The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 151, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1947 Page: 1 of 8
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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utli in nnnnu
’ >?W- -r
The Leader’s editorial yesterda t
1 .-ought quick response from the
subject. Foe something direct from
the individual discussed, see Col-
umn fl below.
VOLMUEXXXIV
Trumon on Measure
Parley Opened Today
-
' ; 'fr «t > -f !
I "-'mm
ge Leader
C
m *m
vtnoi a __._
.. ..
By The AsNctst “ -
. ^r~. - ■
1 East Texas
afternoon, tonlgiit and
Little temperature change,
erate to lrcsh south winds on
coast. .....
Aaaaclated Press
i — Partly cloudy l
ORANGE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JUNE 27. 1947
NUMBER 1?1
|
i ial
Pittsburgh, June 27. (AP) —
With nearly two-thirds of the na-
tion's miners on strike and a fuel
shortage pinching steel mills and
railroads, tire government -pre-
pared for an exit from the soft
coal business at midnight tonight.
Actually the U. S. flags at the
mines, symbols of government
operation, will not be lowered un-
til Monday noon, but tonight the
miners will begin a 10-day vaca-
tion with pay granted in their
contract with the Naval Coal
Mines administration.
The government took over the
mines du ing another strike —on
y 21, It 16, after little or no
>al had been dug for 59 days.
Walk ut Began Monday
! The prese.it walkout dated onr
, ly from last Monday when Con-
gress overrode President Tru-
man’s veto of the Taft-Hartley
labor bill. Within a few hours
several thousands of miners had
left the pits: today the number
idle, mainly in protest against the
new law, had grown to more than
a quarter of a million scattered
over 11 states.
The return of the nation’s 2,500
mines in 22 states will, leave still
unsolved the problem of what
will happen next July 8 when the
miners’ vacation ends. No wage
contract between the mine own-
ers and the A EG-Uni tod Mine
Workers has been signed; the
miners have always maintained
“No contract, no work.”
mm
mm
Officials Meet To
Discuss U. S. Aid
Plan for Europe
' By Harold W. Ward
Washington, June 27. (AP) —
Leaders ,o,f 8,000.000.000 CK) mem-
bers, cautioned by President Tru-
man along with all labor and
management to live up to the new
Taft-Hartloy law, gathered today
to draft a program of contest or
compliance.
CTO President Philip
convened his 51-memb^h
tivp board to hear an
minute sizo-up of the
as compiled by the
REPORTED BEATEN-
By Joseph E. Dynan
Paris, June 27. (AP) — Foreign
ministers of Great Britain and
Krance started consideration to-
day of an European economic re- lion's' entire Wt at?
covery program linked with Am- neys ,or each of the «
erican aid. There was no official
indication of the Russian attitude
?WV£***™ bat
.lartOr'"' ,w..... . ______
.itai^y of;#ti*tc Marshall. test strikes, althouglTAFl
»tAuthoritative U. S. and British
sources in London said the United
States and Britain had reached
the “broad conclusion” that the
aid program should be operated
Mrs. Uvon .outside the United Nations frame-
tons met hero ye
General Counsel
Idea Re
ic Russian
f" Marshall Plan- out .» ; Idea Reject#*”
i and Fremftifjava wel- Both the API. and the 1
iRopdsal of *0. .S. Sac* reicctiktrihc idea of gem
State Marshall. test .trikes, although AF
If* P ,1
FORD SETTLEMENT
REPORTED TODAV
i Detroit. June 27. IaF' —Set-
Tement of the dispute between
* the Ford Motor Co. and its 110,-
000 production workers was re-
ported to have been reached to-
day wit’) only formal approval, by
' higher company and CIO United
Auto Workers’ union officials re-
quired to formalize.
col Scout Board
isits Stark Camp
The executive board of the Sa-
bine Area council of Boy Scouts
had supper at Camp Bill Stark
Thursday night. Following sup-
per there was a short meeting af-
ter whic/i the men attended the
Stunt night program.
Board members attending from
here were Judge Sid Caillavet, A.
J. McKinzie, Julius David, and j
George Colburn.
Putnam (above), a juror in the
Ovcrell yacht deaths case, was re-
ported, m Santa Ana, Calif., by an
authoritative police source to hr.re
been beaten up by an unidentified
intruder who broke into her house.
(AP Wirephoto)
Jester Vetoes Five
Of Bills Remaining
As Deadline Comes
By Dave Chraveiu
Austin, Tcias, June 27. (AP) —
Gov. Beaufort} H. Jester Inst night
formally wound up t’he acts of
the 50th legislature, chopping,,—,.............. ,—„.
down’ five of the last seven bills 1 Patch, economic advi-or
work. A French cabinet spokes-
man said last week, however, that
thi projected European Economic
New York, effective next year.
commission woqld work "within”
the framework of the United Na-
tions commission for Europe es-
tablished earlier at Geneva, with
the U. N. commission a planning
board and the new commission an
operational and functional organ-
ization.
The conferees were V. M. Mol-
ofiv of Russia, Ernest Bevin of
Britain and Georges Bidault of
.France. They met privately at
4:15 p. m. (9:15 a. m. Orange
time.)
Bevin arrived Just before Mpl-
fVfiv. Bv via was accompanied by
"Alfred Duff Cooper, British Am-
bassador to Paris; Edmund Hull-
to the
foreign office; and a private sec-
retary.
Russian Ambassador Alexander
Bogomolov and two carloads of-
advisers arrived with Molotov.
Orange Teacher Is
that remained on his desk lor ac-
tion before the midnight dead-
line on nis power to veto.
The measures killed were those
which would have:
1. Prohibited fcatepities, so-
rorities and secret societies in pun-
lie high schools and jtmior high.
2. Pro ided mandatory salary 1. , v-p/s I • *
raises of; .15 per cent for officials j In IN I jL Library
of 11 counties and permissive -
salary raises in the/same percent-
age for those of 73/ counties.
Hospital Bill Dies
3. Authorized/creation of pub-
lic hospital districts by county
commissioners courts and the
levying of a tax to pay for build-
ing and maintaining such hospi-
tals.
4.
dent William Green told report-
ers yesterday that unions j
throughout the nation were urg-
ing him to call one to last “until
the act is repealed.”
Instead, Green called a meet-
ing here July- 9 of the heads of
the AFL’s 101 unions, to go over
the law and determine a program
of policy — the same type of ses-
sion fixed for today by Murray
and the CIO.
President Truman made, his ap-
peal for compliance by employers
and unions in a formal Statement
at his news conference late yes-
terday. He called upon bc^th la-
bor and mnagement “to egbrclse
patience and moderation iA ac-
commodating themselves the
changes made necessary by the
act.”
Must Respect Art
. “In accordance with tt»«? con-
stitutional processes or our gov-
ernment,” he said, “we must all
respect its provisions;-*
Mr. Tinman formally pledged
that despite the enactment of the
Taft-Hartley law over his veto, he | definite decision
will do fill in his power to make
sure the act “is well and faith-
fully administered.”
■/*-
*
m
C.I. O. Heads Meet To Draft €iaurse of^Rghton Labor Bill
End at Midnight
JURIST URGES
QUICK PASSAGE
OF UNIVERSAL
TRAINING LAW
U. S. Claims Force *
Was Used Against
Greek Government
PiBI
Navy James
EISENHOWER D*CORATED Secretary of Navy James V.
Forrcstal (left) inspects the navy distinguished service medal he pre-
sented to Gen. Dwtgiit D. Eisenhower, army chief of staff, ;n a navy
department ceremony in Washington. The citation was for leadership
in the North African theater in November 1942. Earlier Elsenhower
disclosed he has accepted the presidency of Columbia university in
Washington, June 27.' (AP) —
Former Supremo Court Justice
Owen J. Roberts declared today a
world cgikis is Approaching and
Called oh Congress to strongthon
this nnlioit by pr omptly retting up
universal fTrllltarj training for
American youths
lie told the House Armecl Ser-
vices committee that tf. 8. sMM-
. By Max Harrebon ~~
Lake Success, June 27. (AP)—,|a
Tho United States today charged
that Yugoslavia, Albania gnd Bui- fl
garia had violatrd fundamental <■
principles of the United NatioWH
charter by using force against
the territorial/ integrity and po- ;
litlical Indcpenldcnce rtf Greece.” J
This accusation was made bo. -
(ore the security council by War-.®
ren R. Austih, Chief f. S.. Dele-J
gate, as council begin debate
on the voluminous report of “
Baikan it}vesMisBitg con
Upholding the empmit-tion’s mriJlf
" e*So«
in/a
(AP Wtrephoto)
Dies Promises To
Announce Political
Intentions Between
Now and Joo. 1 .
Huntington; Tex., June 27. (AP)
-Ex-Congressman Martin Dies
was quoted here today as saying
he would announce hi$a potyticul
Intentions by the first oi the yesr,
and hinting he might oppose Sen-
ator O'Daniel (D-Tcx),
U. S. TURKISH
AGREEMENTIS
EXPECTED SOON
By John M. Hightower
Washington, June 27. (API
;JIV United SUdes- U. expected
xlgirK'*' N'frefttienf with Turkey
the next feW days 'providing for
a $108,000,000 modernization of
He told ( layte Pinion, mnuag- I the Turkish arqyy.
ing editor ot tlie Angcline Coun-
ey News, that he had made no
yet but added:
Leadership Class
Walker Address To
VFW Rescheduled
State Rep. Mi Her Walker sched-
uled to speak last week to Post
Denton, Tex. (Spl.) - Isabel!”757 of 'hc °ri,"«c Vclcran“ ,,f
Japkson. administrative assistant i fore,«n V^r® wlU ar’l,c;" ,,n lts
in, elementary education for the ! ,,rogram Wednesday evening at
range elementary schools, is one
“There seems to he a wide
spread relief reflected in a recent
j>oll that Senator O’Daniel i.
through politically in '1'exas and
that !om''oric wi|I succeed hint
next time.
The agreement similar to the
one signed with Greece June 20,
is being negotiated at Ankara by
American Ambassador Edwin C\
! Wd .on. *
The negotiations have moved
forward f’o“'ly, according to dip-
lomatic infui manta here, because
Turkish, olliciida wanted to/rjos- |
trtry weakness Is hastening th*
crisis and failure to ihdre up the
country's defenses “will lead us
further down tho old familiar
road of appeasement of . . J
aggressor nations to an,, all-out
shooting World War 3.”
Roberts challenged point by
point arguments against universal
training, declaring the United
Nations Is incapable of prevent-
I ing a War and added:
Trained Citizens Essential
A trained citizenry diffused
i through- thfi, bopul*tlon is the o»-
' nentlal and only organtzation that}
[ can provide us with dctcnsetvc
strength in the atom age.” j
Without such a force, he da-
rlured; there will- be "edm^ete
| collapse” In the event the .nation
is attacked by r.itlins possessing
atom bombs and weapons for
Waging bacteriological war.
Roberts said he was disturbed
by reports that Congress might
adjourn without acting on training
bill and urged the lawmakers to
postpone a .acatlon until “this vi-
tal and urgently needed" legisla-
tion is passed.
The congressional effort to write
foreign import curbs Into a do-
mestic wool support price bill
appeared doom today.
Chairman Hope (R-Kan) con-
ceded that the House will follow
tho Senate "and pass a measure
.. ca«a f;
“They have in (ml l^ep
sew;
signed tp prevent, and have vl
luted, the most miportartt of ti.„-
baste prineiplcs tiisPh which oug ;,
organization was founded.” jv
. He pointed nut that Bulgaria j
and Albania were not members?
of tho V. N„ bpl said "this does ’
not mean that they are not gull- j-
ty of. having used force in contre-
dietlon of the principles of JhAsi
United Nations.”.....
7:30 o'clock in the Gilmer Homes
f 20 librarian, and teachers rep- I Community center. He will speak
:________s.______.______ in. on the work of the recent session
to /T J$IS~ . f ■ ■ rr
4. _ . • . without the tmitf-fiuota featviw
sure themselves and (heir conn- , . . n ,. . “
- i« ,u i • t. ii,i j < u whCh rresident Truman dtsop*
• ■ m >>>■> 4. c , try that the United is not i A ~
Many p-ople in the Second jj f f .. provetL The bill would re-
Congressional district are urging 1impeHahsm” m "conLtton I vi^ »'* K«-^rnment’s wartime
me to return to C ongress. Be- ' i support prices.
rear''few'll T ["T ■ ""i The “inqmrial'l.sm" issue is one I , M,-Tlu/™n vt^A hil1 «iv*
year, I will reach a decision and i ...... , ...... ,...... ,.......ling him the turlff-quota powers
Action Krnuextrit v<®
Austin then called upon the
counctl to take the “action neces-
sary to prevent further support of
the Greek guerrillas by its-«iorth»i|
ern neighbor* so that Greece may
determine its ^iwn destjny within!
fta right* as a sovereign member
of these United Nation*." |
Austin at the same time pro-
posed formally that the council j
approve tho commission’:; recom- i,
mendtatlons lor U, N. machinery ~
Wh nei);lrnor:i have iciimmafi fwm- /
tiers.
CommlsHion Asked
Hi* proposal ralicri for either /
a neutral commission or commlSt p
slonef.t. he sent to the area for a }
minimum of two years, with in*4fi
etrutstionii to report to the secure ('
Uy council at least one every
three months.
will announce it in a radio broad-
cast,"
plugging hard in connection with I
He contended that the i:ew pro-
visions would be a * Irjagic mis-
LET'S DO
SOMETHING
ABOUT IT!
**•
I resenting schodls throughout the i , ,,
j state enrolled in the North Texas ! , le 5,1 il *' lesislature did on
. ! State college library leadership. ! rcteht ",<ltJer8 Pertaining to vet-
Transferred control ofA thc workrhop tilrg conducted during i c,'“n*' Joc H"n,K'is' Jr- '>olit rHm*
(State school for thc deaf at Aus- j ihg% mtw %ar^tlra nf tUn ,ltB¥t_ | mander, announced.
j It will be Judies' and
| tin from the board of control that j
I
l
4
■ 0R0BR*
DEVELOPING AGRICULTURE
in Orange county and adjacent
areas is an item that should by nq
means be overlooked. In view of
improved methods of reclamation
and the available assistance, Or-
ange sections could be greatly en-
riched by the reclamation of
thousands of marsh lands that
may be made to yield all manner
of things that would be of use to
mankind in the sustaining of life.
5EE ORANGE FROM THE AIR
is a general' admonition of those
who have ridden many of the
planes, that may be seen in the
skies from Ihe ground in this sec-
tion. Some of thc most attractive
pictures of the Orange area that
feature Sabine river and tributar-
ies to include numerous lakes,
will be shown in a special publi-
cation in the near future. Those
who have not seen Orange from
the air cannot imagine just what
the scene presents.
the tirst six weeks of the sum-
mer session.
A revised (jehool Library Hand-
book for Texas is the major
5. Set up mechanics for the ab- [workshop project, according to
olition of the Lamar junior r' *—
Dies is noXv practicing law in
Lufkin. While iri Congress,
was nationally prominent as heart
of Itic Dies committee.
j !u!peris S'Amrehi1. op|msilmnTo {l’ikc" lh*
he , Communist expansion In thc Mid* Quest tor freer world trade and
administers all eleemosynary in- \
Stitutions, to a separate board.
I night and barbecued chicken will
I be seined all in attendance.
His statements here were in an-
guests' swtr to an cditoriid in The Or-
col-
lege district and for transfer of
the junior college property to the
senior college which the legisla-
ture finally failed to establish.
TAX Measure Signed
Jester signed the much-con-
tesfed bill which extends for one j sultant for the
Elnora Alexander, director. The
vgorkshop is being held by NTSC
in cooperation with the Texas
State Department of Education
and Southern Association of Col-
leges and Secondary Schools.
Mattie Ruth Moore, state school
Pencils and Tin Cups for Sightless Outmoded
ange Leader yesterday which pre-
dicted his return to politics.
jV-------
Port Arthur Man Tails Eagles How To Be
Happy and Self-Supporting Though Blind
; die East,
{ At the same time the Soviets
i have been applying steady propa-
ganda pressure on Turkey for both
l a military share in control! of the
| Dardanelles and for the cession of
! the Turkish provinces of Kars and
i Ardahan to the Soviet Union.
Thc -fact, however, that lius-
I stun pressure is not acute now-
i when the American position is
j strong und clear—-Is regarded here
j as highly significant.
that they would be considered a-
broad as a step on the “road tc
economic isolationism.”
Soon alter tjic veto message
reached Capitol Hill, thc Senuti
Agriculture committee approved
and the Senate passed a measure
restoring the support price foi
iombstte wool through 1948. This
will mean resumption ot govern-
ment buying through the Com
modity Credit Corporation which
has been suspended since April
—»#k; •
Some of the marvels a
an done-quarter years tax remis-
sions to all counties which lost
regular remissions when the
library supervisor, is special cpn- JmHn can accomplish with the; 't'1
group. ! proper psychological outlook and
tion
state failed to levy a general | ment and making recommenda- -der
fund ad valorem tax in 1946. I *:— —J — «— *-■-— 1
His actions—-finally wound up
five hours before thc deadline-
brought to 471 the unofficial total
of bills finally enacted by the
50th legislature. The total num- |schools and elementar? schools'
ber of measures introduced was j
During the six-week period the ; n,e help of a “seeing eye" dog
workshop is, examining the condi- ; wcre brought out in the anniver-
of school library develop-j sary meclin8 0jt thc Kraternal Or-
i making recommenda- }qer 0{ Ragles Tuesday night in
I tions and plans for the future. , {he wow haU wtlen Sidney J.
These recommendations include ; Barnileaux of Port Arthur ap-
material to be used in the School j peateq as guest speaker. His sub-
Library Handbook and state lists ; ject wai! -A BHnf, p0rsOn's Troub-
of library material for high jes" jn which he outlined various
experiences he encountered in
training for and with his dog, «s-
VFW Building Fund
Campaign To Offer
1,333. Jester vetoed 12 all (old.
Delinquent School
Tax Drive Reported
Producing Results
Bonnie Bland To Be
In Talent Contest
—_— [campaign for collection of delin-
FARM TO MARKET ROADS in quent tdxes for the Orange Inde-
Bonnie Bland, “Miss Orange of
1947”, will participate in the mid-
night show of talent in Beaumont
July 3, sponsored by the Beau-
mont Jaycees, it Was announced
today. The program will begin _ __ _
Indications today were that the HM* h> the Jefferson theeter. |tree cenis rech
Orange county promise} a revela- pendent school district would be
tion in progress that but few peo- successful, following a number of
pie have imagined. When a net- , conferences held by Ross Terry,
work of farm to market roads art ’tax attorney for the school dis-
available, the rural districts Will trict. Quite a number of the
become exceedingly attractive , property owners delinquent in the
with new and improved homes payment of school taxes have
where all the comforts of life paid in the past few days, accord-
in the ing to Mrs. Winnie Carter, tax col-
(lector-assessor.
that have boon available
cities will be enjoyed.
Miss Bland will compete with
Miss Port Arthur and Miss Port
Neches in a talent contest The
winner will receive a Kx20 oil
painting wtth a gold leaf frame,
compliments of the Shadow Art
studios. Lynn McClain of Luf-
kin who won the “Miss Texas”
title will present #U awards of the
con teat.
Ticket* art on sale'at thc Jef-
ferson theater box office.
serting that the dog is not train-
ed- for the purson. but the person
for the dog.
No Pencils for Him
Barrilleaux also stressed that
anyone who wants to be success-
ful can be, in spite of physical
handicaps. He declared it a "mis-
understanding'’ for a man “who
sits all day on the sidewalk sell-
ing five-cent pencils for twenty-
Since becoming
blind four years ago he has con-
tinued working after first going
through a school of training men-
tioned above. After that has been
able to support his family and
educate his son, whom he will
ny Pa\ ia, who pointed to the
blind man’s ability to indulge In*
many sports, including diving,
swimming and dancing, much the “)f^) an AwnrHc
same as hc did before losing his M* nnulu5
riftht. | Donors to the Orange post, VCt-
Movie* Shown , erans of Foreign Wars, building
’ Also Included on the program,! fund drive will receive awards
were a moving picture by the U. j totaling at jeagt ?l,262..95 in re*
S. Army recruiting service; an
address by Herbert C. Otey, vice
president of Texas State Aerie,
F. O. E.; and several dance num-
bers by students of the Ingram
School of Dancing.
Dance routines presented were.
•‘The Bowery” with Ben Irene
McDonough and Robert Judiee;
"Confetti" with Eloise McKinley,
turn for their donations, it was
announced today. Merchandise
such as radio, gas rjinge, home
laundry, shotgun'; Urps, vacuum
cl«aificr.\silverware, bicycle, fish-
ing tackle, etc., hove been given
by local merchant* fdf use in the
campaign, it was stated.
Announcement of the names oi
A House Merchant Marine com-
mittee sought to find out why U
S oil is being shipped to Russia
wnen there is talk of a gasoline
diortage In this country. Arm-,
Navy anti Interior department of-
iclal* were called as the first wit
nesse*. The investigation wai
ordered after Chairman Weiche!
(R-Ohio) announced that alx
American built and owned tank-
•rs are transporting some 500, •
»00 barrets of petroleum products-
to Russia,
Jimmie Hull Will
Produce Show for
Pilots Club Hero
Jimmie Hull is expected b«ek *•
iff the city some time in July to
begin work on a musical-comedy
Jiow to lx? sponsor,!
? d by the Pilot’s clubt
omc time in September. Setting 4
if thfe exact date ot the show Uta
being held up (tending his arrival,^
t wfo announced by Mrs, J. Fsif8
IttlUvan. finance chairman of th#|
dub. ji
Proceeds of the presentatiodyM
vhlch Mrs. Sullivan stated ”is]p
mped to be nit successful as the}."
faycce Rainbow Minstrels,” will}
;o to the Pilots' Evergreen reroe-,} j
ery fence furfd. "We later plan : *'
Vr,
. it ,,
[M* ■Tvr
does this through safety lecturrs
over thg area and as dealer for
the Crosley home freezing unit*
out ol Port Arthur.
The speaker was introduced by old LeBtanc
Jeanine Howard, Carey Ruth
IJeon, Kay Reed, Ruth Edgar, Bar-
bara Sigler, Hazel Rose Johnson
and Jerry Nations; “Going to a
Party*’ with Jean May and Har-
old LeBlane; “French Dolls” with
Frances Beauchamp: ‘Stepping
Sam'' with John Glen Pou and
Mack Cozby; ‘Twists and Turns"
with Hazel,gose Johnson; "Wood-
en Soldiers’’?with Jeanette Win-
frey, Jean May, Janell Guiliiot,
enroll in college thi* year- He S*»y Edgar, Frances Beauchamp,
Catherine Ann McNeil], Bert
Iren* McDonough, Antoinette Gi-
arratano, Judy Beth Cozby, Fran-
ces Jones, Robert Jfudice and Har-
donors who will receive the fret
merchandise will be made in Strk
par,k on August 18 at 6 p,, m,
Other developments:
Radio—the Progressive Citizen*
of America said • bill to amend
the communication* act would
’curtail and prohibit freedom of
speech and expression of opin- j
n assist in i sizing funds to go to- ■
yard building of the municipal ’ I
wimming pool, establishing of '
Girls’ Haven and other worth-
vhile projects for Orange. ” the ;
:halrman said, “but right now the
laying off for election of Ever-
;reen’s fence Is our primary ob-1
iigalion and must be taken care
•if first” ’‘1;
The club is asking for Volun-1
(ears to take parts in the musical *
■oroedy in (September, auditions
.'o'- which Hull will take cm his
return to the city. '
im
VFW official said.
tion campaigns to “legally quall-
POUCE REPORT
-On* white woman of Riverside
was Jailed by city police .Thursday
for refusal to pay fine following
complaint against her for allow- political party
ing her dog to run loose withou tended that ,n many C1
having been vaccinated against
rabies.
vtdual* or groups supporting
^ . ,, opposing candidates cannot
connection with car theft, 1 for
drunken*** gnd dlriudbing the
rnace, 1 for indecent exposure
and 1 for vagrancy
•V
ORANGE JUICf *
Mrs. R. Lee t»vi» on the phone
today mistaking present joriety;
editor for Enla Ma#( Tsrnsrl ‘
Commerce committee. The or-| J m *7* youre back
been hearing
ia*!
ganizatlon particularly criticIZhd |
touldVifmff l1 ST radio^ in"*^- : tor ymJ to
society editor
fled" candidates or a
reeularlv ! hcr with ,h* Elga Mae j
» a con “ *on* ««xL th« way « lo<*» 1
, indi. now' Orange will just
to grin and bear It » *
The retail cost of buiitlin* ma-
terial* in the United States is
about double their production cost.
J. P. Sullivan, finance
of tilt pilot clnb full
for the club's
in July under
will produce the
’:r
:.v ‘
Hi.
i -
m
rl r-'rftrv
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 151, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1947, newspaper, June 27, 1947; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558459/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.