From the Bryan-College Station (TX) Daily Eagle, Thursday, December 20, 1973, p. 4A:
Leaving a personal note behind, Mrs. Emma Boriskie Hawkins, 70, apparently committed suicide Wednesday at her residence of 400 S. Parker St., according to Bryan police reports.
Justice of the Peace Jess B. McGee ruled that Mrs. Hawkins had committed suicide by self-inflicted gun shot wounds and that she left behind a personal note to her brother Theodore Frank Boriskie, who lived with her.
Police reported that the body was found at Mrs. Hawkins residence about 4:45 a.m. When Bryan detectives Oscar Chavarria and Ivin Walker arrived on the scene, they found two attendants from the Memorial Funeral Chapel and Boriskie.
According to police reports, a .22 caliber pistol was found on the body of Mr. Hawkins.
From the Bryan-College Station (TX) Daily Eagle, Thursday, December 20, 1973, p. 4A:
Leaving a personal note behind, Mrs. Emma Boriskie Hawkins, 70, apparently committed suicide Wednesday at her residence of 400 S. Parker St., according to Bryan police reports.
Justice of the Peace Jess B. McGee ruled that Mrs. Hawkins had committed suicide by self-inflicted gun shot wounds and that she left behind a personal note to her brother Theodore Frank Boriskie, who lived with her.
Police reported that the body was found at Mrs. Hawkins residence about 4:45 a.m. When Bryan detectives Oscar Chavarria and Ivin Walker arrived on the scene, they found two attendants from the Memorial Funeral Chapel and Boriskie.
According to police reports, a .22 caliber pistol was found on the body of Mr. Hawkins.
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