct the trial of the eight.
But the mosquito saw him, and The States said Judge Cocke
they started wrestling for posses- will take over the dockett of Cal-
sion of the weapon. “I was des- casieu parish Judge Mark C.
perate,” Wagner said, “until Red pickrel next Monday.
% oame to my rescue. Pickrel, senior judge of the 14th
“He shot that skeeter right be- judicial district, had requested
» (tvaen. the eyes, then he had to appointment of a judge from out-
shoot him again before the fight side the parish to try the cases,
over.” Those indicted were:
“What was wrong with the first Thomas B. Shearman, publisher
shot?” Around Town asked. of the Lake Charles
%. "The bullet was a little weak,’
FBI Investigating
Indictments; Trial
Judge Is Appointed
NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 25.
(AP)—The FBI said today it
to swim the river, too,'
added.
“The river’s pretty cold at this
time of year, isn’t it?” the re-
porter asked.
“1 felt no pain,” she said.
Ruby said she didn’t remember
why she had been booted out of
the club. “But I ain’t goin’ back,”
she declared.
“I could have swore they were
following me down the bank,” she
said, “so I hit the water.”
She said the incident hap-
pened shout * a. in. today, add-
ing that a cousin finally got
her borne from “Granny's” at
about 7:30.
Mrs. Bawsley first became
familiar with the Sabine about
two years ago when she escaped
arrest by diving out of a rest
room window into a canal run-
ning behind the Show Boat.
By the time the officer decided
something was amiss, and barged
into the rest room, she had made
it out of the canal and to the
middle of the river.
Officers encouraged her to
“swim on to the bank,” but she
VOLUME XLVIII Member Associated Press
ORANGE, TEXAS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1951
6 Pages
NUMBER 227
Ridgway Calls on Reds to Renew
Talks Between Liaison Officers
~_V_
King Gains
Strength in
Restful Nite
until a local cab driver dived in
____,___^__^ >v and dragged her ashore on the
is investiSting'the'ktdictment '^^his month your report_
er also took a swim in the Sabine
By Don Schwind
LONDON, Sept. 25. (AP)—
A medical bulletin from Buck-
ingham palace this morning
said King George “continues
just treaded water in the middle to Cain strength” after a rest-
linivl o 7ft 1 Antn 1m ^ J ® J J^t
of five Lake Charles, La.,
newsmen and three other per-
river in the same vicinity follow-
It was the'fifth and most en-
couraging report from the king’s
doctors since they performed a
major operation on one of his
lungs Sunday morning.
The bulletin, signed by four
doctors who spent the night at
the palace and the surgeon who
performed the operation, said:
“After another restful night the
king continues to gain strength.”
Family Informed
As soon as they agreed on the
bulletin, the doctors telephoned
the good news to members of the
royal family staying outside the
palace.
Princess Elizabeth, heiress pre-
sumptive to the throne and her
husband, the Duke'of Edinburgh,
received it at Clarence house,
their London residence.
The news also went to Marl-
borough house, home of Queen
Mother Mary. With her were the
Duke of Gloucester, youngest,
- brother of the king, and Princess
PARIS, Sept. 25 (AP) — The Mary, the princess royal, his sis-
American united States, Britain and France ter.
"yaw?
sons charged with defaming three ing an “incident” in front of the
gamblers and 13 public officials. Show Boat.
Agent J. M. Lopez said the in- The Show Boat is owned by
vestigation is being made at the Claude Williams of Orange, one
request of the Justlcc department of three admitted gamblers in-
and that a report will be made to volved in the defamation indict-
Attorney General McGrath in ments returned last month by a
Washington. Calcasieu parish grand jury
The New Orleans States said against five Lake Charles news-
today the Louisiana Supreme men.
Top News Briefs
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 25
(AP)—The AFL was set today
to elect 78-year-old Bill Green,
one-time coal miner, to bis 28th
year in the presidency and to
make a strong bid to the CIO to
“come back home.”
lac bullet was a little weak, Press- William Hueli Shearman , , “V • /
s? »* *-<* “»• ~3W«r*iS8i Sras jstsstf 'sxzmr.’r
*2 But the second shot got him. He’s managing editor- Carter George " *~ « 1111 y “ c lu
down at the morgue now, await- court reporter and James Nor- lonfiwj,subJ®|ct to her peace treaty George, was reached at the home
’ cuuri icpur er, uuu James ,arms limitations. nr « Ko n-
Wednesday saying Italy “is no who gave up the throne
1 nor onKimni" 4a Ua* aa ♦ *» r« _____ _______i_ i . t it i
Communists Break off First Meeting
Over Issue of What Is to Be Discussed -
* ’ By Don Iluth
TOKYO, Sept. 25. (AP) — Communist officers angrily
stalked out of a meeting today at Kaesong but Gen. Ridgway
asked them to return Wednesday for another try at reviving
the stalled Korean truce talks. The Reds walked out when
Allied officers insisted on discussing conditions under which
the truce talks could be re-
sumed. The Allies earlier told 2“lcer left. *ho advance camp at
the Reds Kaesong was not a wltJ a messagc for ,h*
satisfactory site. The Commu-
nists wanted to get the truce
talks going right away .They de-
Hc made the extraordinary
night flight to Panmonjam.
near Kaesong, by helicopter.
manded that the first session be The message, signed by Col.
given over to plans for processing Andrew J. Kinney, under instruc-
a string of charges that the Allies tions from Ridgway, said:
had violated the neutrality of “Despite your unilateral action
Kaesong. - 7 in recessing the meeting today
Eight and one-half hours after and your abrupt departure1 there-
the Reds stalked out of the Tues- from, I am prepared to meet with
day morning meeting, an Allied you tomorrow ... at 10 a. m
(1 p. m.. Change time, Tuesday *
to discuss conditions mutually
satisfactory for resumption of the
armistice talks.”
The talks have beyn stalled 33
days.
The word “conditions” left the
situation just where it was when
the Reds walked out of Tuesdays
meeting.
The tense, 50 minute session
ended with explosive suddenness.
Air Force Col. Andrew J. Kin-
ing burial.” ton, City editor; and E. F. Brouse,
Some people are swearing the Maurice Vincent and Ernest Mil-
mosquito invastion is a new se- ier, the Latter three members of
V eret weapon the Communists are the People Action group from
using against us, but they can’t Sulphur, La
prove their accusations. The Peoples Action group, with
-Other people are swearing that the support of the American
the Red Cross is running short of Press, was waging an anli-gamb-
blqod, so they hired the mosquitos ijng crusade in Calcasieu parish,
to work for them as an emer-
gency measure.
But all of us know the mos-
* quitos are as bad as they have
ever been in these parts, and if
wc don't do somethting about
« them soon, we’ll have to grow a'
bill just like theirs and start
arms limitations.
Israel Welcomes
Mayor Impellitteri
of a friend where he is staying
while in London.
Bulletin No. 5 was posted on a
board attached to the palace
fence. A crowd of nearly 1000
lined up to read it.
uinc avu . The Scots Guards, en route to
drive st. James’ palace marched by a
jtlces in few. minutes later with their
pipes and drums silent.
.....i. The pain-wracked king reached
HUNTSVILLE, Sept. 25 (AP)— the second stage today of his fight
Steve Mitchell, 47/died in the elec- for life.
trie chair early today, a few hours While well-wishers prayed and
after being named heifc to the hoped for him beyond Bucking-
$40,000 estate of the wife be n ’
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25
(AP) — The government today
threw all available price control
personnel into a nationwide,
pre-dawn cheek of some 500
slaughter bouses in a
stamp out illegal practii
the handling of beef.
'ri.-i avtv c~r>t 9k ui ure win; tie mur- ham palace’s walls, the haggard
KS'-M1*?.
BULLETIN TELLS OF KING’S OPERATION—This is the pencilled
bulletin posted at Buckingham Palace, London, telling of the surgery
performed on King George VI to remove all or part of an ailing lung.
It bears the names of eight medical men. (AP Wirephoto via radio
from London)
No Salary Cuts Are Contemplated
Pay Hike for Firemen,
Police in New Budget
A reorganization of two city departments to allow for free garbage
American Sabres
Defeat Red Jets
In Historic Fight
By John Randolph
EIGHTH ARMY, Korea. __________________
Sept. 25 (AP)—American F-86 ncy, senior Allied liaison officer.
Sahres won the longest jet had proposed that both sides dis-
battle in historv today. Thev cuss condition-? which would
shot down five Communist guarantee uninterrupted talks by
MIG lo’s and damaged five in a chK‘lUd"col t han* < hon
35-minute fight in MIG alley- over C
northwest Knron Sa,‘ na,,y rrJ“ctrd the suggrs-
nortnwest Korea. tion, said the meeting wan end-
Thc U. S. Fifth Air Force said Pd. and headed for the door,
all the American planes returned The belief prevailed at Allied
sajely. headquarters that the Communist
The fight roared from 35,000 walkout did not signal a complete
feet to ground level. It produced breakdown»of the stalled truce
the biggest one-day bag of Rus- talks.
sian-type MIG-15 s since April 12 a Source pointed out that a
when U. S. pilots shot down four, final bieakoff could be called
probably destroyed two and dam- only by the highest levels of the
1-J- . Red or Allied commands—net by
On the ground, United Nations liaison officers,
troops Tuesday captured a com-
manding peak west of “Heartbreak ay • a ■ ■ a
"TLnuthc rus::cd eastCTn Ko- Davis Named Area
The sky fight was the longest e I
and also one of thc biggest jeD-LAr V.OI11ltlOI1(l£r
battles of the war. It involved 117 WwHUIIWHfw■
planes — 37 Sabres a gainst 80
MiG’s.
Tile mountain, like the ridge the Leader, as commanding officer for
Allies wants so badly, looks down the six.COUnty Group 17 of the
on a Communist supply and as- Texas Civil Air patrol was an-
The appointment of Sam Davis,
circulation manager for the Orange
8,1 as locrth y:„Tu:
who flew here from / WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 (AP) Medical circles believed dawn
—Senator O’Mahohey (D-Wyo.), today marked the end of the covers
'Pfc.RayGoynesls
Wounded In Action
Impelliterri
Rome today.
At r «/)/(•, iSo w,ju.,, muajf niaiKeci me ena oi xne
Insueckd^ euaid^ hoMr^nad'e lalmched a fl*ht today to recap- first—and most crucial — post-
upPoTSraelfcarmy caSet” turc an estimaUld $73<)’000-0(>0 of operative phase.
The .welcoming' party, included « ^SSS{ST^& i,e7S SLP55 SJ*
ate finance committee.
Man Seeks Alimony
From ‘Miserly* Wife
An Orange youth who spent Ihud Avriel, director-general of
more than three years as a civil- Prime Minister Davidnen- Gur-
ian prisoner of thc Japanese dur- ion’s office, and Gershon Avncr,
, ing World War II has been director of the western division
* wounded in the Korean fighting, of the Israel foreign office. The
He is Pfc. Ray Goynes, 21, son mayor told newsmen he was hap-
of G. A. Goynes, 220 Morcell py to rcpary here the visit Ben-
boulevard. According to a tele- Gurion paid him in New York
gram received by hi* father Mon- last M0. .. .. . seoarato malntonanr..
day afternoon, Pfc. Goynes was The mayor’s party later drove IS?,
wounded Sept. 18 while fighting to Jeiusalem to be received by
(with the First Marine division, (he premier. Salman Shragai,
The nature of the wounds was not mayor of Jerusalem, was to wel-
diselosed by the wire. ./ come the mayor this afternoon.
served, “but they are not as great
or as grave as those of the opera-
tion itself and the (first) 48 hours
which have now passed.”
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 25
ROYALTY GETS RAISE ................- ---------- ------- , .
THE HAGUE, Sept. 25 (AP) — and by savings resulting from the F”*1”
(AP)—A San Franciscan is suing Holland’s royal family may soon departmental reorganization.
a pay hike. Despite rising
because “she insisted upon living living costs the queen’s household
in a humble and miserly fashion has had no increase since 1938.
on her $3000 a month income.” Parliament is studying a bill to
The husband, Jacob Solomon, 67, raise Queen Juliana's income
asks $1500 a month alimony^ $25,- from about $250,000 to about
on an individual basis and providing for a 10 per cent across-the-board
pay hike for firemen and policemen is contemplated in the proposed
new municipal budget. A public hearing on the proposed budget, which through intense mortar and small The appointment carries with it
covers the fiscal year beginning • , , arms fire. It kicked an estimated a promotion from the rank of cap-
last Aug. 1, has been set by city template any salary cuts for city two North Korean battalions off tain, which Davis held as the local
commission for its regular month- Personnel.- Salaries QLthe mayor, the peak in nearly three hours of cap commander, to lieutenant
ly meeting on Oct. 9. th* atu>™ey, and most other fierce fighting. colonel.
It totals S366.830, an increase administrative employes will re- There was a comparative lull Col. Rushing said in announcing
of $52,410 over the $314,419.83 mam the same us last year. If the Tuesday around “Heartbreak the change that Davis had earned
actually spent during thc last fis- « approved substantially ridge, twice lost to counterat- thc promotion because of the job
cut year but the jump will be par- >n present form, members of tacking Reds in 14 days of bitter hc has donc in making the Orange
tially offset by revenue from gar- the police department, fire de- fighting. CAP one of thc best-organized
huge pickups from business estab- partment and possibly a few Grenade - tossing Communists and most active in the state
lishments and housing projects tmpjoye* are expected to be drove U. S. troops off the highest It will ^ Lt Col Davisi
10 per cent increases by
the commission.
No Salary Cute According to Mayor Joe Run-
Contrary to a published report nels Jr., if the reorganization
*nday, thc budget does not con- plan is carried through, the pres-
—• garbage department *~
The telegram did not state the Tonight there will be a state din- «« vm.- hmZh
-ipcatlon at which he was wound- ner in honor of the guests. 000 attorney fees, and $2500 court ^ 375,000 0 year. H«u husband,
!i h„( »»»! Ai^trh™ costs , „ , Prince Bernhard, is to be uppsed
Solomon s action, filed Monday, from about $50,000 to a^KHjK$75,
I ed but recent news dispatches
have said the First Marines were
mgaged in hard fighting at the
time in thc bitter North Korean
action known as the “Battle of
“buddy” and for-
Officers Still Hunting
Hardened Criminals
ent garbage department will be
abolished and its duties assigned
to the street department. Prev-
iously the garbage department
peak in the ridge Monday for the sponsibility under the new setup
second time in 10 days. to assist in forming and operating
active CAP units in the following
counties: Orange. Jefferson, New-
ton, Cham ber S- Hardin and Tyler.
Secret of Anisette
Saved From Blaze
[Orange iuicei
ELECTION STILL SLATED
LONDON, Sept. 25 (AP) —
Rumors that Britain’s Oct. 25
national election might be post-
poned because of King George
said his wife, Rachel, of nearby 000.
San Carlos, owns $250,000 worth
of peninsula real estate. BOMBER CRASH KILLS THREE
“She is a mysterious woman,” SABINA, O., Sept. 25 (AP)—
hc said. “She is always getting An Air Force B-25 bomber crash-
BUFORD, Ga.. Sept. 25 (API-
State troopers and county offi-
cers, hampered by heavy rains
V the Hills.'
Marvin Priddy, 21,-was killed in
action in the area on Sept. 12
* while fighting with the same out-
fit,
When the Japanese invaded the
by a Labor government spokes-
man today. Prime Minister Att- left her in 1947 because she be- the state highway patrol reported,
lee called a meeting of his minis- came so miserly I couldn’t Stand The patrol" said three bodies have
ters tonight. it any longer.” been recovered.
iSlliSl Trail of Lithofold Lagniappe Widens h~S;£S
ter. Thc family was captured •' surrounding counties were rc-
when Manila fell and spent three WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 (AP)— was employed by the firm “solely close friend of Blauner. He named leased late Monday night when
years and a month in the nearby Senate investigators today brought because of his influence,” and that the brother and sister as Jack the rain began, but state troopers
Santo Tomas prison camp before two tax agents and a wage-hour he thought it was an improper O’Connor and Marian O’Connor, ancj Gwinnett county officers
their liberation by the U. S. investigator into their developing arrangement. employed in the Newark office of maintained a tight cordon around
LUGO, Spain, Sept. 25 (API-
operated under a separate budget The sc ret of the way Anisette— Vera Browning, who used to
based on its own revenues and licorice-tasting liquor—is made hound other people when she wrote
neither its expenses nor its in- by the Augustinian monks has this column, had her own moment
come were included in the gen- been saved from explosion and fire of adsentmindedness Sunday/ Af-
eral budget. • ' for posterity. ter reading the papers and then
Under the reorganization plan, The monks have been making it preparing breakfast she started
the mayor explained, which for centuries at their monastery hunting for her spectacles again,
would become effective Nov. 1, of San Julian De Samo in the The place was pretty well tom
the expense of garbage collection village of Sarria, near here. apart before they were finally lo-
will be set under the street dc- A bottle of alcohol used in mak- cated—lucked away in the refrig-
detail at Georgia's new $1,000,000 partment in the general budget, >nS the liquor exploded Monday, crater.
prison for incorrigibles Monday. This, he added, accounts for the killing a young student, injuring Pop Guidry is stilt up in th*
One was believed wounded by a fact that the street division is 'wo rnoirks and starting a fire in clouds over that .four-column pfc-
hail of buckshot fired by guards, budgeted for total expenses of the 14th century buildings. ture of him at thc Jennings rice
high- $95,800 this fiscal year as against But many relics and ancient festival which appeared in the
the; night, kept a close
watch on a wooded area today
where six hardened criminals are
The six escaped from a work
Patrol cars cruised all
(Sec 1, Page 2)
documents, including the Anisette
recipe were saved.
armed forces in February, 1945. story of expensive gifts and big 3. Walter Doxon, an internal the Internal Revenue bureau.
Later the family moved to Or- payments by American Lithofold revenue agent at Atlantic City, Received Gifts
ange and Ray graduated from corporation to federal employes. jf. j., testified Ujat he and another Besides his gifts, Doxon said he
Lutcher Stark high school in 1949 Trailing details of the St. Louis governmnet employe drew more had received such gifts as a cam-
after starring on the basketball printing firm's relations with gov- than $7000 each as commissions era and a turkey from Lithofold
team. He enlisted in the marines eminent workers, a Senate inves- from American Lithofold while on last winter.
the patch of woods.
__:_____- - - -------;----— ---------V '
J. D. Stanfield to Head Chest Group
Soliciting Funds from Businesses
spi
later that year.
| Today's Weather
tigations subcommittee heard: foe federal payrolls. Doxon told the Senators he was
1. James B. E, Qlson, former suspended by the Internal Revenue
U. S. alcohol tax collector in New Doxon named the other man as bureau without pay. “effective
York, testify that he drew fees John L. Kelly, former regional yesterday morning,” for 30 days
from Lithofold and used his in- director of the Labor department’s pending outcome of the present
flpence to get profitable printing wages and hours investigating unit, inquiry.
Doxon also testified that the in- While Olson was in the witness
Senator Nixon (R-Calif.),
___ ____ . , .RBU at one point that it
wind* from ri*ht »o M mile* per houiv fo oison. through his office while he was amounted to a “shakedown” for
la rriodTii p. ™ Hired for Influence • receiving commissions from the Olson, as alcohol tax collector, to
Bolivar—His*> a* J.M a. m.; low ai 7:U 2. Testimony by Vonne V. Cir- firm. He said he referred one’of solicit business from beer and
i>-J”-______________. cle, Lithofold’s New York repre- Blauner’s disputed tax returns to liquor firms. Olson vigorously de-
tive, that he thought Olson a subordinate, whose sister was a nied that.
Date Pma l. S. Weather Bureau
Forecast: Oran*e and rlclnlty; partly contracts for Lithofold from firms
cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Lowest
Lake Charles American Press last
week.
Gaston Mooton was in the office
Monday to report that hL> son.
Wilmer, badly injured in a recent
automobile accident, was back
home from the hospitaL IVhile
herd the office oohed and aahed
over a beautifully carved walking
stick which hecarried. It .has sev-
eral hundred words of a message
carved on it in Old English letter.
Everett Fuller is one of
Sun rise* Wednesday St 1:05 *. m. and
'Asets *t 5:07 p. m-
. to-
s^ntat
MORRIS C. CLEMMONS
■Morris C. Clemmons, newly ap- Ibis grotto, and the American
pointed publicity chairman for the Legion Lloyd Grubbs Post No. 49.
Community Chest Red Feather C. H. Meeks, chairman of the
campaign, announced today the Orange Community Chest drive,
appointmnet of J. D. Stanfield, announced Clemmons’ appoint- lucky people who are avoided by
prominent local businessman, as ment today also. Clemmons is a mosquitoes. Hu says it’s because
chairman of general solicitation life insurance underwriter for the ‘ I’m so full of formaldehyde after
for the coming drive which opens Prudential Insurance company. years as a funeral home operator.”
Oct.-1. He will fill the post formerly About birthdays: This column b
• held by Ross D. Evahn who head- a day in advance so we w ilLhavc
workers will serve ed the publicity and promotion in to discontinue including those
on Stanfield s committee. He will the 1950 campaign. , phoned in after the column is writ-
supervise solicitation of business The five agencies participating ten. Please call us several days in
houses in (he local commercial jn funds raised during the coming advance at the birthdays. ~
area, starting Oct. 15. drive are Orange county welfare Speaking of birthdays, thrnr will
He currently serves as president agency. Camp Fire Girls, Sabine occur Wednesday: E. W. Brown,
of the Optimist club and the Retail area council of Boy Scouts of IU, C. L. Smith, Mrs. Hamilton
Merchants’ association, and is a America, Girls’ Haven .and the High, David Lee ^cLellan and
member of the Masonic lodge. Salvation Army. Mrs. C. H. Norsworthy, Jr.
-
v.tv -iY-
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 227, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 25, 1951, newspaper, September 25, 1951; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557973/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.