The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 221, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 14, 1952 Page: 1 of 16
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Ate1;
Rangers Conti n ue Probe of Bung led Mu r
The Orange Leader
VOLUME XLIX
Member Aoodated Press ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14,1952 32 Pages - Price !•
■Hr
______ ___________________________
JAY WAY RESIDENTS FEAR THIS GULLEY DAM
City Is Asked to Lower Obstructing Sewer Line Before Another Rain
Home Owners Riled by Poor Drainage
Jay way residents are up ia
[arm* about a sewer pipe dam
I across the Cooper’s gulley culvert
| at Uth street.
Saturday four of them were out
[visiting, talking up a campaign
to bring about municipal action
to remove the sewer obstruction
to their drainage.
Two months ago, before the
sewer line to Clairmont addition
ran across Cooper’s guiley at
! Wren iJark. Hit Jay Wayldlts re-
call how their yard* flooded and
[ how they had to move their autos
two blocks away to high ground.
B. D. Huff at 1212 Jay way
-_______I_
said, “The water rose clear over
the top of my hip boots in the
backyard.”
Bill Lins comb at 1220 Jay way
recalled, “It reached the sills sup-
porting my house.”
What they fear is that the sewer
pipe running across the ditch will
stop brush washing down the gul-
ley and form a dam which no
amount of opening beneath the
street could drain off.
Tlien wliat will we do?" asked
Linseomb, adding: "Any more
water backing up will come into
my house."
And, G. O. Hare recalled how
vw
Stevenson 'Well Pleased' With Chances
In West; Ready for New England Foray
By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH
SPRINGFIELD, in. (AP)—Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson returned to
his presidential campaign headquarters Saturday, “well pleased" with
his prospects in 10 Western states and looking forward to a swing
into New England, Virginia and Iowa. The Democratic candidate for
the White House arrived here by plane from Albuquerque. N. M„
after a nine-day tour of the West
in a bid for November votes.
Just before departing from Al-
buquerque, Stevenson's campaign
manager, Wilson Wyatt, announc-
ed plans for a foray into New Eng-
land starting next Thursday.
Frqm there, the Illinois gover-
nor will travel to a traditionally
Democratic stronghold, Richmond,
Va.. for a major address Sept. 20.
On Oct. 4, Wyatt announced, Ste-
venson will talk on farm policy at
Ft. Dodge. Ia.
As he set out for home from
Albuquerque. Stevenson issued
this statement on his 7.600-mile,
nine-day swing through the Weat:
'T am dclighteo with my jour-
ney through 10 states. Everywhere
the crowds exceeded my expecta-
tions and their warmth and friend-
liness even surprised the local po-
litical leaders.
“This trip enabled me to set
forth my views on a number of
issues not previously covered, in
*■ Lamar To Open As
Four Year College
BEAUMONT (Spl) — Lamer
State College of Technology opens
for its first year as a full senior
si college next week with an expect-
ed enrolment increase of up to
10 ner cent.
The college, which opened last
year as a state institution by add-
* ing junior-level courses to the old
* Lamar Junior college curriculum,
adds senior courses this fall and
will grant its first degree* next
i spring.
” A faculty of 100 persons will be
on hand to instruct an expected
1700 full time students in day
sc’kkiI, plus an estimated 700 to
* 300 in evening classes. Some 16
new members were added to the
faculty this summer to accommo-
date the larger enrollment and
curriculum expansion.
The faculty will hold its first
m session Monday at B o. m. and
* meet in departmental groups at
I p. m.
Actual enrollment gets under-
way Tuesday with seniors and
* juniors registering while freshmen
go through orientation and testing.
Sophomores begin registering
Wednesday and freshmen Thurs-
day. All classes can register Fri-
day.
First day's work in classrooms
will be held the following Mon-
'S- day. No classes are scheduled for
Saturdays.
the Jay way area folks had been
promised three years ago that
no more water would be dump-
ed Into the ralley above them.
“Now” he complains, “they've
dumped In the 16th street ditch
plus a line from Clairmont ad-
dition.”
The Clairmont line is an eight
inch sewer which dumps into the
railroad ditch, in turn draining
into the gulley.
Louis WWto it 1221 J4y”WIF
had littlg to say but wasn’t happy,
chorusing agreement to the other
three. But, he did remind that 11
families will be affected by the
damming of the gulley at 11th
street. “And,” he said, “it looks
like there's nothing we can do
about it.”
What the quartet is asking for
is removal of the sewer line across
the gulley until such time it can
be lowered to a level where it
won’t obstruct the passage of
flood waters.
Said Huff, “Now is the time to
dp something about it; before
Clairmont is opened and pumping
sewage into the line. Let them
take out those two joints of pipe
(See 1, Page 2^
Commission to Hear
From Two Groups
Orange county commissioners
court meets Monday morning to
hear from two different groups of
citizens. •
The chamber of commerce high-
way committee joins with the
codH in one hearing; discussing
Highway ■OOHiriD-OT-way. Special
Rignt of Way Agent George Mas-
terson is expected to present ad-
ditional right-of-way parcels for
purchase by the county.
The chamber's hospital commit-
tee will also report to the court.
However, the committee will not
Flood Cost Estimated
At Over $10,000,000
South !exas Pays Dearly
For Drought-Ending Rain
Hearings for Pair
Charged in Texas
Political Slaying
Into Courts
(AP)
of waiting settled today over
Ahs—,invgBtigaUoa of - the
Texas Demo
Fight Taken
bungled. assassination plot
aimed at a South Texas po-
litical leader and a district judge.
Silent Texas Rangers went about
their duties expectantly as If a
break in the case might be near.
Two men accused in the plot
tha, went awry and proved-Jatal
to Jake (Buddy) Floyd Jr. sweat-
ed in the hot, tiny Jim Wells
county jail.
Officers awaited the arrest of
Alfredo Cervantes, third person
charged in the plot.
These other developments hung
fire:
4. Filing, of new, detailed mur-
der charges by Dist. Atty. Homer
Dean.
2. Acceptance by Spurgeon Bell
of Houston of a request he act as
special prosecutor.
3. Habeas corpus bearings Mon-
day for Mario Sapet and Nago
Alaniz, dapper Alice lawyer who
at a rendezvous told Jake Floyd
Sr. that he and Judge Sam Reams
were marked for death. Alaniz k
charged with murder.
Floyd, prominent lawyer, said
he was told that two professional
killers had been imported from
Mexico to do the killing and that
politics was the reason. He said
his son was slain by mistake.
• Roam* Saturday postponed until
Monday a hearing on a writ of
habeas corpus for Alaniz, law
. By BO BYERS
- AUSTIN (AP)
Texas Democrats went to
court Saturday to decide
whether Republican Dwight
Eisenhower gets on the Texas
ballot as a Democratic presidential
nominee.
Backers of Adlai Stevenson, the
national Democratic hopeful, won
a quick but indecisive first-round1
victory when a district judge is-
sued a temporary restraining or-
der to keep the new, pro-Eisen-
hower Texas Democratic party off
the ballot.
The Stevenson lawyers said the
new party is toying to steal the
“Democratic’’ name.
District Judge Jack Roberts
granted the oi*der, which keeps
Secretary of Stnte Jack Ross from
certifying the new party and its
candidates until the judge hears
arguments Tuesday s nd reaches a
decision.
Attorneys filed the suit on be-
(See 4, Page 2)
By The Associated Press
t The Gulf of Mexico Saturday swallowed fip the muddy
left-over of floods that cost South Texas at least eight lives
and 810,800,000 in three days. Army engineers estimated the
cost in dollars while crests on the Guadalupe and Cblorado
rivers still were chasing cattle from lowlands in their paths
‘to the sea. The body of Edgar
CARL K. HOWERTEK
Seeks Tax Post
Statement Is Made
By GOP Candidate
The Republican nominee for the
A. Kr\eupper. 55, was found
■shortly after noon Saturday
in shallow water in the
Guadalupe river near Shu-7
mansville about six miles south of
New Braunfels. It was wedged un-
der a rock.
The 11 Port Arthur youths1, wStaS|m
Springs trying to retrieve floating
furniture. His boat overturned
while going over a dam and
Kneupper was thrown into the
water.
Trimble Dismisses
Charges Against
Port ArthuranS
as a result of the brutal beating of
an Orange boy last May 31 are in
the clear so far as county court
here is concerned.
Two of the 11, however, remain
under peace bonds set by Judge .........
F. W. Hustmyre in district court; Thc sun shone on the grimy
ami a third is in trouble in Beau- w®1* of cleaning up mud-caked
mont. : hill country towns and farms, v
____ County Attorney Fred Trimble! There was some good to the
office' of~ county tax tsaeasor-col- dropped the charges against the 11 credit of^thecl^burats that mea-
Ipctor has announced his reason over a week ago but made no an- sured up to 23 inches and sent
for becoming one of thc first slate houpeement or explanation of the rivers and creeks roaring from
of candidaWm for local offices ever | action at the time and .the dtsmls
put up by the party here.
Five Doctors Aad
Thc announcement, part of a
statement made Saturday by Carl
K. Howerter, was thc first to come
from the GOP Candidates. Hower-
1 ter will oppose the Democratic;
R . r___ I#__la. I nominee. Fred E. Force, in the
1/UnllSTS race UrOTT i November general election. He is
v Ian employe of Ramsey-Kantz
State Selective Se rv i c e head* j Construction:,company,
quart are has oMered Bqard 100 of Jn Q written statement, he said.
Orange, Jasper and Newton coun-1,., h(VG entewt my namc as
their banks. The rains broke the
sals were not disclosed until Sat-i long and costly drought In the hill
urday. country. They filled lake* and
Docketed reason for marking the stock tanks, revived pastures,
cases off the books is "no evidence raised the level in wells and soak-
sufficient to prosecute in court.” | ed into underground reservoirs in
Victim Surprised Central Texas.
Dismissal of the charges came But the downpours and floods
as a "complete surprise” to 1»- mi&ht have finished the destnic-
year-old Vernon Henderson, vi> tjon n{ cotton and corn crops start-
ed by long summer months of
(See 2. Page 2)
* ,*w“
Af n..a>«4 lfl/t n nn/vlirt ac/J • * _ P*Tr**** * _
He added that the present sit-
uation his evolved over a long
period of time to the point that
the November election under a
one-party system Is a “complete
waste of time and of taxpayers’
money.”.........I. '---------------------- ...---------1. 1
The people of this county de- ;
serve more for their tax money. j
Howerter went on, saying “the [
ritual of the November election j
can have a real meaning in that j
people will actually have a choice j
to make. It is my honest belief I
100. announced!
State Official To Hold
^Orientation Program
Mix. Frank Nussbauni. presi-
dent of the Galveston League of
Women Voters and a director of
the state league, will conduct the
orientation program slated this
week by the Orange Provisional
League of Women Voters.
# * The session will be held Wed-
nesday at 7:30 p. m. in the Hol-
land hotel parlor. All members
. who have joined thc league since
. Jan. 1 will be oriented during the
w program.
Mrs. Nussbauni is thc daughter
of Mix. H. T. Fountain of Orange.
accordance with my plan of ex- yet ask for a bond election to col-
pressing as clearly as I can my
hopes and ideas about our future
“It would be bold and foolish to
express any conclusions as to the
political destiny of these states in
November.
“But I am well pleased with the
political situation in each of these
states. Everywhere 1 found the
Democratic party unified and en-
thusiastic — more so, I was in-
formed, in some cities than it has
been for many years.”
lect. the ■> 1.250,000 needed for
t*x"<l ; anticipation in the project.
Presentation of petitions calling
for the election is scheduled "for
an Oct. 13 meeting of the court.
Thc committee at Monday’s !
meeting is expected to brief th'e j
court of what has already been |
taken and outlining its intentions!
for the future.
Raeburn, Norris, over the bittei
objections of Charlie Lyman,
Alaniz' attorney. cl&k of Board
Floyd was an advisor to Ream > j Saturday
in the judge’s unsuccessful cam- j i„ addition to its call for doctors i
palgn for re-election against a and dentists, state headquarters'
candidate supported by Sheriff aIso has caUetJ ,)n 1W to
George Parr of Duval county, long , SUppjv 17 regular men for induc-
a South Texas political power.
Runnels Will Publish
Tabloid Newspaper
Former Mayor Joe Runnels Jr.,
now a local insurance mun, an-
nounced Saturday that he will
begin publishing a bi -.monthly
tabloid newspaper. The first issue
is due out in the next few days.
He said the publication will
handle editorial and column ma-
terial mostly with sections regu-
larly devoted to different issues in
the news. >
He,said the tabloid will be dis-
tributed by mall. His immediate
goal will be 1,000 subscribers, he
said.
Service Is Today
For Delaney Infant
William Taylor DeLaney, two-
day-old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas H. DeLaney of 433 East
John street, died in a local hos-
pital Saturday at 4:35, p. m.
Funeral services will be held
today at 3 p. m. in the Noguess i
funeral home with the Rev. C. M.
Boyd, pastor of the Drake Memo-
rial Presbyterian church, officiat-
ing. Burial Will be in Evergreen
cemetery. ,
Survivors besides the parents
include three grandparents, Mrs.
Esther DeLuney of Orange, and
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Harris of
Pittsburg, Texas.
Pioe Grove Houses
Agaio oa Market
2B **££.*£; !!r±ivr,"sr,r-ri;!'■ To Ls. wir™ Two Beauatooters
partner of District Attorney-Elect , (doctors nn{t dentists) for their p!lrty j firmly beijeve ,hat 1 "w •»»«»■■■«***•■#
Drowned at Beach
BEAUMONT <AF> — John
Richard flake. 67, and Wayne
Galllo, 12. both of Beaumont,
drowned in a heavy undertow
at the Gulf beach near High
Island southwest of here today.
Both were or an opting with
a young people's group from the
Lamar Pentecostal church.
Beaumont.
Voung GalHo. son of Mrs. J.
B. Galiio. and Eddie Plakr, 11.
step • grandson of Plake, were
crabbing when they stepped
into a hole. The Plake boy swam
to safety. Plake went to the
Galllo lad’s aid but both disap-
peared. Their bodies were found
an hour later.
Daughter of Oraage
Resideat Succumbs
Mrs. Edith Thompson,
daughter of Mrs. Mac Brown
Orange, died of cancer Saturday
at 3:30 p, m. at her home in Gist.
Funeral services and burial will
be held today at 2 p. m. at the
I Williamson cemetery, north of
A Public Housing administra-; Vidor, under the direction of
tion (PHA) regional official will stringer funeral home'of Kirby-
bc here Monday and Tuesday to | vjUc. The Rev. Doyle Hall and
negotiate with persons who want! John Adams. Jehovah’s Witnesses,
to buy one or all of the 40 duplex I will officiate.
tion.
Mrs. Cox said the call for doc-
tors and dentists specified they
were to be taken from the first,
second and third priorities. She
added that the local board has no
registrants in the first two cate-
30 i gories, therefore all who go from
of
rtrwHQm,-- --+■*—
Col. HR. Hailocte, district en-
gineer, estimated the cost in dam-
aged property and Interrupted
travel, trade and communications
at five million dollars in thc Col-
orado watershed,1 where 74.000
acres were flooded. His figure for
the Guadalupe watershed was S5,-
800,000. < .
Lions Roll Up 477
Years Attendance
h«i* must be from the third pri- j p(top]g 0f this area desire to
orJ£* . .. . .1 vote for tho individual rather
She said she could not name, st 1han (or the pal$/>
this time, any or the doctors or Be said there had been count-1
dentists who will receive their I
pre-induction exams on that date.| (See 3. Page 2)
_L ' t
CHIEF NANCE FEELS BETTER
Orange Police Chief E. L.
(Gene) Nance is still sidelined by
illness. Today he was reported
feeling “much better” but still not
able to retprn to his duties.
demountable dwellings remaining
in the Pine Grove wartime hous-
ing project.
PHA nas attempted three times 1
to sell these houses through bid-
ding. It disposed of 60 of the origi-
nal 100 buildings that way but
still has 40 ort which nobody has
offered the “appraised” prices.
This value was set by the gov-
ernment agency at $1,250 to $1,350
and its officials have said it will
not take less for them.
W. H. Voss, disposition official,
will toe here Monday and Tuesday
to negotiate with anyone wanting
tne uwemngs at the “appraised”
prices. He will be at thc office of
the Orange housing authority, 101
Pine Grove drive.
Other survivors are her hus-
band, V. A. Thompson; two sons.
Aubrey Lee and Edward, and two
daughters, Helen Marie and Ida.
all of Gist; her father, W. B. Stark
of Austin: one brother, Curtis
Stark, also of Austin, and two
sisters, Mrs. L. R. Holloway of
Austin and Mi's. J. R. Blalock ol
Gist.
Pallbearers will be Wayne
Stark, Jack Richard, Buck Bilbo
and Robert Stark, all of Orange,
and Buck and Roy Davis of Vidor.
JASPER CHILD KILLED
JASPER (AP) — Louis Howard
Jr., 8,’ son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis
E. Howard, was killed today when
he ran in front of a truck.
Eisoahower Rallies Workers for Start
Of 12-Day, 12-State 'Crusade for Peace'
— By JACK BELL , government tp the people at way-
NEW YORK (AP) — Gen. »•<»«! stops.
Dwight D. Elsenhower rallied his! He will make 56 of these stops,
workers behind him Saturday for
NAIL USED AS WEAPON
A local man was treated at City
hospital, then “treated” to a cell
In city jail on a drunkenness
charre Saturday about 4 p. m.
shortly after his wife stabbed him
above the right eye with a nail.
The iniury was not serious.
I To'W$W«ort»er |
1 Local lom-Mt: Portly cloudy with wide-
ly mum' tiiuM**oho«er« tod*y ond
the beginning today of a circuit-
riding “peace” crusade through
the politically ■* vital Midwest.
Describing himself as only the
spearhead of a movement for
“honesty and integrity” in gov-
ernment, the Republican, presi-
dential nominee told volunteer
supporters that a crusading spirit
will go much further than politi-
cal organization towjyd winning
a victory in November.
“1 believe in organization but I
believe more in spirit and that is
what I see here today," Eisenhow-
er told about 250 members ot
Citizens for Eisenhower • Nixon,
who had gathered from all iec-(
tion* of the country to plati a get- i
out-the-vote drive.
Ml
MomUv Umpcrulnrr,
SS to »1 tl.-rcc* SMt to wnilltriul winds
• I u> II I'llA u" h»ar ntsht*. II M U
mUc* »n hour duyUSt*.
Tides untune -- jjnrfiy. ht«l> »t I IS
p. in U>» st t»».x »nd •:« P m.
Uondav ha.li »l l» S* » » Md MS
„ hi Urn »t ».4J s. at. MSd 7:1* ?. m.; i
BSthsr SiiiHtdSr httll M 3:1* • «... tow ,
„ st 1 37 m in . Monday hl*li m *;I7 » m-;
0 nan It 3 p m low at i S3 a. » and
llH. p m
auRrwes ^Mdsa'ai’ £i | • missionary taking the polito-Hi I literally down ta
! aosnel of ohsre and honesty la' (Infers ”
besides major appearances in St.
Paul, Minn., Des l^Joines, Ia.,
Omaha, Neb., Kansas City, Mo.,
St. LouD, Mo., Louisville, Ky.,
Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleve-
land, Ohio, Wheeling, W. Va., Bal-
timore, Md„ and Richmond, Va.
The GOP nominee told the vol-
unteer workmen he is only the
symbol of a crusade aimed at re-
storing world peace and “honesty,
Integrity and decency" in govern-
ment.
GOP Case Overstated
He said that he sometimes
shudders as he sees the Republi-
can overstated.
Am a specific instance, he took
thc slogan of the volunteer organ-
ization that Eisenhower is. the
man who will bring durable
peace.
Instead of this. h« Mid it (Might
to lid "the man who will work
mil winy tl
»!. Ill
Preparing to depart today .mi a peace, who will work, who will
12>day, 12-Mute- trait, tour. Eitcu -! plf tge to you energy and devotion
huwer cast himself in the rote of j to that cause that could take me
i literally down tj the bones of my
1 \ 1
Firemen Remove
Drunk From River
Chalk up another first for thc
Orange fire department. Long
accustomed to being called on
to get cats out of trees, they
recently were summoned to re-
move an alligator from a storm
sewer.
Saturday afternoon the job
was to get a drunk out of Uu>
river.
One. of the local winos had
made himself comfortable be-
neath an overhanging pile of
dead brush on the eight-foot
high river bank at the Sabine
Supply company parking lot.
After drinking himself into a
stupor, the inebriate slipped into
the shallow water, pulling the
brush pile down on top of him.
Lying there on his back in about
two inches of wetness, he slum-
bered peacefully until a passer-
by noticed his leg* sticking out
from the brush and called po-
lice.
Firemen, summoned by the
officers, came hustling with a
ladder and Chief Denny Smith
took (tersonal command of the’
job of getting thc drunk out of
Ike river.
At last report thc wuto was
finhStigf bis mp In citv jail
Members of the Orange Lions
dub have rolled up a total of 477
years of perfect attendance and
the president hopes to make it 567
by the end of the present club
year.
A record of perfect attendance
mailed out to members last week
by club President Bert Hauvei
discloses that AH of the Lions have
gone from one to 8 years without ^
missing a meeting. Together they
have 477 years of perfect attend-
ance.
f| In aa accompanying letter. Hau-
! ver announced that the first meet-.
|g ing of thc new 100 per cent at-
tendance period will be held Mon-
day at 7:3d p. m. This will be a
stag barbecue affair.
The club now has 130 members
and Hauver’s letter states, i
would like to present 110 of our
members with 100 per cent latte-1
pins next year and have set that
figure as our goal.”
WRECK VICTIM BETTER
Wiille Heaa. 23, of Oruhgefiald.
was reported “doing fine” Satur-
day by Frances Ann Lutch^r hos-
pital officials. He suffered painiu!
injuries of the back and left arm
Friday about 10 p. m. when he
was thrown from a car involved 3
in an accident at the intersectin'■>
of I2th and Park streets. *
OVEEt OVER! IT’ti TOWN HALL TITSUAi NIGHT—Mi...mg like ye Town Crier of old. Mrs. Al-
ton Turner president of the Hurines* and Profesmmal Women* dub symbolically ring* the bell to
draw Nttonuon t.> th« dub* onen forum town hall” meeting hmt Tuesday night The scaakm. to la.
held pi Room H7 of Can junior high school, will cover the suhjec’. "Proposed Kxpniirion of Orange”
ha* been invited .bo attend and hour the low thru u .hi plan* tor >uch thitt|» aa a hoagltal.
ItuUf Photo by Ralph Names'
HWH*Uc
tin
| ORANGE JUICE
Aa Associated Press story from
Memphis, Tcnn., relates that u
check drawn on the East Bank of
the Mississippi was cashed by a
downtown department stole ...
The store Wasn’t named.
In San Antonio a garbofc track
has earned the dubious distinction
of being the first motor vehicle
in that city to be given a ticket
under the motor vehicle inspec-
tion law. The ticket, givyrl by
Stute Highway Patrolman R. Har-
lan, stated that thc truck, in addi-
tion to having no sticker, also had
no stop light, no reflector, no Ufil
light, no turn signals and only
one headlight. This also was an
Associated Press story, which
went on to soy that iimnediatclv
the city pulled all 50 of its gar-
bage trucks off their runs and
ront them to the garage. Anythin*
familiar hi that?
According le Hr agltadar*..
birthday anniversaries will be
celebrated Monday by the fuliow-
Ing Orange people: Bitsy Anger.
Mr*. J. B. Sander*, Mrs. LeL.
Mom ton. Mi*. J. E. Alaxandti
Richard Allen Cavea. Mrs. P H
Stephens. MM la Fordyce *m»
J^niOs Uiuadiu
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 221, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 14, 1952, newspaper, September 14, 1952; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557521/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.