The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 213, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 8, 1957 Page: 3 of 26
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SUNDAY, SEPTEME
Tht PKANGE LEADER_PAGE T^REf
Veterans of Foreign ^ors Plan
District Cone lave in B eaumont •£ 8R&S?SI
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the A jpint mee^~ting of all posts and of road wnrk-
Secrir't District win hn'd r convert- auxiliaries w«—1[ be held at 10:30 None are in Orange County i
lion Sept. 14-15 in Bemtmont^in a m. A banqi_^*et will follow at 12 Low bids are expetted to total
jlfie headquarters of the Beauifforttlnooe at whicfci Ren. Jack Brook* 16«mlll;on dollar*. About 67 miles
I Post No. 837. ' will be prmci -pal ipeaktw / of work will be done on farm
| A nre-conventlon smoker Is Separate bt_^*jintsi session* ar* roads and 114 miles on state and *
ischeduled for Friday and all mem-scheduled at 2 pm. .fames 0. U S. highways.
I here with a t»58 paid-uo member- ShaMi>til-t commander, will be .. . .....A* i
iship card from any post in the d's- in charge of win post session and Apples were being grown - fa ■
itrict will be admitted tor Jaalf Mrs. Grace "Er'.ucker. district lax-1 Nova Spotia as Airly as 1635
it, will be In charge —r-----— -'4-~
’a meeting ,in Hotel M Mi
Legionnaires’will begin registra- Beaumont,
on Sep*. 14 at It a m." A rehabili-
‘AT*. W . WOSItl *lr.HTS .r«r«vri>
* ORLONS
* 321» 3«
* MIX AND
MATCH
•CIAL PURCHASE SALE!
FALL COTTON
FABRICS
s *«* »* wifuua mu mw
SPECIAL PURCHASE
PretrnlinH ific A rtf
SUM. SUEK, SdrMSHttlEi
SHEATH
£ VI M €
LEI ’S GO TO LEVINE’S!
a .’"••••
wmM
’ yi
Texas, Pennsylvaniq Couldn't Win j
Two Precedents Cited in Use of National Guard
* ’.iv... ,
I't ■■ / v ' ’ ' '
tHE Lime WOMAN
WACw^Trw cB” . |broujatht the first big ahawdownjstate conservatic
^WASHINGTON, Sepy’l i4i-Tex-j on the respective power of federal I The governor directed Brig
•s Bvt neighboring Arkansas an and state courts."-In the Texaa Pen t.™h e\ur • - +------
tgo. So did Pennsylvania, a thou
jj*nd miles and a century and i
Mlf away.;. •
"5i?hb0rinRJ XrkMS,J an a"d st*f« courts." In. the Texas! Gen. Jacob F\WoUef»W the Tqx-
fcif.Tfi Z *.rm • L*8l,t*r!ce t0 c,ss the Supreme Court gave pne as National Guard to take com-
j ri y m the ,urhu:ent °f most positive, clear-cut op-Imand of the situation and to taka
not on d*yM quarter century inions on use of troops to balk a. steps to uphold the law in accord-
federal court. ’ |ance with orders from the gover-
The Texas case had its originpor relayed through State Adju-
in 1331, in the depression days I tut Geh. W. W. Sterling,
when' -hot oil” was being pro-1 A„ the *el|i, in the area were
tiuccd in disregard of national and; Shut down by military (pree. Some
state efforts to hold down output.!0f the oil operators contended
A U.S. court enjoined apphea-i their right* were violated because
tion of an administrative order ,he Constitution guaranty they,
restricting production. can't be deprived of Jligir property
Gov Ross S. Star inrpro-without due process of the law.
claimed martial law in several! ~ * ,IC. Court uph(W
, Texas and Fea-n s yTVa n l a
"w couldn’t win. They gave way be-
fore the power of the U.S. Su-
preme Court. Their defeats may
be additional precedents for Gov
Orval E. Faubus and his use of
the Arkansas National Guard to
try to prevent racial integration
in a Little Rock high school.
There have been other instances
i» which states used their mill-
the federal peace
of its“agen were
But the Pennsylvania' one ful
•Tary forces to defy
government dr some
East Texas counties which he %ML/V ,‘u*, . ■ - „„
were in "a state of imsu rrection.3^ ther* was no
tumult, riot, and a"breach of the Wurrect,“lor
because some
in
production in violation of the|
insurrection
™ Squill
ergency to just-
"knd issued an
s t interference
‘n w“»with the rights of the operators.
The governor tritpk the case to
e supreme Court, arguing his
AkGee Bend Dam Necessary
To Defense, Civilian Economy
By MAX B. SKELTON
HOUSTON, Sept. 7 UK—Oil
| the____
jproclamatioB of mprtial law was
supreme and unchallengeable
Jict‘* w^jch- was not subject to
Hew pf federal courts. In a
MCGee Dam on the ASgeffifa Wv^rply worded unanimous opin-
„ er in East Texas. I0". by Chief Justice Charles
fineries require a tremendous voP hS\ort rec.a!,«>1 ,,hat a
ume of fresh water and the De-shorta"e crisis ,ast ycar nearly. deCTared on Dec. 12. p32.
fen*e Department is backing Droi- forced a ma'or sbutdov/n of thej ‘if this extreme position .could
ml wh^h Kua antee an ^amolc nation s' mosf conBested refining be well taken, it is manifest that
Sly 8 P arca les* thbn 100 miles below the ,he fiat of a state governor, and „ . . l w
“Oil' is the life of a modern!^' ffm “tC- . i. :20t.‘he Cowtitution of the United B&0W L-CSt YGOf
mechanic
NO JOB
too llKCt
01 100 SM4U
'4-
“Your chinge, madam.’
-------
life • of a- modern
kwar machine,
McGee dam site.
Just 20 square milea- in the States, would be the supreme law
|tkfioii service officers meeting is The expedition l«l bv Dr. Mar-
planned for 3 pm. the same day cus Whitman Bn Iffi, which result-
,with thp public invited. ed in the es.mbiishnent ol a mis-
I Officials who^Fill conduct the sion «l Walla Willi, wa* the first
service officers meeting are Rob- party to cros a the Rocky. Moiui-
lett O. Pugh, department service t*ins with wo-jnen, ’ ,t
nfftcer,* Miles Wasson, of the VA
!regional office-in Ilduston/'J H.
(Mitchell of the Veterans f Affairs
Commission in Houston,
| Also Harry Weaver pf the Beau-
mont VA office; Richard Mothner,
(Texas State Employment*Comraiis- .
Tsion; Lvmon Brewer , director of j J
the Social Security office with all r
county and post service officers
from throughout the district. |
O;' n house is scheduled from;
15 to fi p.m and the day s activities i{
' will be climaxed by a dance at
9 p.m. with the Hernandez Combo |
Band furnishing the music.
On Sept. 15 at. 8:30 a m. the
• such Mrrour tiuimid Micnank^
• I XHRT MINT iMUHOOVSHOf
• COMF1 Ml CUSTOMU SATISFACTION 7
BORDER c*wu>
in StviMM sr
DIAL TU I |1*<
High Woofer Usage ^ ^ SL?i
Second - grader Michael Joseph Rf;,umont Past Commanders Club
Felker, 7,. was killed by a car on wi|| honor all past commanders
a total of 112.733,000 lhe Buenavista - Borger axgres- an(j thoir wives *and all past aux-
week at ground breaking «re- ^ stotaireFininsca Dacitv the u,n^H the 0r,n|!e *y*tom In St. Joseph s Catholic School yester-.hands at a breakfast In the
Orangefield Briefs
i -Shaft...
industries are producing about 11 jity of wfiich the state may at any by'Witimer
million barrel* of oil products an-; time disclose by the simple pro- The hichest
of „... ijgtec
time
nually for the armed forces. cess pf transferring powers j^j was
RE 5-31781 He said McGee, when completed ^t0 Jhe governor to be: pumping"'of
Mrs. G'. A. Scales, Ph.
ORANGEFIELD (Spl) - Roy in 1362. will guarantee a year-
Lee and Debra Grace Granger, round supply of fresh water need-
children of Mr,- and Mrs. Leroy.ed to insure production of oil
Granger, returned home Saturday products at present rates or at
from Orange Memorial Hospital increased rates made
where they each underwent a ton- j by emergencies.
slllectomy Friday. B o t h children This was one of the reasons, paramount authority of the fed-creased the
are reported as recuperating nice- he said, that Army Engineers dur- era] Constitution." jto 81 miles,
Mrs. S. T. Dickey
ST* ■”s” hK
-j the ir
!crewf
i • onxthi
rmy
ing the Korean war listed McGee
returned to as one of the nine most necessary
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank projects for the nation’s defense
‘;’s stay and
Peveto Friday after a week's stay
in Frances Ann Lutrher Hospital,1
essential civilian economy.
Just below the dam site, the
on Aug. 10 with the j"
2,790,000 gallons n *
of 4,- »
N _________ ,........ During A
"Under our system of govern-1 the month, w- ^»ter d e p a r t m e n t •
ment, such a conclusion is ob-'crews install^ed 3,300 feet of line
necessaryjviousfy urttenable.- There is no on the Jack RT siand road from But-0
such avenue of escape from the;ler drive northward. This work in-
total In the system a
5,232 feet. '•
Thq renowned Pennsylvania During Augerust, 20 water samp A
"Olmstead case” was far more les were sen* to the Port Arthur w
complex. Jt dragged through the health unit fo-=** testing which show- f
courts for 30 years. The key.dgci- ed there was itocoliform organism •
sion, by Chief Justice John Mar-(present,
• •FOR YEAR ROUND COMFORT# •
PHONE TU 3-8433
FOR F.NCINEERED AIR-CONDITIONING
Angelina flows into the Neches. *hall, was handed down in 1809; It required
|RI«f?_Yhe Nechea provides Beau- by the U.S. Supreme Court. It di- of electricity
under treatment for a heart at-:AngeHna flows into the Neches shall,
tack. „ > River^The Neches provides Beau
Weekend visitors in the home of moot withta deep water port be- rected enforcement of_________
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Granger are (ore emptying into Sabine Lake by a U.S. District Court in Phil- *ach
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Billeaud and Ju« n°rth of Port Arthur. Refin- adeIphia which the sUte tnd itg pumped,
daughter. Janice, along With Miss i"8. petrochemical and chemical:Legis,atu had defjed 0ne famed
Mlleaud’a fiance, all of Houston,P^s and docka facilities are 5entpnce sajd:
Mrs. Granger’s father, mushroomed along the Neches
153,190 kilowatt hours G
to operate pumps fori
35 kilowatt hours for A
gallons of water V
^tOMMERCIAl • IKIMMmi
AIR CONDITIONING
AN-D HEATING
IJTIMATIS OLAOIY FURNISHED
WITHOUT OIUCATION
Afawwrt
Billeaud is___________________
o t from Beaumont to the lake * and
effiron. R^da Ann and Gayle ;alo"f ^ek.Texas *ide of ‘he, ,afe
rKently spent a two-week vaca-i The Sabine River on the Louisi-
tipn with relatives- in Bay,St an* border also ends at the lake
Louis. Mias. The Moran family “d the two rivers are the major
was called back to attend the fun- sources of fresh water supply for
eral of a relative in Mississippi, the Beaumont-Port Arthur refin-
two days after returning home.; eriM that can process about one
Visiting Saturday m the home of
Mr and Mrs G A Scales was Drought poses two problems to
Mr. and Mrs. o. A. scales was refjnerieg jfl !uch coasta| areas_
a dwindling supply of fresh water
and a danger from salt yvater
backing up 20 miles from the Guif
and into the rivers.
and Mrs. G. A.
Kinnard Hollis of Buna
.aefer- -Trra--m-i-vrA--.,
INSURANCE AGENCY
•aprtiwtHnp
M. W. PEARCE
TM TRAVHHS INSURANCI C&
Phone TU 3-2621
AU KINDI OF INSURANCI
Five Aii
»ir*nts Pass
-vice Exams
rant* have
suecess-
4he necessary exams
on the dvil service
■ater is prospective
z>r police department
306 SORDIR
DIAL TU 3-1433
Oiangat' V • • • • 11
Growing All ConSI-
tioning end HmIIiir
Company
Salt water forced one refinery 0 ,
to close temporarily last yearJllkel,h00<J °*
Other plants faced extreme emer-
gencies before heavy rains sent
more fresh water down the Nech-
es and Sabine.
"If the Legislatures of the sev- i^*. . "
eral states may, at wilfc annul tlVll 301
the judgments of the courts of the! Five unif.
United States and destroy the fully pawed
rights acquired under those judg- #n(j now
menta, the Constitution itself be- eligibility ro
comes a solemn mockery; and the candidates fc
nation is deprived of the means employment
of enforcing its laws by the in- Police Chief' Raymond Sanderi
stnimentality of its own tribun- identified the- tti yesterday as
a*J: * Intth Rav V^orris, 315 24th Strf
Gov. Simon Snyder called out Nederland; ~®obby Lee Vercher,
the militia to resist the decree. 12501 7th St. — Armor L. Hughes,
A / ITS,marshal countered by 206 9th St,; John Edward f ester,
summoning * — *-------- * — • * ~
LEVINE'S
se of 2,000 men. 466 Dyson
day spoke of a Young, «6V
bloodshed, which At the pr«
never materialised, and vigorous- no vic«ncie=a»
ly debated the issue of federal ver- Sander* said—
sus state powers
Behind it was a story rooted In Lake Titae
the Revolutionary War—a story of, livia border
Cta., and Jack D.
iddle St., Bf-ownwood,: \
•sent time, there are
In the department, I
Advance Sale Ladies
FALL
HATS
c» on 4he Peru-Bo-i
at 12,500 feet ia thelj
Call KEMBLE’S
drama, heroics ’ and persistence. (highest like - on which steamboat*
In one role or another, major or runjregulsrlj—*
Carrier
Summer > Winter Air Conditioning
KEMBLE PLUM CO.
405 THIRD ST.
PHONE TU 3 5668
minor, it involved names of prom-
inent men, some of them signers
of th« Declaration of independ-
ence.
Francis Scott Key, more re-
nowned as author of the Star
Spangled Banner than a* a law-
yer, was on the legal team for
the central figure, Gideon Olm-
stead. Benedict Arnold, at the
time military commander at Phil-
adelphia, helped Olmstead finance
his Jegal fight.
Olmstead wig a Connecticut
fishdlTnan. He and three compan-1
ions were captured and pressed
Into the crew of the British sloop I
“Active,” hound for New York
with military supplies.
IF IT’S
fOKtH OWNING—
It s WOir—TH INSURINO WITH
JO INER
INSURANCE AGENCY
401 Fthh
I AETNA Agent
Ph. TU 1-R3R1
’ FEATHER
VELVETS
FEUS
RIBBONS
NOVELTIES!
> Lorqe & Smol j
1 Lavish Color
LEZ V I MG
WHAT A
DIFFERENCE
IT MAKES
TO BE CERTAIN
ABOUT
YOUR EYES!
FIMSTOUAUTf
AT
MSONABU
COST
Wear while you pay
fl WIIKLY
PRECISION VISION
diet ms
dtp
&
w
When you havo glasses fitted, it's
comforting to kno,w that your eyes
have been thoroughly and scientific
colly examined for possible disease
4
or defect as well as for visual abnor-
malities . .. to know that your eyes
were fitted in glasses because they
needefd the exact corrections provided
in them.
Texas State Optical offerl you a 21
year reputation founded on finest
quality eyewear orrd eyecare at sensi-
■* . v
ble cost./Visit your nearby T$0
office soon!
ONLY EXPERIENCED DOCTORS OP
Optometry examine your eyes at tso.
Quo^Ud,
I by Dr. S. i.
WORTH
LEWIE'S SHOES FOR THE FAMILY
DECORATE
& SAVE
FOR FALL!
YOU*
CHOICE
• FLORALS.
• SCENIC!
• MODERNS
• LEAFS
• ABSTRACT
• SOLIDS
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LEVINE’S FALL FASHIONS
• 45 to 48 Inch WIDTH
•: VAT DYED COLORS
• BETTER QUALITY
• FULL
BOLTS
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 213, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 8, 1957, newspaper, September 8, 1957; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth556981/m1/3/: accessed May 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.