The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1927 Page: 1 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
♦
e '
9
i
**********-****--
VOLUME X
ll
i
From 10 Cities
BERTAUD READY TO TAKE OFF
NO NEWS EROM
GLE ON
1
*
WAYTOBRAZIL
1
WASHINGTON,
J
The Widgeon
and
the Ortolan were dispatched to
West
a
I
6
Wu
M
ki
3
4
ble >•
Harvy
been losing heavily at
*
IN GOOD FLOW
I
the stret scantily clad.
his
ped in the 4 loset of a hallway where
$
nel
been dead
BEAT ELECTION
-
ir Columbus hospital, Chicago,
h
and
*
in charge
Rouge, L.a., post for
representn tives will rejdice
Orders ware recelv
from
npent at—Covington, Ia
ha
promoted from
penitentiary at Hunts
time
STATE BRIEFS
sportsman and yachtsman.
When the automobile
three
from
here after it is
unloaded, preparatory
to
estate grounds Septerber 3.
obtained
The car in
ing
the
him, was maid by police to have been
a bogus
been
HEAVY SrORMN
BANK CIOSFD
cias
ngers knelt tn hysteri-
especlally
fatter
mimsione, announced.
. SAN ANGRLO — Manta
on-
capital
blew railroad trackage in yArds here
internationally noted archi±
prces are being paid.
Thus far, the
Beginning next Sundar
grounds of desertion by Cir- recreation.
apples being swept
he will occupy the pulpit.
the trees
4
LATE TODAY ON NON STOP HOP
TO ROME IN DISTANCE RECORD
Dale R. Ains-
commissioner.
ro-
w
|rr«nH were injured, an aged man
leapi into the sea and 300 hiri
can
Mrs
Irrigation Once
Used on Rice Now
Serves Fig Crops
the
the
ton
their
ton
Calf Round-up
For Performers
at Orange Rodeo
in-
the
Murphree says
PINE INTEREST
LIFER ESCAPES
FROM PEN GUARD
HONOLULU, Aug. 26.— Seareh for
the lost , Hawaiian flyers extended to
the far side of the islands today.*
were
here
NEW SHIPMENTS
IN GAS SYSTEM
Jr.,
and
I Ml I
-M t
FLAMES RAZE
DALLAS HOTEL
deo to
Brown
Two Carloads Daily of
Pipe Ordered; Good-
Line Progress
found
t oday.
Mra.
from
of
Mra
s tass
NEW WELL FOR
CHANGE Ml
however, the convicts jumped
the machine and escaped.
cal prayer as a raging storm lashed *
ed four orvan Hners which came
into New York from 24 to 34 hoars
late.
and
of
ha ll
Rev. Wiese for
Nazarene Church
HALIFAX, N. •„ Aug. 26-/The
death toll in the storm which raged
over the Nova Scotian roast yester-
day was placed at 10 or more today
were riding
of the city.
Stockmen View
Record Season
Salvation Army
Leaders Depart
MISSING MAMMA
RAPS PAPPA IN
PUBLICITY TALK
use —
Arrangements have been made in
SCORE DEAD IN
FRENCH TRAGEDY
Tillery No. 3 State is
Brought In Today
at 3400 Ft.
• over the Atlantic adording to
rehedule.
HUNTED KILLER
SHOT POLICEMAN
ISLAND BORDERS
SWEPT FOR SIGN
OF DOLE FLIERS
MOST COLD BLOODED MURDER
ON RECORD IS DESCRIPTION
OF BOY KILLING OWN MOTHER
hie -vacation
During the
was located
The property loss
milHon ollar.
STANDARD RAPS
CITY OIL SALE
Complete. But All
Parts Nearly
to learn
in on the
the chan-
STORM DAMAGE
NEAR HALIFAX
EARTH SHOCK IN
SANTA BARBARA
25 SHIPS ARE
DOWNINSEAS
the
structed to atop and question
driver.
Fifteen Guests Escape
Fire Which Does
Big Damfag
The bank h^a
of $10,000, deposits of
Georgian Due to Reach
South America’s
Late Today
stock of all kinds have been clear oL
disease •
GUT. — First cooperative gin in
Toxas located here
..............Hai
the island of Oahu.
Furious Storm Reported
off Newfoundland
Borders
range Leader
Was burton
in the city
KT. JOHNS, Newfoundland, Aug.
26 -‘Twenty-fve fishing vesseln wi
LAST TOUCHES I
REMAINING ON;
SABINE BRIDGE
. -— ■ 1
No Part of New Bridge
their own necks and to all appear-
Rtoc k are in
and topnotch
ances did
in which
reached t
the outskirts
Fhiladelphia, filed
of the sixteenth 1
relf and fly it over
he_ought to he enp
in thin endeav ” D
BRUNSWICKa
though no new#4
early today of the p
tor Paul Redfern, n<
•090004444660006
least two weeks and
Wheter a pamsenger, Phillip
’• Payp, gmnnagipe editor of the New
I- York Dally Mirror. wilt b. tnken
ing contests during the annun
have been
special services at the local Nazar-
ene church on ‘the corner of Polk
they would lock
n the Annapolis valley tremen-
dous damage was done in the fruit
crop, more than 209,000 barrels of
gaming tables,, police say and had
this time
which Allen was rid-
time Bergman stopped
living in an apartment
having secured a divorce
glass with
VANDERBILT TO
WED IN PARIS
They told him
the chains about
one-eighth royalt» paid goes
State educatiohal fund
seven months that
at Orange,- he was
The body of a Mailor IeHHea to tpe Er F
Nna th. only trace of th.
fata of th. craw or the echo ors
the rank of captain to that of an.
sign —
ward of Paris this
company's canning plant in
( range.
September 1 to take «eharka.gr that
post, in accordance to orP"recelv-
ed frem hen d qgnrters thy.
Captain Mrs. C. ( IKynolds, who
• Ar the Baton
time, will
vs Doane at
red"by the Mal-
Elisabeth Tobin, Mrs.Gih-
succeed Ensign and
Orange. _ ____
A. C. Henry, a tlegraph operator,
mt hi" carried hie paralyzed father-tn-lw
te safety after both had been trap-
to the state
ville at the
Partiy MMW
la put at two I woth, deputy bank
was placed in charge
A force of twelve men ir being
used by the Dixie Gas & F uel com-
pany in unloading piping and other
material being received at the rate
of two and three carloads a day now
for the gas system soon to be In-
stalled here.
The piping is also being treated
As a result of ideal weather con-
ditions that have prevailed in Orange
county, this year will go down in
th* county’s history as a banner year
for the stock business
Accoring to stockmen, the cattle
ried her
basement
police bel
SILENCE MARKS BRAZIL HOP
then they have ver heen before at
this season o th* year.
Orange county fat
demand everywhere
which kept them from jumping from
the second story window of their
room.
Ethel Marlon, 21. leaped from her
bedroom window after hattering the
purchased in Joliet with
check and Bergman had
DA LLAS,Tes#,Aug.—26.—Fif-
teen persos, guests of local room-
, r hous, narrowly each ped death
by burning early today whe a fire
bf unknown origin razed the21-room
dwelling,and drove to orcupnts into
Thirty head of Hereford chives
were rounded up yesterday by Tom
Marshall, an Orange eounty steqk-
man, and driven to the rodeo corral
where they wiu be held for ’he rop-
i-old-blooded murderers on record.
The coroner hlieves Mra Hill had
$86,000 and loans of $$78,000 with
rediscounts of 414,000. W. K Un-
■cott was prekident.
tnH"dsrnetitmesir"isemn: ~ con
vatlonists here
Domhe’s return
Hall," contributed largely to the de-
feat of Governor Dennis Murphree
of Mississippi m the gubernatorial
campaign there a few days ngo, ac-
cording to the governor hmiself here
today
Governor Murphree who stopped
here -for a few minutes while en
route to the Pacifc roast with a
"Know Minnissippi party." declared
that his succenefu} opponent. Theq-
dare Bilbo, had strong fnancial
backing from the lumber interests
who ere antagonistic to the state tax
favored by Murphree.
a third man believed to be an attor-
ney retained to protec t the boy’s in- I The mine-sweepers Sunnadin and
terests, left Streator shortly after I Pelican were steaming toward Kauai.
been enrtrtatthg j a vishl .
Cos of the ffiht. begun shortly
before/ his mother; bod; w9a found.. Ling
was n»et by a forged- check’whieh he >
In an elimination1 contest between
bathing beauties of ten contest be-
tween bathing of ten cities in Illi-
nois, was chosen as delegate to the
Atlantic City pageant She is a
blond, with gray-blue eyes
Mirlaz Noel Wright today was grant-
ed A divorce from Frank Lloyd
wrigA inf _____ ____", -Llt
tect oM gro - ‘ _ t, Lt
cult J4ge Augst G Hoppman.
STREATOR, 111. Aug 26—-Harry
D. Hill, 32. wayward son of a weal-
thy physician, accused of having
murdered his mother and buried her
body in a shallow grave, was expect-
ed to be in custody before nightfall.
Dr. H C. Hill, accompanied by
Chief of Police William Robb and
Ensign and Mrs r Doane. of the
locetl pont of the Halvaton Army,
will leave here going to OaHeston
Ronamond ‘I..
afternoon formal declaration of their
Intention to marry The notice was
posted on th* bulletin board at city
hall
- This notice is required by French
law The couple may marry after
ten days of the posting of the notice
Hoth Vanderbilt and Mry Warbur.
TOPEKA, Aug 26.—The Mound
Valley State bank in Joint county
today was closed by its bon4 of di-
ectom, Roy L Bon*, state bank c om-
though ten vessels of the U. S. ship-
ping board were strung out today
along the route to be followed by
Paul Redfern. the young Georgia to
Rio flyer, none of them had report-
ed sighting his monoplane up to,
noon today.
Hydrographic experts here figured
that if Redfern has good luck, is not
forced down or delayed too much
by adverse headwinds, he should
strike the northern coast of South
America some time this afternoon.
PAKIK. Aug 26.— William K Van-
derbilt. nocially prominent Ameri-
NEW YORK.
WRIGHT DIVORCRD
MADISON, WIs. Aug 2<—Mrs
chair. She was only
immediately upon
RARCUS RETURNS
Rev Thos. 8. Bareus, pastor of
the First Methodist church, who has
been on a month's vacation, returns
today Invigorated by the rest and
ident of Benedict cgllege here, and
the father. of Pawl Redfern, the
young pilot who is attempting to
make a non-stop fihi from Bruns-
wick. Ga., to 1 44 Janeiro, Brazil.
"If, esa-t4-fhuhigh‘scheo? here,
he was able o bhb arolane him-
1 $h , surely
krotrinning
-todfern said.
L«k t«—ai-
kmn received ,
greaa of Avia-
nop flight to
Rio Janerio. Brazil, belief existed
here that the daring airman was
still aloft and skimming nouthward
during a greater part of the time
Harry was seen in Streator. calling
on Miss Sawyer, dropping In at the
pool hall and otherwise acting nor-
mally.
During part of the time, authori-
ties say, Mrs. Hill was in her rrude
grave, Harry was seen sweeping and
mopping around the house.
-hea. not-besn ~delngaly. an.
_ —--ai mqrning. qlehbugh thwi
•M •vory indieation that na would
haketuhe trt. Re t Mtn* to Ko,
but hU weiphy ot will, 175 "bourde
E22"h?rM362,3m*-n"8
Barclay H * Warburton.(
Phi ladeiph ia. a year ago
Virginia ‘Fair Vanderbilt
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Aug. 26.—
Mrs. T_ J. Gibbons and Infant daugh-
ter. Marjorie. survivor of seven ba-
bigs accidentally poisoned last spring
There is not a single item of the I
Sabine river bridge construction I
work complete, according to Herbert J
Eldredge, who is in charge as bridge
engineer for the TexaS highway de-
partment.
However, It would be but a small
matter. If necesakry, to complete al-
most any part of the structure, from
general appearances.
There is some riveting yet to be
done on the swing span and some
painting to be done on that part of
the structure. While the bulk of
concreting on the decks of the bank
span has been completed, there is
yet some work “to be done
USTIN, Texas, Aug. 26.—Quar-
antine restrictions on the shipment
of sweet potatoes into Texas from
parts of Louisinna and Minsissippi
were Annunoed today by R. E Me-
Donald, entomologist of the depart-
ment of agriculture. The quaran-
tine was imposed because of infec-
tion by sweet potato weevils. Mr.
Donald stated
Before shipment from the binned
areas into Texas will be permitted, a
permit will have to be obtained
from the state department of agri-
culture, certifying that an inspection
of the potatoes hss been made. Ship-
pers will be required, too, to make
bond and reimburse any person who
purchases infected potatoes
in Missinnippl, Jacksun. Harris,
Hancock, George and Pearl Rlver
counties are declared Infected, and
in Louisiana all parishes south of
the northern boundary line of Beau-
regard Allen, .Evangeline, St. an-
dry. Point Coupee. West and East
Feliciana. St. Helena. Tangipahoa
and Washington counties, as well as
the area within a radius of 25 mils
of Glehmora, Rapides parish, are
said to be afected.
/Hovstos, Texaa Aue. 26.—Jack
Clemmens, under life sentence for
murder in Jefferson county, and G.
W Pierce, serving two years for
burglary in Harris county, were still
ht large today after escaping here
yesterday from prison guard H W.
Baker.
Baker was conveying the prisoners
"PRINCRAN* JAILED
RAN FRANCINCO, Aug 26.—Bo-
lita Martin, known among the In-
dians of Oklahoma as '•Princess Bo-
Ita"‘ was held in the city lajl here
today on a charge of vagrancy. Her
arrest occurred during a police raid
on a hotel.
her divorce from Vanderbilt last
June
turned over to an antomobile dealer
for tuning up his cari reeerying in
change severl hundred. dlars,po
lie® say ‘ g-366,/ * *
If youngaHill acaily pdn
mother in he head and (hen car-
• - pound., body to the
her grave, rthey had fled for safety rrom'a blaze
• he is on of the most ‘
HOUSTON, Texas Aug 34 —The
antagonism of southern lumber in-
terests and the fact that his oppo-
nent had built "a machine as ruth-
midnight on a mystery trip gener-
ally expected to result in young
Hill's arrest.
"It would not be surprising to see
young Hill turn up hefore the in-
quest is resumed this evening," said
Dr. L. B. Howe, the coroner.
State Attorney Russell O. Hanson,
however, professed ignorance as to
the purpose of the trip.
Dr. Hill, it was understood, had
communicated with Chief Robbsoon
after returning from Springfield
where he had buried his divorced
wife, Mrs. Eliza Hill, 53, whose mur-
dered body, dug from a shaHlew
grave in her Streator home, launch-
ed the search for their son.
Harry stood accused today of hav-
ing repeatedly forged checks on his
mother’s account and authorities say
Dr. Hill had invariably stepped in
to save the boy from prosecution.
It was believed Harrv hd cum-
munication with Dr. Hill from some
secluded spot and the wealthy eye,
ear and nose specialist thin called
in the police.
A motive for the alleged murder
was seen today by authorities in the
shutting down by Mrs. Hill upon
Harry’s withdrawals from her check-
ing account and possibly opposition
she might have had to his proposed
marriage with Mias Alice Sawyer,
school-day nweetheart
the shipping of materials for the gas
eastern to arrive at the rate of about
two carloads a day from now until
it is all in.
It is expected that actual work of
digging ditches and laying the
piping will he started next week.
Newspaper reports say that the
Dixie Pipe Une company, the con-
cern laying th* main line from-the
Louinlana gas fields into Texas, is
making excellent progress.
During th* past few days the New
York preks has had much to say re-
garding the activities of the Moody-
Seagraves company. Incorperated, in
putting the new gas system in Texas
Another producing oil well was
brought in for (rangeeld this
morning by the L. J. Tillery Oil com-
pany in its No. 3 state
The well came in around 4 o’clock
this morning, miking pipe line oil
at the rate of from 400 to GOO bar-
rels a day.
This well came in from the 3400-
food sand and bids fair to increase its
output as the well is elenred up
This will swell the daily produc-
tion of the tteld to arund 5500 bar-
re is a day^..............—. .... ...n- ■
The Teas educationl depnrtment
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil, Aug
26.—All night long the Brazilian ra-
dio station at Para was on the alert
for steamship messages reporting
the progress of Aviator Paul Red-
fern’s flight from Brunswick, Ga., to
this city, but today no word had been
received.
ere divorced in Paris from
previous mates. Mrs Warbur-
t«—Five
Nihoa. Frost Shoal. Meeker Isle.
French Frigate Shoal and Brooks
Shoal, which lies 500 miles west of
RANTA BARBARA, Cal., Aug. 26.
— Housing alumberers from their
beds, two sharp earthquake shocks
rocked this city early today. No
property damage was done.
The Prat fremblor was felt nt
4:04 a m and was followed by a
second tremor of less intensity.
While a number of persons rushed
Into the streets after the first quake,
most of the residents were not
alarmed and remained indoors
Toda’s shocks were the first felt
here this summer.
be held on the Dr F
At any rate, it ran be seen now
that the bridge will be easily com-
pleted by the time, and even before,
the highways on either side of the
river are ready to receive traffic.
SEEK BODIES IN
JAP SEA CRASH
WASHINGTON, Aug 26 — Th*
right of Amerjcon cities to engage
in the oil and gas businesm was chal-
lenged today by the Standard Oil
company of Nebraska
The company filed in the supreme
court today, an appeal from th* Ne-
branka mupretne court decision up-
holding the city of Lincoln in retail-
ing oil and das Th* ordinance was
enacted in 1924 It was the out-
growth of a fight by ex-Governor
Charles Brah of Nebraska to re-
duce gasoline prices.
The company charged that th* or-
dinance was unconstitutional be-
caune it violated the 14th amend-
ment to the constitution. Th* com-
pany said it was being deprived of
property without due process of law. '
an guaranteed by the amendment
powerful as Tammny
TOKYO, Aug. 34.— 8ixteen war-
shlpa and ten seaplanes hunted off
Monozeki today for the bodies of
119 officers and men minsing in the
double cranh of two destroyers with
two cruisers during flight maneuvers.
nly one man, Frginer Rhirashl.
‘survived the sinking of the destroyer
Warabi. Before dying Shrashi said
Thf sunken destroyer had been
speeding 88 knots an hour before the
crash. r
CHAMONIX, France, Aug 34.—31
persona were dead today and ap-
proximately 30 were suffering injur-
ies of varying degrees of severity, as
a result of th* disaster here yenter-
day when an excursion train jumped
the tracks and plunged over a high
trestle, while descending along the
glacier edge of Mont Blanc.
-- By JAMFS I. KILGALIEN
(INK Ntaf Correwpondent )
KOOSEVELE FIFLD. Mineola, N.
Y., Aug. 264—Old Glory, the power-
ful single-motor William Randolph
Hearst monoplane, may take off for
Rome late today on what is expect-
ed to be the world's longest non-
stop flight.
The sturdy looklug plane, silver
body and gold winger, was poised
on the crest of th runway at
Roosevelt field this morning, her
fuel tanks Riled to capacity and all
equipment aboard, ready to go at a
moments notice.
A fairly strong west wind, enough
to enable them to get the heavy
ship into the air, was all that Pi-
lots Lloyd W. Bertaud and James
DeWitt Hill were waiting for. Weath-
er conditions over the Atlantic were
reported satisfactory.
"Old Glory has been gone over
thoroughly and la rady for the trip,"
said Bertaud. "All we want la a
fifteen mile wind so that we can
get the load of 13,540 pounds in the
air This is the heavist load any
single motor plane ever attempted
to carry."
Bertaud and Hill, veteran air mall
pilots, both expreseed con Rd once that
they will make Rome They figure
on getting there in forty-live hours,
or Jena
Berts ud has been Hying for 18
years and has spent 4400 hours in
the air Ho flew the mall route from
Now York to Cleveland for five
years.
Kill 1* the father of 'blind nr-
ing""—that ia. ho tsught air mall stu-
dents the art of Dying by frstru-
menta. For three years he was a U.
g. air mall pilof aw the Net York
to Cleveland route.
4 and 5
"If these calves don't do their
stuff in the roping conteeta l’|| cer-
tainly be fooled, " declared Marshall
today
Marshall has consented to take
charge of the stockpens during the
period of the three days of rodeo
here this year.
bons" mother, also was found living
nt the same apartment.
T. J. Gibbons, whose search for
his wife and baby led him to Ran
Antonio, Texas, was notified by tele-
graph
"I cannot understand the reason
for this search over the country for
me. ' Mrs. Gibbons said "I have not
written to my husband for some
time because I have been sick. I
am wiring him to come on up here
and* get a job and quit running
around talking so much. I did not
know he was making a search for
me until I read it in the papers two
days ago."
Search for Mrs. Gibbons, her baby
and mother was started here when
Gibbons at San Antonio told police
he had searched here but was un-
able to find any trace. The report
of a girl who Informed authorities
she had seen the infant with an el-
lerly woman in' a park led to find-
ing of the family.
Gibbons In messages to authort-
ties here had told them there was no
family troubles of any kind.
• "We have not had any family
trouble at all," Mrs. Gibbons told
authorities when found. She laugh-
ed heartily when told her husband
had reported she had been killed bs
'bandits for "valuable jewelry."
"I have a few jewels but they are
not very valuable." Mrs. Gibbons
said:
The woman was taken to police
headquarters for questining and to
give a statement
yanga orach Nalodlana,
Aug: 24—The “Pride .M ‘Diitole,"
I lobe-ctrdin Bfinion mbnpikhe, ar-
i ived pte her this atteynpe rrom
Qld Orchard! 14 r, preparatry to
awaiting fnvorable cohditfhs korthe
nop to Loondon, Engiand ,
DWIGHT. IH.. Aug 26.-- Posses
closed in today on a cornfield near
Dwight prepared to capture dend or
alive Lieut Lloyd Allen, Joliet
“man of mystery," who earlier in
the day shot and critically wounded
Charles Bergman; 50, Dwight po-
liceman.
slightly injured
The guests of the rooming house
lost all of the possessions with the
exception of Henry's mother, who
found- 17 5 in a puw in the smol-
dering ruins W
Th* damage is estimated at twen-
ty’ thousand dollars.
ORANGE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, August 26, 1927 "NUMBERIs
‘OLD GLORY’ READY TO START ROME FLIGHT
Laughlin, found bottom up in pla-
centai bay * ,
The sc hooker Noi togndered- of
Bf Johns, one man belng washed
overbourd and live dthers of the
crew belhg driven twenty miles to
spa in a dory. Th^ quintet reached
the coawt completely exhhuste '16.
day. -
Another tragedy wan indicated
when the wreckage of the achooner
Dowdon was picked yp In th* chan
and Market streets Rev M H
Lowery is pastor of this church
The visiting minister will preach
Saturday night and at ll a m Kun-
day A cordial invitation is extend-'
ed to the public to hear this man.
reputed to be a very able speaker.
the southwest corner of the island
of Hawaii. Eight submarines cruis-
ed to the area southwest of Oahu
and Maui.
Recurrent reports that residents
btween Keanae and Hana, on the
island of Maui, had heard the drae
of a propellor induced a searcg
party of forty men to comb the
sparsely settled and precipitiuus
country in that vicinity. Sheriff
Clem Crowell headed th® expedition.
Residents said the purr of the engine
had been heard on Wednesday, the
day after the flyers took off from
Oakland.
The irrigation canals that once
were used in watering rice lands on
the Orange County Irriqetion Cnnal
company’s canals are today serving
a new purpose ip watering fig or-
chards.
Dave Nelson, manager of the W.
H- Stark ranches and farm inter-
ests in this section, had water turn-
ed into the fig orchards yesterday in
order to relieve the severe condi-
tions brought on by the prolonged
dry spell.
’It is believed that irrigating of the
fig lands will make them produce a
third more than they would other-
wise
in the meantime a large force of
gig pickere are gathering the fruit
thut ta hauled to the Orange Products
COLUMBIA, 8. Aug 34— "I
know he will make it."
These words of confidence came
today from Dr. P. H. Redfern, pres-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1927, newspaper, August 26, 1927; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1529740/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.