The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 135, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 6, 1932 Page: 1 of 12
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OPAKTS
. Mir.
J'W„ it"
■ Mhk
n: eagle-
IN
Mh, for i,
». M2.
* OYS
Tuesday, they
:_______ .... u
will be
port In the etate eni wi-
ballot. There are no local
city or county,
ballot box la where a man
Has th<* opportunity
ling hie opinion ae to by
what manner it
government l>e
_ end ln
UlF *** **our
national and etate leeuea
.occupied the headlines
newspapers, aa well tf those
other state*, since spring. Ev-
n voter in the Tri-Cities area
toiid be sufficiently familiar by
li, time with thaae issuea, to be
\kVCif ’ 5 to make • de/nite dedsioo as
JAl J lThs* to vote.
*irl" (jtjjy CLOSE observers of the
The bifgat situation in Tegps give
yesrs-Tln Republican ticket, headed by
°u ' e heard is Rullington, little chance to
ffttX the Democratic nominee,
In. Miriam A Ferguson. And
despite the* fact that numy
are bolting their party
wte for BulMngton.
Bat mil bolting is not confined
dw state ticket. In the Nation-
field leaders of both parties
refused to support their nom-
and are found working in
enemy camp. This deflection
support likely will about bal-
and the result, therefore, will
unchanged. *i*’!*>
VOLUME U—NO. 135
, I
• a ■
4 •
••
- -
ASSAULT LAID TO CITY
• • • • • i a • • e a • • b • a a a *r 'e a * * e*
Right OfSolons To Meet Questioned 'ah£
DNIGHT
Hell”
HELL
e in a
f
)N
TENURE OF
OFFICE IS
HELD^PAST
Pope Believes Terms
of Legislators Ended
November 4; New
Bill Given Once Over
AUSTIN, Nov, 0 (ITJ9— An early
test of the right of the 42nd legis-
lature to be in session after mid-
night Friday night was promised
an overwhelming victory fof Saturday in the announcement of
ENVOY
F. Lamont Belin, veteran of
the atate department, who ha*
been named ambasaador to
Poland, succeeding John, N.
Wiilys, who resigned to return
to the automobile buaineea.
SLANTS IS SO rnh as to pre-
Democratic ticket.
....... *■ * ♦ ■>
Farther than deciding who shall
((governor of Texas, the voters
f being asked to express their
n on nine proposed amend-
to the state constitution,
affect delinquent tax coilec-
b; homestead exemption; com-
i offices of tax collector and
| Rep. W. E. Pope that be will raise
such a point of order when the
‘house convenes.
Pope contends that the consti-
tution meant just what is written
in the provision that members
shall serve two years from the
“day” of their electron. They
were elected Nov. 4, 1030. New
members will be elected Nov. 8.
: * \ .* •
■v
EXPENSES
I OF COUNTY
SHOW GAIN
I Interest Upon Sinking
Fund Causes Boost
of $232,732 Over
September Figures
The general budgeted expense
of the various departments and
institutions of Harris County for
October was *304,671.12, the
monthly report of County Auditor
Washburn showed Saturday,
j The same expenses in Septem-
ber totaled $63,104.86
) > "The increase,” Mr. Washburn
said, “was caused principally by
interest in sinking fund expendi-
tures in October of $232,732.03.
There were no expenditures for
debt service in September,
j The total expenditure from all
SEEKS ROYAL ALMS
A London beggar is shown hsre running alongside ths royal
coach of England in which King Georg* la riding with mambera
of his entourage, togging for aims from the king.' Tto photo
was taken shortly tofore the hunger march of the unemployed
upon London. * . t,|*
By
Deputy City Marsha) W. F.
cd with aggravated assault in
of a man and woman Friday night and ~
jar partially filled with liquor.
The complaint against Mi
struck the man with his pistol,
whose court the action was filed,
transferred to a Houston court for
Roark arre ted the man and woman and placed them
Goose Creek jail on a charge of dronkedneaa. Wltnei
--------a tlm man argued with the
YOUTHS QUIZZED EgWgt.
AFTER mm
SEIZED IN
yor Myers aad demanded his re-
lease from jaiL It was reported
that this
with.
Exolosivea Are pound
Following Meeting
of Socialists
r, investment of university Both house r.nd senate In com-
b; bond election majorities;
t of voting by service men;
on of tax sold land; sea-
construction and the Texas
SCHOOLS VISITED
BY 433 PARENTS
PRESIDENT of the Stan-
t .Oil company Walter C.
I,y. as well as other oil com- followed by toe committee.
PTVcutives, makes the predic- * Chairman a V. Terrell, of
m*t Hie oil refining business,
^especially in Texas, will con.
this winter at an increased
, or on the present scale, at
.■ s:=:
That is cheering news. When
! the leaders of the industry so
to the Tri-Cities are agreed
there shall be no let up in
during |be. winter
*» a great deal of apprehen-
should be lifted from the
ws of so many residents of
'•Cities who depend upon'the
v at Baytown for susten-
.* »• a*.
I IT IS HIGHLY gratifying to
'** °f Dr. 0. H. Hotchkiss of
sources in October, Mr. Wash-
burn’s -report showed, amounted
to $428,271.82, as against $109,-
986.46 in September. §
Harris County's 1933 budget
will not be fixed until the new
Commissioners Court takes up its
work Mr. Washburn said.
| "The new court will function on
afternoon over the procedure to be Sam Houston Leads for SS^wf^to^^gbMtat
First Six Weeks it should confer with me as a
With 66 body before the budget is adopt-
Four hundred and thirty-three
parents have visited the schools
mittees worked until late over the.
proposed new oil law the session
was convened to pass. The house
had a public ‘hearing before its
oil committee. The senate sat a ,
a committee of the whole Friday
night after wrangling most of the
MADISON. Wia, Nov. 6 (UP).
-Throe high school youths were
arrested by poll* aad United
States secret service mm Saturday
sod accused of steeling powder
and dynamite capo for bomb mak-
ing on tha eve of president Boo-
sts te railroad commission, which
administers oil laws as well as
rail laws, was quizzed before the
house committee
~He advwattd passage 'of the •-» its »=•
(Continued on 8,
jday. Sam Houston elementary1
| school had 60 Visitors, the great-
jest number to visit one school
JOHN M. KILGORE
• Iv' „ ..
KflLL BE MARRIED ciementary ^001 *had
this week, when 42 parents visit-
s*> j n ni' ’J _.!ed classrooms there. There were
Cedar Bayou Resident m vi,jtorR the pafit wwk % al!
Toe Wed Houston L ’ *
' Woman Today „
“I only can say that I will pre-
sent to the court a budget that
will be as small as I know how to
devise ”
The marriage of John M.
Kil-
LOG IN WILDCAT
Refining Industry
Will Maintain fees
By UNITED PUSS
Refinery operations in die aouthweat, particularly in
Texas, will be maintained on their present schedule, unleaa
an unforeseen decrease in demand occurs, leaders of the oil
refining industry told the United Presa Saturday, ,
Harry F. Sinclair, chairman of the excowdra committee
of the Consolidated Oil corporation was interviewed In his
office in New York City; Charles Burger, vice-president of
the Gulf Refining company, talked with a United Press staff
correspondent at his headquarters at Pittsburgh, Penn., and
the schools.
The patrons honor roll follows:
Robert K. Lee: (Jarlean Herring-
ton, Lois Evans, Marion Leder,
Frances Schloaser. v » . -
[ eonference of the Methodic
chureh, south. For 12
1 Ur. Hotchkiss has held that
xhwiNe position. Since 1893 he
been closely connected with
brence operations and today,
•knows mow about that body
’ *ny other living man.
* * *
®AY IS THE Sabbath, the
’ J for rwt wor-
: E*ch «»_ri$dyi.to go his
M Churches of every de-
and creed are to be
‘ in the Tri-Cities. Go to
commune with God “Re-
,r„ * th(- Sabbath and |»«.p it
........- ■ '.A -I.... ... r ■
W. C Teagle, president of the
Standard Oil* ifiaqway- ef New
Jersey, was seen in his New York
office. >. " • *
TEST FAVORABLE
working hours for certain groups
in the oil industry.
“A number of companies, both
large and email, have gone to a
short week," said Teagle. “As a
result, the Spread of employment
has materially alleviated the dis-
tress of die idle in field work. I
am hopeful that other companies
and independent contractors will
NEGROESJ
AS
Barbers Hill Extension
Is Expected To
Be Proved ,
Predictions were made Saturday
! by Pete Weaver, who with Omer
home. 2629 Amhurst Hauston, it ^ »' F1^1’ Mt*‘ C C‘ Shoe‘
was announced Saturday. . j Baytown Junior High: Mrs. E. within another 30 days.
The wedding will be a very in- p. Crow, J. W. Carroll, Mrs. A. Weaver based his toe.
**'1l$ rMx .,,nir „ ... *Vi** , weaver bused his prediction on
tonio and Dallas. ^ Iteytown^ Mcruentwy: Mrs. R. the loc8tion ot the Dyer‘
will make their home at Cedar E. Overbad, Mrs Gladys Morgan, -JSjSjSSjlJlSlSiS
TEXAN [S JA.lV fc. H.S.^ A
. LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov, 6!P» .haus, M» . 0. &» McCulloogh-, l
more employe* tepy *** J4**-
Effect of such employment
plans is seen in a recent announce-
ment of fte American Petroleum
Institute pointing out Humble Oil
A Refining company reported from
Houston tost by adoption of to.
40-hour week plan on July 1, It
hag been enabled to employ be-
tween 1,200 and 1300 more per-„
tan would have been pos-
sible with a 48-hour a week pro-
gntaa.
Officials of tod Texaa comjeuiy
Articles Stolen i From
Three StotH
Reco
tolen t rr
tores Are
vered
f it I letd ot) tilnto^t
Two negro
who had
dry goods merchant on Testa* av*.
nue. Saturday, were in jtii after
the wife of one of the men
chased them about six blocks to
recover articles taken from the
store.
The negro women, Beatrice
Pullen and Louise-Xee, had been
to the Guberman store and pair*
chased a smalt amount of mer-
chandise. When they left, a
hrge amount of merchandise wn
v and lira J. Guberman
called her
vet's visit here.
The three, Harold and Keneth
Krebs and James Engeberg, were
jailed after a note signed by Har-
old was found in the University of
Wisconsin gynasium following a
Socialist meeting.
Police said the youths admitted
the theft and experimentation with
bomb-making. ;
Police said the tone young men
were experimenting with
they “could threw • tong wny.*
The bombs . v.ere made from
wooden block contflininjf dyn#mite
cap and powder with a nail In to*
end which would penetrate the
eftp when thrown, .v- t
The youth* denied they hid ity
motive in tha bomb-making other
thpMI eiperimentation, police re*
President Hoover made a apeech
at the university fteldhoose about
t p. n.
NEGRO HELD IN
WRECK ATTEMPT ; H
BELOIT, Wla, Nov. « (UP).
Police reported the a met Satur-
day «f-a,nagre caught trying to
remove spikes from the rails ov-
er which President Hooeai'a train
• pass, ri----------}
Member* of the crowd
gathered while toe anaat wM >e>j
ing made said the offlear dis-
Ptoyed bis gun.
Roark brought a quart Jar f*
most full of liquor to Corporati
Judge Paul King today aad said
it had been in the car occupied by
the man and woman. Ha said ) -
. * not find the J**Ae c*..
hut tSS he located it in a pradl]
wwdi nearby.
al rich B ”
_ NEAR DEATH
»-©.wrs
Ate
When the charge was
a demand was made that
commission discharge Abe
ihe turned hi. gun over to
ration Judge King pending al
««on a. to whether he a *’
discharged.
A report was currref
'-’ity Manager B. J.
f«9»«*ted by a
city commission to di
(Continued on Page
AUDiCEWE 'I
CRmOSE
Members of Guild
at Work on Ibsen’j
A Do!!^Hou^
Members of the tudienew i
«* iboen’s "A DoIJ’s Horn*"
seated by the Tri-Cities PI
Guild will be given an opport
to criticize the cart, toe dir
the stage direct, and sc
They also wii ibe given an <
tunity to aid in selecting L
today by Georg. L
director with Kari L j
Mr. Keene alao
AROUND TOWN
I$$&&£*
----advertisement..
;£»-Citians ducking like na-
T,“f the City when
Package of firecrackers ex-
on Texas avenue today
Mabel O’Neil, of
down to visit her siz-
(Goose Creek Hospit-
n,N*fI • • •; Lintclman
W. H. Darby very happy
^Politician^begin to “paw
doe-...and toe buck
o««Hng SB call-
^Whift" from * j,, of day as the
‘ifuor desk—and
ggg R I Smith re-
chKcoai in
him
with misapplying funds while jus-1 Manley. Mr*. H E. Bnmson, Mrs.
rnm-j,
-John D. White, 56, former Tex-(Mia, 8. B,* Hickerson, Mrs. J. L.
as Deputy sheriff, was under ar-1 Monroe, Miss Ruby Haney, Mrs.
rest here Saturday charging him G. C. Weisinger, Hra C Bcverly
tire of the freace in Runnel’s coun- J. ft. Gone, lira. Paige B. Stone,
ty. ’ (Continued on Page 8)
"1 ‘—
Roosevelt And Hoover
%Approaching tf rails End
of a dome with a gradient toward
the Barbers Hill ridge of approxi-
fnately 13 per cent.
I with the pvwwit teet on toe
higher aid# di the strata, aererd-
ing to Weaver, the indieattons «*,
that when the well is down be-
tween 2100 feet and 2500 feet, the
oil bearing sands found at
Barbers Hill will be penetrated.
However, there is a chance of
daeHnei to comment on conditions was afraid of
in the refining Indurtry. if they didn't
“Our refinery operation*, par-
ticularly in Texas, will certainly
ABOARD HOOVER SPEaAL,; NEW YORK, Nov. 6 «£»-
Nov. 6 (l?J9—President Hoover will j Franklin D. Roosevelt Saturday
deliver a major address in the‘night was te make the supreme
Mormon Tibemacle at Salt Lake j effort of his national campaign
City Monday en route on his finsl for the presidency and his final
there being p fault between the
test location and the Barber* Hill
field that would cut off the oil lake
lying under the dome, but it is •
contingency the drillers do not ex-
(Continued on Page 8)
schedule unless there is some very
sharp/decrease in demand which
wa do not anticipate," said Sin-
C‘"f'
The vice-president of the Gulf
Refining company said in hie opin-
ion fttkia cannot • «pf>wer and
that if any change comes It must
Al Rich is in a very serious con- hat been necessary to,
dition and there is no hope of a for presentation of the
recovery according to a letter re- November 21
reived by Dr. M. S. Atamnder The change
became suspicious She called her from Dr. Joreph Bolton, surgeon reremary wl._
husband, who declined te question to charge of the United States Horace Mann ,
the negro women bereure “he Marine hospital to Galveston. auditorium aln
M i Rich has be« iqW|ote l^red for
1 a j a j. ■ Fiwte 1 aairjt e» al ) S3
IVcbiOh l0i WVBrit *l
Mnovi Was I. Aft,. eMtak,
.. _— — - repon nw wen cur-
rent in the Tri-Cities the put ‘
MrsCubermen WtKKEMk
gto women down Pruitt street al-
preaent most to tha inandry before she few -
ctmpaign tour which will end at
fats Palo AHo, Cal™ home Tuesday.
The announcement came Satur- ^ squar(. Garden.
whiiiwind finish of hi. redaction
drive into the agricultural North-
west after dramatically picturing
-““isr.
tf HtoMB ^ ~'
appeal to the American electo-
rate, at a mass meeting in Madi-
c. O. SLOAN
RECOVERING
The Democratic nomine#
into toe home stretch of the race
with the
port pf the man who
rival for the
E. S»Uw.fc,
ijy
c. O. Sloan, who fell and frac-
tured his hip early this week, was ;u|
resting well Saturday and his eon-
sup-1 dition was reported as greatly im-
“We plan no change, either
ease of decrease, to our opera- There am no “repy-eato
tiona or number of workers,’* he Baytown elementary
told the United Press staff cor- that word has beei
respondent, "no particular expan-
sion is planned at this time."
Burger arid it is “useless” to
Ik expansion when people are
wmakiftir nnvf Groa
worxing pan um
"We feel that buainm is go-
[4A
stopped them and found the arti-
cle* taken from her store slong
with * numerous otter pieces of
•f (Confinoed on Page 8)
n ie very
grave. !
Hospital authorities have noti- ed
fled relatives and requested that
they go to Galveston.
Students Plan And Carry
Out Own Work In Classes
dent A few of the student* w
to
school for
l*-en eliminated
from the vocabulary of teacher*
and pupils alike to that insUtu-
der away to another group to
view the work being done there. jpr i
yet there are no disciplinary Mn.
words from teachers, or remark*
E "copy-cat” from studente.
A talk with J. M. Stuart, ]
dpti of the school reveals
the seemingly undisciplined
AT*
chlcT prflvc^l,
mmtm
jLwroffl.
mmm
bF*N* * ^ v v 1
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 135, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 6, 1932, newspaper, November 6, 1932; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1020910/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.