The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 206, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 31, 1949 Page: 1 of 8
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.*
r
The Orange Leader
VOLUME XXXVI
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ORANGE. TEXAS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 31, 1W9
IS I’Hgt'S
NUMBER 20fl
1 .
V'
n
«2
it™ urges Vaughan
AID TO CHI
IN WAR ON REDS
5-Percenter Probers
Jm
Bv Uf Binder .
PHILADELPHIA. Aur 31
j—</P>— The American Legion
called on the United States
today to support "any patiV
otic groups or organizations
of Chinese" who would fight / riety. that is
| Communists
The resolution «u adopted
uiunlmoutlr A ronlrirr pro
posal. reported under dlscu*
;e in Rough and Tumble Round
Drive Opened for Waterways JAYCEES GIVESeno,or Wi,hdraws
Assn. Members in This Area
r I
Orange county today has I,
its first KRtXiS—human va-'
And *he Sa- |
bine River authority has
in cash with which to
start the job for which it was j
set up hv the 31st legislature
nlon. to "write off" China a* | The f-ROGS ure member* of
ALL GAR DELEGATES PRESENT—All six of the delegates to the last GAR encampment are as-
sembled in Indianapolis, Ind., in the parlor of Commander Theodore A Penlund, lo receive greet-
ings. Left to right. Penland, Charles L. Chappel, Albert Wolscn, Joseph Clovese, Robert Barrett,
and James A. Hard. <AP Wircphoto)
AROUND TOWN
AND COUNTY
THESE DAYS
Project Delayed
Navy Man Retired
Pool Water Tested
Young Musician Will Organize
Symphony Orchestra Here
a new older sponsored by the Sa-
bine River Watershed assoclu- j
i lion Official* of that organt/u-
i lion ho|ie it eventually will In- j
I elude 100,000 persons along the
Texas and
gSSrJtt ;[ Will's Alter A Fortune
Support of Project
Willie's out to make a for- j
tunc.
I Orange is to have a symphony; The bird's gonna sell rose-}
j orchestra. Here to make tha/ a, colored glasses to all people who!
fact is a 22-year-old Greek mu-1 tend to see things in one light
sician and conductor, Chris j only.
Xeros of Dallas, who this week j Will says that if anybody is
joined the faculty of the Orange1 seeing the weather today in
public schools as private in-1 one light only—that it's gonna
structor. | rain, for instance—they may get
Assisting in laying the ! fooled, nr -tha> it’s not gonna
groundwork for the organize- rain—they may get fooled again.
SCHOOL BIOS TOO HIGH
Tom Landrum, secretary of the , NTSC between semesters.
tion of the orchestra is Clifford
Shipp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vir-
gil Shipp, who is home from
West Orange school board, said
today it may be a week or more
before a contract can be let on a
proposed $200,000 project for an
auditorium and two new class-
rooms at the school there. Six bids
on the job were opened during a
meeting of the board Tuesday
night. All exceeded the estimated
cost. After discussing the matter
at length, the trustees decided to
consult with the architects to de-
termine if alterations in the plans
can be made to bring down con-
tractors’ figures. Lowest of the
bids received Tuesday night was
submitted by Farnworth and
Chambers of Beaumont. It
amounted to $208,193. Other offers
were as follows: Herman Weber
of Beaumont $213,073, Tellepsen,
Co. of Houston $242,000, O. W.
Collins of Port Arthur $228,300,
A. L. Hayes of Port Arthur $225,-
412 and C. Sargl of Beaumont
$230,500. A $200,00 bond issue to
finance the project was approved
by voters in the district earlier
this year and purchased by H. J.
L. Stark of Orange.
Xeros chose Orange as the
place for such an organization
after studying the area’s possi-
bilities following his appearance
in Stark high school last spring
with the NTSC chamber orches-
tra under direction of Dr. Silvio
Scionti.
“I know that the people of
this area want a symphony or-
chestra,” Xeros snid, “Everyone
has been most enthusiastic over
sucha prospect and we hope to
have the orchestra fully organ-
ized within the year.”
Musicians of the entire area
were being asked to get in
touch with Xeros by dialing
9098. Dates for auditions arc to
Jje announced.
Xeros did academic work for I
He's gonna say 'partly cloudy’
and keep an eye on each light
. . . the fowled-up fowl may
have something there.
their rights under the law."
Rumors Spread of
Red March on Tito •'■regulars
Invade Kwangtung
lout wax not offered.
It urged the It. 8. to "Lend
IU Immediate aid" in forming
a regional defense for Aala.
The convention adopted unan-
imously these other resolutions:
Endorsement of the United Na-
tions, the Marxhull plan and the
North Atlantic pact.
“We are opposed to communism
] under any cloak. Appeasement of
; the aggressor constitutes sun-end- j ^'^inoTliw"authority,
j cr ot om freedom on the install-
| inent plan."
"We urge thr Male depart
1 mrnt to use all practical means
to get Ihe trull' 01 Ihr American
wav of life throughout tlir
world." This was a reference to
the Voice of America radio
broadcast program.
"Inclusion of a greater propor-
tion of specially selected and
trainrd non-political prrsoiinrl
... In the diplomatic service." I
The I/Cgion’s national command- I s 1 *’
er declared the organization’, I Th*‘ Mtm t,und *'he
major 1950 fight will be egalnit 'lon * wh,rht U ‘,n
the government's economy move lh* ,,f m.rrvl^rahlp cards
he said "threatens to strangle" 1 F,,M,d c**n,rwl "nd Heclamallon
veterans’ rights. ! °f thl’ °r*ater SaWm' Wutrr'
Commander Perry Brown yfjnhco.
Beaumont, Tex., in his report said) First of these membership card*
"the disabled veterans . . are to be issued In the river's lower
being caught silently in a squeeze section were passes! out Tuesday
play which threatens to strangle , night during a meeting of the
Brief News Leads |
HAN DIEGO. Calif.. Aug SI
—(.Ah—A giant Nav* Mariner
I'HM firing Imal rrasrtrd In Ihe
ocean and burned 2 miles west
of here this morning, carrying
some members of Ihr rrrw of
10 to their deaths, thr llth
Naval district reported
Sabine river
ianiislana
1 he association Is an unoffi-
cial group organized recently by
pci sons all along the river to
support the activities of the uf-
I hr SLVOtIV Is thr amount ap-
propriated by Uir legislature
us thr stale's first financial
support for thr authority. A
voucher for that amount was
received from Ihr stale romp
troilrr Tuesday afternoon b y
the authority's president. John
\V. Simmons of Orange.
one gloving over age former
member were |>ieaenti>il with
"old rooster" buttons repre-
senting |>i».xt service to the
WASHINGTON, Aug at «1*» Orange Junior Chamber of
— Thr umbutbudot of Koivu dp-1CoilHllfru* (lut ing aft Old-
pealed to Pirsldvnt Truman for' tuners nigh! meeting in the
nillltuiy aid to help meet any | Holland hotel Monday eve
poaxtldr utbuji try the Soviets | Mlllg
The pms went to W I.
SPECIAL RINSES'
TO OLDTIMERS
, ol*> Maj Gen Unity H.
Ten lot riier preauleitta and Vaughan told the Senate*
Cl.
1VAMIINGTON. Aug 31—<4*i
-President Truman and his
llrmorratlr high rommaml to-
day discarded suggestions of a
stopgap extension of Ihr Hr
i Iproral Trade Agreements
law. They elected to ftghl for
the full program al this ses-
sion.
Hrst prrrulent of the oigant/n-
ll'in when 11 wav rstulill»h<w| in
I9J«I. W It mod I Met* M It
North, lliitu Unity, hurt llou-
vet , F I. Hull her.
t'rnfl. J I Westmoreland. Fritz
Iwr and It It Allen, ail former
heads of ihe club, and .1 Cul-
len Mi mi mini
Only line Has Moved
Ait villi toe In I tt.aitge everpl
Is In Iiiijii
Five Percenter in<|uiry today
be had been investigated bv
the P HI ,n\d bud receiver! a
campaign contribution from a
lawyer who talked to him
alsiul a pardon for a convicted
llf|u<»j iilack marketer.
Thiv tsstlinony from President
1 riimun'v military aide high v|mt.
ted j sometimes li#rt|c sesvlon An-
tilhei druinatn ile\elo|imenl cants
when Sen.itoi Met orthy iN Wi.vl
vi ithdirw in e.oiler vtalefneot ex-
pressing belief that Vaughan hail
(;-rr 't*1* profiled pei soiiiilly from any ot
hlv deal- "
SHKEVKIh>ltT. U , Aug 81
FROGS is the alphabetical I —a 11-4,1 jet bomber from i We .ttfmi idnnd. wdn
designation for Individ-j Hniksdalc An Force l»ase crash | itesr in Ibnjston
taking
i unis taking out member-
in the watershed association.
(See Editorial on l*agr til
By Alex Singleton
Belgrade, Yugoslavia, Aug. 31
—(A1)—Spreading rumors of So-
viet army troop concentrations
It) Spencer Mousa
Canton, Aug. 31—(A1)—Chinese
Communist irregulars invaded
Kwangtung province today. The
near Yugoslavia's frontier attend- j Rcfj threat to Canton gained force
ed speculation today over the new along an arc north of flip Natlon-
Russian denunciation of Premier
Marshal Tito.
(Diplomatic officials in London
said British and U. S. restrictions
on the sales of military equipment
to Yugoslavia may be eased to
bolster Tito's regime.)
nlist capital eastward to the sea.
Press dispatches said lied Ir-
regulars, equipped by Gen. Liu
Po-Cheng in Communist - held
Kiangsi province, had knifed into
northeastern Kwangtung and
taken Pingyun, 210 miles north-
| Membership committee in the
Holland hotel,
George Colburn, lower section l
vice-president, opened the ses-
sion and later turned ll over to
W. K. Ilardlng. chairman of Ihe
Membership committer. Hard-
ing explained plans for an In-
trusive membership campslgn
In thr Sabine area. About 500
membership cards were passed
out anioug men on thr rommlt-
tee and work was started to-
duy on the job of loaulng these
to Watershed hackers In thr
area.
Memberships arc scaled as!
follows: individual $1; Husincxx I
or Firm $10. and up, Organiza-1
[ SAN ANGELO. Aug. II
| District Attorney Ralph Logan of
Sun Angelo gald today that In his the ••x-preshlents responded in
i opinion Sandra Peterson, who shot i hirn They related the club's
• a Brady^pan to death Aug 2.1. I*bafty struggles fw existence, told
only 17 and cannot now be tried , of xn'me of ils former projects
tor murder.
« ex.p. ralril tilth I HI
\ uughan made dear he co-
"per.deri wilh Ihe rill In Its .In-
vevliaalli'ti of a chtfigr that he
had aveeplrsl a urior In an,in-
i nine !uv fixing < »*«<
And Vaughnn'v assistant at Ihe
While House. Co! (’ ./ \|ata. s*dd
flatty the Fill had exonerated his
j taws
Mofli Vaughan and Mara also
In the Juyeces w as present for j 'l*"iert under vh. I p rpiesttevnihg
the f lidtlmrrs dinner-, which was ! the Fill scrutiny ronerrnefi a
piesulerl over hy Vaughti Seas- ! charge tirat Vaogiran hud takrn
drunk, vice-president atal long- money from liquro' interest* in
| time member of the club. The re,urn for effort* to get them mote
program wus arranged try Hob raiinned grain.
Merlin, veteran Jsycee official : cVa for lire canifisiign contrtbu*-
whn iiitiixiocvrl the former offi- tlon, Vaughan said he didn't think
j rials i.nd memhers, •• "could have bean over a couple
( iMifrssions Made 1 of liundred dollars " And he de■
f fun lev Rulitn made the ad- hied it hud any connection with
-ilres* of weh nme and esrch of
mi and burned near Dixie, lac,' The emblems were presented
about 10:30 u tit (Orange time I hv hd White, prvaent tie.ol of
today. It waa« not immediately. the organi/.itum
known how many were ulroarrt I I eland Morrow, another for-
th* cruft or whether any ex I niei president who is still active
cuporl.
TOMI.O, Aug. J|_i/I*i—Thr
second half of Tokyo's worst
typhoon In II yesrs roared
across this teeming area to
night hilling al feast five per
sons. Injuring 33 and losing It
ship* in Yokosuka harbor
AI NTIN, Aug 31—nih—Texas
polio dipped In Kit new cases
last week, thr first time In four
weeks II has failed to break the
IDO mark, the State Department
of Health rrporlrd Unlay
of M.ntc of
a rut made a lew
j “lift tfie record"
Two new rnerntaTa were
(Sec VAUGHAN on Page X)
Frank Beauchamp
Is Taken by Death
j ducted
the
during
it'll a rt
club by
They
Cos
30 YEARS IN NAVY
Lt. Comdr. Frank C. Dilworth,
48, was retired by the Navy in a
ceremony aboard the APL 53 at
the Texas fleet berthing area here
today at 7 a. m. He had completed
30 years of service jn the Navy
during which he rose from the
ranks to command of his own ship.
Lt Comdr. Dilworth enlisted in
the Navy at the age of 18 on Jan.
23, 1919. He held every enlisted
rank possible in his classiifcation
before being given his first com-
mission on April 10, 1941. During
his career, Lt. Comdr. Dilworth
served aboard 17 ships and at 2
shore stations. During World War
II he fought in ali theatres of
operation as commander of his
own ship. Outstanding among the
ribbons decorating his chest is
one which, according to the Navy
public relations office, is parti-
cularly outstanding.' It represents
16 years of “good conduct" as an
enlisted men. Lt. Comdr. Dilworth
plans to make his home on the
West Coast following his retire-
ment.
i . y. ^ ■ a-
EXGELLENT REPORT
The state Health department
laboratory at Port Neches has
tested samples of water from the
new municipal swimming pool at
Orange and found the water to be
“as pure as your drinking water".
Considering the fact that this city's
drinking water is rated among the
purest bathe world, that's quite a
recommendation for the pool. J.
B. Peddy, director of the Orange
Recreation commission, which
operates the pool made the report
public today. In doing so, he dis-
closed that a total of about 16,500
paid admissions to the pool have
been recorded trace it opened on
Aug. 7.
half a term at NTSC. Prior to
that he studied three and one
half years at the Julliard School
of Music in New York city.
Officially there was no confir- j east of Canton. They were re|>ort- j 'i,onal tl*25 “,,d
Court Postpones
Race News Hearing
mation of troop movements nor) ec| stabbing
of talk that Yugoslavia may seek j there.
United Nations intervention in j W hether this w as thr same new
her blossoming dispute with Rus- j |{rd «trive the .Ministry of Na-
s*a- _ tional Defense sale was thrral-
Secretar.v of Slate Acheson said j ening I.uiigehun was not clear,
in Washington today that devel-j Lungchun Is 145 miles from
l opments on the Yugoslav border [ Canton and 85 miles southwest
j appear to be part of a war of j of Pingyun. This would put it
I nerves. |„ the path of the irregulars'
AUSTIN, Aug. 31— UP)—A: He told a news conference that | thrust past Pingyun.
temporary injunction hearing to the developments appear to be The ministry did not say
halt the alleged transmission of j taking plaee with a sort of cal-j whether the threat to Lungchun
horse racing news in Texas has j culated publicity. He did not say ; was Regular or irregular
been put off until Sept. 7.
The hearing was originally set
for Sept. 1 in |26th district
court by District Judge Jack
Roberts, who announced the
postponement yesterday.
The suit, brought by Attorney
General Price Daniel, charges
the. Western Union Telegraph
company and A. G. Coggins of
Little Rock, Ark. in connection
with the flow of racing informa-
tion to Texas bookie shops. ... .. . . ,
. Atlantic early today.
T,h* P°‘tP?nemftnl WaS re* The weather bureau at San
quested by the attorney gener- i Juan_ Puer(o Rlc0j |aid
WASHINGTON, Aug it olb
Sustaining! After taking one setback. Senate Lui rough, Robert
' J',"f * | $|oo, Honorary $.1,000. leaders pressed confidently today Wall S Witkawxki
sou war rom j jjur;,IK tlie meeting Simmon* | for a vote by nightfall <»r> a bill , Royd Hopkins Jr,
passed out information dwta on! putting a 75-eoots-an-hous fl-xa ; and James J inkles
tiie association along with a re- under wages.
kiank Beauchamp, to of toll
mi'HIng They were Hlvieenlh virect. die<) today at
Swam and Russell Eat- -j a ilt u f,„wpltal
kum. Six other new Juyree* follnwjtig ,, lengthy illness.
| Mhft« <1 uii flwrifitf ti»u rurrnil
■*»* wan a Ilf**
; fnljf r »nl|> writ- in .
. . !Pk .. , rt*«Hicr»f. Of Ijrutiti* n
lif»fiui #*f| rhry wvtv Mairux I. . tkl .
mini\»*r t>t Uu finit I'rcMbyirr-
t hun.M
Whllrhfafl
J.uk UiUhtt.
John I f f’lrfi.1*
specifically what he had in mind, J troops. Neither did it admit the
but there are rumors of Soviet j Kwangtung border had been
troop movements toward the Yu-
goslav frontier.
Tropical Disturbance
Reported in Atlantic
MIAMI, Aug. 31—UP>—A small
crossed.
_____
CjC,Jtiser#s Final
Rites Incomplete
print of an Orange Leader edi-
torial explaining the movement
to develop the Sabine river Wa-
tershed.
He *lso told the committee
members attending that all |»ro-
jerta now planned in connec-
tion with Its development
eventually would cost v»t least
s«eo,oo».#o*.
Bu$ine$ie$ to Close
For Labor Day Mon.
_ ... r , Fannie Beaty Goes
R. W. Akers Speaks To South America
At Rotary Meeting
Comparing tht* ret cut
inipi in France in an effort to ptaftc for Curtinix,
fonn «i United States of Kurof^’ whc/c *h»" was wh*^lultf«.J to
with the meetings of the JA MV(, Tuwlajr morning
tun fhun.h Mr pi ♦vioionly
} *'onhdH*|a»tJ w ttli two iti o t ti p
, freight IrntM jjutnxging
j both. Mr w*ia 4 mem hr I of the
Lion* Hub ttii'l «»f the (’finirtbir
«/f ('om/oert •? *
Furitiral wdt hi» held
ThoripJay 5 p m at the No*
go *;M># chapel Burial will lu* in
j the Kverjpeen l etricfety uiuU*r
the (Mr ^efton of Nosguvns fu nor ft l
onah'^l coloniefj
United plates of
to form
A met Ira,
| \ a mile Beaty, daughter of Mr
j and Min Munter Heat# of
meet- (hungf left Houston JfSMoin\*ty < barite
I’ll 11 beam 4 will hr. Kills Car*
uf” '* • ft ft Hpmiii(!tiii, Walter
i'v ■tiingUjn, Jamei N Ih-v* arjfi
the I
Mill* Beat y will te«< h whuiA ff« jar y
Hob-* thin, year in jMjmc town m
* b ai lfc*
pfert W Aken*. Beaumont Fhter-i ftf Vene/.uelii for the Standard guthtf?
; prft»e editor, ap<>ke Tuesday company, uaorrjing to tier
All bustoeftae* connected with j n<lOII ,lt the Orange Hotary club j paFerrta
I ttye Retail Merchant* aaaoeiaUon. J She nerved uvernea# with the
j eic crept drug utijre a, cafe* and
| filling stations, will be cloned
Funeral arrangement* for Cal- ! Monday in observance of I*abor
vin C. Kiser, B8, of Orange re- j d^y.
trupicfl disturbance of -Permit jtwJay \W. A. McNeill, the waociu-i s,ruM>our.
slight intensity was located east! . .......... ----------------- --------at Mr“M>uur«
the announcement today in
Homer Stephenson was pro- American Red Cross during the
gram chairman, ; war and haa taught school in
The newspaperman satd that (hi* urea and in West Texas
; the two situation* the meeting# about seven year*.
■ l/i t liSl ’ ........ ...... ........... ....
and the
, Fraiwe, «"•> >“■ i
_ MK- n-A-s., ,h (arrival of relatives, according to a | lioh’s secretary-manager, madu j , the U. S. 162 year* ago! Amcnrlmeni’i Foe**
o fthc Barbados, f,r out in the|CW|(r funerj(1 hon)e attendant. I the announcement trxiay in j "re ^-idmliy "almlliar ’ |Amendm«U» roe»
Mr. Riser died Monday morn-! latioh to the holiday.
Rotary Vtce-Preeident Clark
. , ing at his home at 1601 Scholars J The Orange Leader also wdi | Harrett named by Gov Allan
S S^wRneL^Cawrrca ^1*^ >35 'of Uw - _!*■ closed Monday.--Shiver*' a, a member of the
celled “all the way from the
Panhandle to Beaumont.” More
time to assemble the state's wit-
nesses was needed. Assistant
Attorney General Willis Gres-
ham said. 8
The postponement was by
mutual agreement, Gresham said.
Roberts granted a temporary
order against Western Union
and Coggins Aug. 22, et which
time the temporary injunction
hearing was set.
_V-Iv ,
Two More Areas
Named for Pickups
The Exchange club and the
Barbados.
It was moving westward at
about six to eight miles an hour,
and was attended by winds of 35
miles an hour near the center.
Soviet Pilot Anatole Barsov Voluntarily
Returns to Red Army He Fled Last Fall
Lose Court Skirmi»h
AUSTIN, Aug 31 <A> i T
i firtit court *klrrrmh over i
I. Woodworth, u'f of
i.ml t)i J ('. Mont- -i
of
All l*innh Hub member* will
serve «** hnrifiruty p»Hbe*ret**-
Survivor it arc bis widow. Mn
M d tt I I n Fifauchamp, ofl*:
c!tu*hfer, twu
*on,i, Mill .in<f George TfunkUrt
Heaufhump, mother, Mnt. Ocr-
trude Deauchamp; bister,
Mrsr T. Marvin, all of Oraiigf, :
and orw brother, Cc< ll
• h^mp of Mobile, Ala
CITY MANAGER QL ITS
CORPUS CHRISTI, Aug 31—DP)
—City Manager Maurice W. Coch-
ran resigned last night, a
Russian
B> G. K. HodenfieM : change hts mind. The
VIENNA. Austria. Aug. 31 - OP)» «■* ■*«* In-the^decision he had
: JSSSZJXL, rz1
hours after a petition demanding ' Red army from which he fled as repented
he be ousted was presented to the a political refugee last October.
j Shiver* az a
i Board of Regent* tor Lamar . , ,
... proposed constitutional amend-
! College -of Technology at Heau- (' ^ , ,
i * . . . ,h I ment to pay la wmakers more
mont. presided over the rn-< ‘mg ^ ,hem meet annually
|,n the ab*ente ht Onulrnl Jim- , ^ (k.fl.„ for „,,pone„D
j ,„y Con,,, m pTan yesterday
_ , . , [ They were denied a Vtiporary
Four Permits Issued restraining order which ttiey ano me gin* aie ~sni.ie.iui. u«.
For Building. Repair.
ORANGE JUKE
Kt ED 11 AN SCUM sending pic-
ture poatcard from Camp Eern,
Marcfial!, to the [wasler staff and
writing. “The water, the raiww#
and live girls are womteiful, but
city council The petition
signed by 2,600 persons.
COMING UP .. .
TODAY
Knights of Columbus. KC hail.
Fraternal Order of Eagles will j 7:30 p. m.
be in charge of pickups Thursday Eagles. Aerie hall. 7 30 p. m
day in two different sections of THURSDAY
the city, which are:
All streets north of Coopers
Building Inspector J, W. Wm- off the ballot at the Nov. 8
wanted to go back to Russia | trey issued tour building and *pedtai election Continuation of
Larsov was flown her* from j repairing permits Tuesday. The the court flg*rr t» seeduled Sept
In a brief ceremony at the zonal ^ y s Aug 24 morning largest permit issued went to g
aw——.*ion line. A m e r i c a n Ameritwl army authorities re- James E. Odom of UW! Fourth j
authorities handed him over to a mlvvd irutructlonj from the State street to add two room, to hi* re- M0$0rj#t Get* Ticket
group of Russian offleeis. department to return Barsov to sidence and to build a garag. and . ... . .
The transfer was made on the , x>rnoer Russian authorities. breezeway with tonerew flooring r OlJoWlfljf VlOlBlIOn*
gully between Sixth and the
railroad, except Navy housing,
Norwood Manor and Brownwood
addition
bridge linking Lin* -a the U. S.
zone with tfrfahr in the Russian
zone. The transfer took place only
a few miles from the American
airbase where Barsov and two
my si
for yixirxelyeo" ... . For the life
of me l can't understand why a
driver waits till he is turning be-
fore signalling' it’s a shade late
then, if you’re already hit him. .i..
. CHAR1E BOWMAN, six. beg-
ging to go to target practice wdth
her dad She probably is a better
Camp Fire board at Holland other Russian airmen crash-land-
hotel at 12 noon. . ed in a twin-engined bomber last
Optimist eiub. Airport cafe. Oct *-
12:19 p. m.
Kiwanu dub, Airport
0 30 p. m
Before formally turning Barsov
over to the Russians. Lb* Ameri-
cans gave turn a final chance to
| ItT'oAjtVm ^ given a ticket' T. «oSS
S~i=55 - ......... ~
no lack of a humane society in
— — ■ 1-2 i “£* t ‘rsrsss.“jnr 57?
atan sergeant
back to Soviet authorities at his
to a front porch at a cost of 170 John and Third itreeta. _
"^UTTofflcer. were taken to I sTrtt^mJe^'e^ira t^. US were re-
tiw United SUtes last January. deuce at a coat of 6300. ported- .
dogs on the
them
homes or putting them to death—
also the cruel practice ot boys
shooting at birds just lor the fun
of it.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 206, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 31, 1949, newspaper, August 31, 1949; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558125/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.