The Fayette County Record (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 64, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 9, 1964 Page: 1 of 6
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•UMcmrrioN Micit
Payette * Adjoining
Count loo:
On# Yaar------$3.60
•I* Month*______|1 .to
Thr#* Month*________$1,00
La Qrang* City D*llv*ry:
On* Yaar ------------ $4.00
• M*». $2.26; a Mo*. $126
READ BY. MORE PEOPLE IN FAYETTE COUNTY THAN ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER
THE FAYETTE COUNTY RECORD
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Other Texa* Countloa:
On* Year_________$420
Six Month* _________$226
Thr«« Month*_____ $1.26
Out-of-State
On* Year ____________ $6.00
6 Moa. $2.76; a Moa. $1.S0
Published Twice Weekly By The Farmers Publishing Company, Ltd., La Grange, Texas
Devoted to the Interests of the People of Fayette County and of Texas
VOLUME XXXXII
LA GRANGE, TEXAS 78945 TUESDAY. JUNE 9. 1904
NUMBER 64
FAYETTE’S 4-H
DAIRY JUDGERS
TOPS !N TEXAS
Quartet Is Going
• To Iowa National
Meet In September
Fayette county’s dairy judg-
ing team won first place in the
State eoniest held Wednesday
at ihe annual 4-H Round-up at
Texas A&M University, Col-
lege Station.
Members of the team are leff
Quinn of the Rutersville club;
Janice und Donella Dopslauf,
La Grange club; and Andrew
Kruppa, Hostyn club.
The team will next compete
in the National 4-H Congress
to be held at Waterloo, Iowa, in
September.
Awards were given for the
best score in judging each
breed.
The Fayette team placed
first in Holstein judging, with
young Kruppa emerging as
fourth high point individual.
For this, team members were
presented plaques and the
coach, Asst. Co. Agt. James
Halbert, was presented a tro-
phy by the Holstein-Friesian
Association.
In Jersey judging the team
placed second, with Quinn be-
ing second high individual.
Overall, Quinn was third,
Kruppa fifth and Janice Dop-
alauf ninth in individual hon-
ors. Members and the coach
received pins and certificates
in recognition of their winning
effort.
Erwin Janies Zoch of the
Winchester club placed second
in the tractor operators’ con-
test, and was awarded a gold
watch. Tractor coach was Er-
win James’ father, Erwin T.
Zoch.
The poultry team of Donald
Moerbe, Susan Batelle, Leroy
Janda and Charles Koepke,
coached by Halbert, placed
10th in the state.
The livestock judging team—
Daniel Vacek, Ferdinand Kle-
sel, John Kohersky and Jimmy
Sladek—placed 15th. Mr. Hal-
bert and Frankie Joe Cernosek,
Schulenhurg, were coaches.
In the public speaking con-
tests, Sidney Holec placed se-
venth in the boys’ division and
Rose Kruppa placed 16t,h in
the girls’ division. The grass
judging team of Marvin Wick.
Dennis Migl and Eugene Mit-
clion did not place.
Mrs. Knutzen Rites
At Round Top Sunday
Funeral services for Mrs. Se-
die Knutzen, 53, beauty shop
owner at Round Top were held
Sunday afternoon at the Von
Minden chapel in Round Top.
The Rev. Martin Obst officiat-
ed and burial was in the Flori-
da cemetery.
Mrs. Knutzen passed away
at the Fayette Memorial hos-
pital Saturday.
She was bom on June 26,
1910 in Fayette county, the
daughter of Mrs. Laura Seibert
Weber and the late Fred Web-
er. On December 6, 1934 she
was united in marriage with
Joseph E. Knutzen at Round
Top. She owned and operated
Sedie’s Beauty Shop at Round
Top.
Beside her husband and
mother she is survived by one
son, Douglas Knutzen of
Round Top; five sisters, Mrs.
Louis Muske and Mrs. Harry
Muske of Burton, Mrs. Dennis
Sacks and Mrs. Warren Fricke
of Round Top, and Mrs. Ernest
Monn of Carmine; and four
brothers, Landis, Floyd and
Ciiivey Weber, all of Houston,
and Fred Weber of Austin.
Koenig Funeral Home direct-
eel the funeral.
INSTALLATION SET
La Grange Chapter 484, Or-
der of the Eastern Star, will
hold an open installation on
Friday, June 12, at 7:30 p. m. in
the Masonic hdi.
Here’re the two top-ranking
members of the 1964 graduat-
ing class at Round-Carmine
High school.
Left is Thomas Louis “Tom-
my” Doerr, class valedictorian
with an average of 98; and at
rif^ht is Jimmie Hinze, saluta-
torian, whose average was 95.-
37. Tommy is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. H. L. F. Doerr Jr. of
Carmine, and Jimmie’s parents
are Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hinze
of near Round Top.
Both youths will enter Blinn
college at Brenham this fall.
For Vital Contribution
COUNTY’S DAIRY FOLK SALUTED
HONOR GRADUATES AT RT-C HIGH JJJJ
" REFUND ISSUEDj
BY ELEC CO-OP [
,3400 Patrons Get
Rebates On 1952
Service Purchases
Nearly 3,400 patrons of Fay- |
ette Electric Cooperative re-
ceived patronage refund checks
June 1 on electrical service
they purchased from the Co-
j operative during the year 1952
Over $79,000 was returned
to ihe patrons, making a t<>ta 1
of almost $365,000 that has
been refunded in the past se-
ven years.
Each patron received his pro
rata share of the refund de-
pending on the total amount he
paid for the electric service he
consumed during 1952. The re-
fund represents the amount
member-consumers paid in ex-
cess over and above the actual
cost of the electric service'they
used.
Refunds are authoriz.ed by
the Fayette Electric board of
directors after careful conside-
ration is given to the coopera-
tive’s financial condition. Suf-
ficient financial reserves, to
meet any unforseen emergency
which may occur at some fu-
ture time, must first be main-
tained before a refund may be
made, a board spokesman said.
Fayette Electric Cooperative
presently has 4,830 member-
consumers connected to its 1,-
670 miles of distribution line.
Electrical energy is purchased
and distributed froth five sub-
stations located at Pisek, La
Grange, Weimar, Schulenhurg
and Flatoniia. These substations
are owned and operated by the
Lower Colorado River Author-
ity.
In spite of the movement of
rural population to urban a-
reas, the cooperative has con-
tinued to grow in number of
I members, miles of line, and
j improved facilities. The growth
i is primarily attributed to the
increased demand for electrical
service through the use of
automation and modern conve-
niences now available in the
rural areas, the hoard aide
said.
TWU GRADUATE
June is Dairy Month, the
time of year when people all
over the nation give a special
salute to the dairy farmers of
Fayette county and the entire
dairy industry for their vital
contribution to America’s eco-
nomy, health and welfare.
In its 28th year, June Dairy
Eight Minors Fined
For Beer Possession
Four minors pleaded guilty
in city corporation court here
Saturday morning on charges
of minors possessing alcoholic
beverages, and each was fined
$18.
The quartet was apprehend-
ed Friday night by City Police
Chief L. R Ulbrich.
Three of the group were
from Burton and the other was
from Warrenton, Chief Ul-
brich said.
Saturday night the police
chief arrested a West Point a-
rea youth for “minor in pos-
session of alcoholic beverages.”
He pleaded guilty Monday
morning in city court and was
fined $18.
And also Saturday night, De-
puty Sheriff Vastine Koop-
mann apprehended a Sealy a-
rea trio at Swiss Alp for mi-
nors in possession of beer.
They were fined $20.50 each in
JP court in Schulenhurg Sun-
day morning.
Two others—adults—arrest-
ed by the deputy for affray at
Swiss Alp were fined $25 50
each at Schulenhurg Sunday.
ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde E. Owen
were at Childress Saturday to
attend the funeral of Mr.
Owen’s brother, Robert W.
Owen, 61, who passed away at
his home in Dallas Thursday.
Mr. Owen, a mechanic, had suf-
fered two heart attacks several
year ago and had never fully
recovered from them. Also sur-
viving are a son, Robert Lewis,
in the service and stationed in
Florida; three other brothers
and four sisters. ,
Month is the largest single dai-
ry food sales and information
campaign and one of the oldest
celebrations in the food field.
There are 142 dairies in Fay-
ette county, part of the almost
1,500 dairies in the 62-county
Houston milk shed represented
by the South Texas Producers
Assn.
These dairy farmers produce
7'A million gallons of milk an-
nually to supply the dairy food
needs of the nearly t^ree-and-
one-half million persons in
Southeast Texas.
This giant industry, comprise
ed of hundreds of people and
thousands of finely-bred dairy
cattle, increased the economy
of the area by more than $34
million in 1963.
During June is Dairy Month,
the government, allied indus-
tries, agricultural equipment
manufacturers and suppliers,
banks, power companies and
many more join in a “milk
toast" to the dairy industry.
Orby H. Hallmark
Dies At Waelder
Orby Hiriam Hallmark, 64,
passed away at his home in
Waelder early Thursday morn-
ing following a lingering ill-
ness. Services were held Fri-
day afternoon at the Baptist
church in Waelder and inter-
ment was in the Waelder ce-
metery.
He is survived by his wife,
Hildagarde Bolling Hallmark;
two daughters, Mrs. Bob
(Jeanne) Ray of Dallas and
Mrs Marion (Audrey) Porter
of Slephenville; one son, David
of Houston, and five grand-
children. One sister and four
brothers also survive
Mr. Hallmark was a brother-
in-law of Mrs Pearl Kainer
and Werner Bolling.
LADIES’ BALL GAME
The ladies' softball teams will
play Wednesday night at 7:30
and 9. Jax Beer and Pearl Beer
play the first game and Mike’s
Fabric Shop and Harris-Gaert-
ner play the second. The pub-
lic is invited.
New Classroom To Be
Added To SH School
Sacred Heart parish will
shortly begin on its addition to
the Sacred Heart school.
A classroom will be added to
the east side of the auditorium.
Adolph Matocha, contractor,
has been engaged to do the
work. The addition of another
classroom is necessary due to
the increase in enrollment
which will reach the highest in
the history of the school.
Much work was done last
year to improvise additional
space for conducting classes,
however this year it was found
even that will not serve the
need.
TO BEAUMONT
Miss Mary Kaulbach left
Sunday for Beaumont to spend
several weeks with her niece,
Miss Helen Bailey.
First Session Opens June 15
HERE’S ROSTER AND SWIM CLASS TIME TABLE
Following is the student ros-
ter, along with time table, for
the upcoming American Red
Cross swimming instructions
to be given at the La Grange
Recreational Association's pool
this summer:
Fir*t Sesalon, June 15-July 9
8-8 30: Gregory Hunger. Richard
Wagner, Lora l.ee Illume, Bruce
Dopslauf. Debra Blnha. Daryl Boat-
right and Dirk Lurk.
9*8:46 Daniel Wood, Donald
Wood. Douglas Hlaha and Oary
Kuehn
8:46-9:30 Lonnie Gunn. Billy
Miller. Howard Llndeman, Oary
Dlera, Randy Otto, Thomaa Guen-
ther, Peggy Altinann, Jimmy Leg
l*r, Mike Shoppa, Roger Moellen-
b*rndt, Anna Katharine Schmidt
and Cynthia Hengat
9- 9:30: Micky Muany, Mark Mu*-
' ny. Georg* Wright. Gary D. Hoel-
Hi-her, Danny Mu*ny. Onry James
llelola, Travis Gunn and Harold
Llndeman
| 9 31110 Sieve Huialer. Klatrn- M
| Warhol. Alan Jecmem-k. Iloae Ma-
rie Liaka. Doris Jean Llaka, Marie
Hoffmann, Margie Musiiy, Joyce
Ann Hlbrloh, Dennia Relota and
Beverly Jane Belota.
9:30-10:16: Rtirkv Schott, Paw.
Istt Tlelaoh. Roae Rorkrrt. Christ-
Ine Jnnak. Stephen Cltxler and
Glenda Moellenberndt
9:46-10:80: Carol von Minden,
Dorthra Scholl, Suay Moellen
hermit, Tony Dooley, Gl*nn Davla
and Melody Mueller
10- 10:30 Patricia Ann Chovanac,
Mary Lou Mayer, Jimmy Guenther,
Belay McCormick. Wayne Zlm
merhanael, Michael Kovar, Delira
Jecmenok. Connie Greemnn, Phyl-
lis Voelkel, Jeaale Petrlch. Betsy
Preytag, luirry I'lbrlch. Alice Hala-
ler. Carol Ann Liaka. Donna Marl#
Znpalar and Kathleen Slnhtner
10:30-11: Jackie Stueher. Terry
Lynn Dlppel, Rugene I-arrlmore. Ja
nice Sumhera. Mark Freeman, Bll
| ly Kuhena, Jimmy Zlmmerhaniet.
Judy Guenther, Charlea Mayer,
Dennia Winkler, Quinn W’llllams.
Brian Prauae, Cynthia Schul*. Don-
na Cook. Alfred Petrlch, Gary Lee
| Janda. Lyman Curtla Smith. Lucia
l Williams. Stephen Hrhadek. Wes
j ley l.ee Natimann. Gary Dean Din
pel. Charlea Lee Schul*. Neal Mil
I ler, Kenneth Zapalae and Rebecca
1 Ann Cook.
1 (8*m 8W1M CLASS, Page 2)
Jungmichel Wins Solon Post
Demons Run String
To Eight; Defeat
East Bernard, 6-5
The La Grange Jaycee De-
mons ran their South-Central
Texas Amateur League victory
skein to eight Sunday, nosing wg
out the East Bernard Maroons, 1
j 5-5. at East Bernard.
The Demons collected nine ®
WINNER
The Texas Wobian’s Univer-
sity 61st annual spring com-
mencement exercises were held
Sunday, May 31 at Denton
with Dr. John A. Guinn, TWU
president, delivering the ad-
dress. Graduating seniors re-
ceiving degrees included Min-
ella Fritsch, bachelor of
science, nursing major Mr. and
Mr. C. W. Fritsch, Rt. 2, La
Grange, are her parents.
Last Rites Held For
Mrs. Izouise Fricke
Last rites for Mrs. Louise
Laura Fricke, 74. were held at
the Bethlehem Lutheran
church in Round Top Monday
afternoon at 3 o’clock. The
Rev. Martin Obst officiated
and burial was in the Florida
cemetery.
Mrs. Fricke expired at her
home at Round Top Saturday
A native of Round Top, she
was born on January 10, 1890.
the daughter of the late He.t*-
rnan and Ixiuive T-ecoin 'JfOS-
enberg. On May 22, 1910 she
was married to George Fricke
at Round Top.
Surviving are her husband;
two daughters, Mrs. E. M
Rogers of New Jersey and Mrs.
Odis Jones of Houston; two
sons, Hilmer Fricke of Cat
Spring and Vernon Fricke of
Bay City; five sisters, Mrs. An-
nie Carter of Bellville, Mrs.
Mattie Finck of Houston, Mrs.
Doilie Finck of Rosenberg.
Mrs. Emily Habermacher of
Sealy and Mrs. Ollie Enochs
of San Antonio; two brothers,
Herman Rosenberg of Bellville
and Marcus Rosenberg of Ken-
ney; five grandchildren and
five great-grandchildren.
Her parents, two brothers
and one sister preceded her in
death.
BRENHAM MILLERS
DUE THURSDAY EVE
The Brenham Millers and the
Jaycee Demons are scheduled
to play a non-league contest at
Fair Park here Thursday night, !
June 11. Game time is 8 o’-;
clock.
basehits, including a two-run
first inning homerun by Ricky
Blume, off the Maroons’ Billy
Gerbermann, but bits of erra-
tic fielding and throwing al-
most gave the game away in
later innings. East Bernard got
but six hits off Demon Right-
hander Robert Cooper, who al-
so went the distance.
After EB got a run in the
second on a single by Vic Vogt
Jr. and two groundouts to
make it t-2, the Demons count-
ed once in the fourth when Bil-
ly Fritz lashed out a long dou-
ble but pulled a muscle when
rounding second.
The hometowners went one
ahead in the bottom of the fifth
when they rallied for three
with but one basehit. La
Grange got out front again
wuht« trip, of their own ip the
sixth to make it 6-4.
The Maroons got their final
talley in the eighth on a walk
and two throwing errors.
Blume had a single to go
with his round tripper and Jer-
ry Call singled three times and
swiped two bases to pace the
victors’ offense Vogt with two
for four led the losers.
ATTENDED GRADUATION
Mrs. Linda Lenert of Olden-
burg spent two weeks in Hous-
ton recently and attended the
graduation of her grand-
daughter, Miss Una Mae
Lange Miss Lange graduated
from Stephen F. Austin High
school with highest honors, be-
ing the third highest student
out of 401. She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Lange.
INSTRUCTOR
Three From Area
Get SWST Degrees
Three area students were a-
mong the 300 Southwest Texas
State college students at San
Marcos to receive degrees at
the 61st annual commencement
May 31. They were:
Sarah Jo Oeltjen, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Oeltjen
of La Grange, elementary edu-
cation major.
Mrs. Audrey Frers Huene-
feld, daughter of Mr and Mrs.
Henry Frers of West Point,
bachelor of music education.
She is a 1960 graduate of La
Grange High school.
Nancy Lee Vitek, daughter
of Mr and Mrs. Raymond Vi-
tek of New Ulm, bachelor of
science in education. She was
graduated from St. John’s High
school in Fayetteville in 1960.
Mr and Mrs. Atlan Wiemken
and children returned to their
home in Angleton after spend-
ing part of their vacation with
the C. A Wiemken family and
the Alfred Voelkels.
CHARLES H. JUNGMICHEL
. . . New Representative
REPRESENTATIVE
RACE BY BOXES
La Grange
Koliba
212
•lung.
1106
Rutersville
14
76
Plum
42
62
Ellinger
99
30
Fayetteville
115
83
Willow Springs
17
28
Warrenton
35
67
Round Top
21
92
Carmine
32
57
Nechanitz
15
26
Warda ...........
7
38
Winchester
3
72
West Point
16
77
Muldoon
3
82
Black Jack
7
21
Cistern
14
59
Flatonia
85
155
Praha .
49
1»
Ammannsville
71
7
Holman
25
37
Swiss Alp
41
26
Engle ............
46
21
Schulenhurg
261
219
Dubina
42
14
Absentee
6
79
Totals .......
1278
2553
| Beats Incumbent
I By 549 Majority;
Pool Tops Baker
I' Charles H. (Charlie) Jung-
michel of La Grange, a former
i high school teacher and foot-
ball coach who now is in the
j | insurance business, Saturday
won the Democratic nomina-
tion for state representative of
District 46.
With runoff primary returns
complete from all three coun-
ties, Jungmichel had an unof-
ficial total of 5,619 votes to 5,-
070 for the incumbent, Rep.
Homer L. Koliba Sr. of Colum-
| bus—or a 549-vote margin.
Jungmichel took his home
county of Fayette, 2,553 to 1,-
270, but in his home county of
Colorado, Koliba swamped his
opponent, 3,340 to 1,678.
Bastrop county made the
difference, giving Jungmichel
a landslide 1,348 to 355-vote
margin.
In the first primary Jungmi-
chel polled 5,741 votes over the
three-county district, with Ko-
liba receiving 5,670 and Carrie
Carter of Elgin got 1,610.
Fayette county followed the
state trend in renominating
Joe Pool of Dallas as US rep-
resentative-at-large. The latest
returns from the Texas Elec-
tion Bureau gave Pool 355,063
to 267,975 for his run-off oppo-
nent, attorney Robert Bake of
Houston.
Pool received 1,897 to Ba-
ker's 1,855 in this county,
which had a run-off vote total
of 3,848.
TexfMt *Rwj!>nl>!ienns nominat-
ed George Bush, Houston, as
their candidate for the Novem-
ber general election against the
Dems' Ralph W. Yarborough.
The nearly complete but' unof-
ficial run-off tabulation gave
Bush 49,658 to 30,122 for Jack
Cox.
ANNOUNCE ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fajkus
of Houston proudly announce
the arrival of a baby boy,
Brian David, born in Heights
hospital in Houston on May
29. The little fellow, who
weighes seven pounds 12
ounces, was welcomed by two
brothers, Michael, 8, and An-
thony, 3. His grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Psencik of
La Grange and Mr. and Mrs.
Jim V. Fajkus of O’Quinn.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Kovar Sr. of
Plum.
HOUSE BURNS HERE
A vacant tenant house just
north of La Grange and near
the old Mecklenburg road
burned down at about 10:45 a.
m. Friday. The building was
beyond saving by the time loc-
al firemen arrived on the
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Kermit John Beseda and
Miss Ruth Agnes Jurecka.
Waldeinar John Huebner and
Miss Catherine Ann Dittrich.
CROP PROSPECTS LOOK OK, BUT
TFS’ HOLDING KEY TO OUTCOME
Joe Hillin, above, is the in-
structor for the four-night a-
dult dairy short course which
is being held at The First Nat-
ional Motor Bank here Mon-
day through Thursday of this
week. Hillin is with the dairy
science department of Texas
A&M University. The Ln
Grange High school's vocation-
al ag department is sponsoring
the course. . ...
Fayette county’s crop pros-
pects this year look as good or
perhaps better than they have
at any time since the banner
1959 eropyear.
That’s the way County A-
gent Clinton R. Bippert sums
up the current situation follow-
ing the recent rains and spit-
checks in different parts of the
county.
Cotton growth has been real
good, and some of the earlier
plantings are in pink-and-white
bloom The flea hopper did con-
s.derable damage, the agent
| says, but there’s plenty of room
|<> i the bottom half of the stalk
for further squaring. However,
it will depend a lot on whether
or not the "flea leaves us a-!
Bill Pokorny Dies
Here Sunday Night
Willie C. (Bill) Pokomy. 71.
retired auto mechanic, died
suddenly at Fayette Memorial
hospital Sunday night.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock
at the Koenig Funeral Home
chapel with the Rev H. E. Be-
seda of Nelsonville officiating.
Burial will be in the I.a Grange
city cemetery.
Mr. Pokomy was born in El-
linger on May 7, 1893, the son
of the late Frank and Veronica
Bubala Pokomy. In 1919 he
married Miss Bertha Hlinsky
at Ellinger. They were blessed
with one son, Rueben, who has
preceded his father in death.
Mr. Pokorny was a life time
resident of Fayette county,
having lived the past 20 years
in La Grange. He was a World
War I veteran and member of
the local American Legion post.
Other survivors besides his
wife are his daughter-in-law,
Mrs. Marjorie Pokorny of San
Antonio; three sisters, Mrs.
Mathilda Dornak of Ellinger,
Mrs. Sophie Cloat and Miss A-
lice Pokorny, both of Eagle
Lake; two brothers, Sylvian
Pokomy of Crosby and Otto
Pokorny of Ellinger; one
granddaughter, Mrs. J. B. Te-
ters of Ballinger and one great-
granddaughter, Melisas Kay
Teters.
lone” and on how had the wee-
vil population will be, Bippert
stated. Some "good, hot” wea-
ther would help the cotton sit-
uation a lot now, he added.
Corn prospects are as good
as ever, what with timely rains
and more intensive fertilizing
setting excellent growth. There
was some com blown down by
high winds that accompanied
the Saturday, May 30. rain,
which can cause cut yields in
these areas. There also were
several isolated spots where
corn and other crops were bad-
ly damaged by hail that aocom-
nanied the wind and rain the
previous weekend.
The milo crop is “as good as
‘ (See CROPS, Page 2)
TO CONVENTION
Attending the Texas Fire
pien’s and Fire Marshal’s As
sociation annual convention i.
Dallas Tuesday through Thurs
day noon will be Chief Stan
ley Webb. Jesse Lee Smith, K
A. “Moe” Moellenbemdt atv
Cahble Godby. They wi(l b
accompanied by their wives.
BILL DUPUY DIES
Friends here ihe weekeni
learned of the death of W. H
(Bill) Dupuy, county agen
here many years ago, wh
passed away Friday at Pales
tine. Funeral services wer
held at Palestine Sunday. Sur
vivors include his wile ani
two sons.
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Sulak, L. J. The Fayette County Record (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 64, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 9, 1964, newspaper, June 9, 1964; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth988590/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.