The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 84, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1933 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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*h> plain,
Th« firemen alsn *, ^
*lr annual bartaut,
•t Crescent Pin ’
* September *1. ^ .
on will be to cfcam^ij
It Iwrbecu. with Hi|p|
rr*d HUI, and Arnold I
ho committee for
GOLD YIELD ___
IAWUOTNTO, IB
didn’t need M
the 8tate Mine! ..
fold waa pruducod'kl
California than jn J
lar-a mere |8,52«,7(»,
yellow metal lemf ,
LEGAL N(
HE STATE jOF TUXaT
3UNTY OF HARRIS
The County Court 4 |
Cuanty, lrUI
No. 20.(21
Re: Estate of Juno
maell, a minor.
DTK’E OF APPL1CAT
AUTHORITY TO
Oil* GAS AMI
LEASE ON RK'U. KST*
SAID MINOR/
Notice is hereby rivsi |
Irene W. .Itrartford, i
the estate of June
a minor, did on the {
September, A. II. IMt,j
iliration in the abort i
d numbered cause for aj
the County Judra of [
jnty, Texas, autlmriittgL
grdian of the estate gl
lor to make an oil,
icral lease upon such \
court may order and i
undivided one-fourth
the hereinafter doscribtdl
land being situated ii|
County, Texas, to-wit:
ill that certain tract or |
land lying ami being
he County of Waller,!
;as, part of the IIIIRiCI
nt, being Patent No.
the same land conveyed j
afer on the 27th day e
liter, 1911, said deed I
irded in the deed
Her County, Texas, in1
Pages 581-3, and
larly described as I
!. W. corner of the 1
Pre-emption Survey, tj
comer, from which a |
es in dia. brs. N. 77 W.l
X;
lence N. 1 W. with tk|
of said Pre-emption
vrs. to stake for
south line of the J.
acres survey, from
15" diam. mkd. X brij
—vrs.
ience S 89 W 722 m|
corner in S line of I
ey, same being N. E.I
IBliAC ry. Survey,
3 1 W along l
of the 1IBDAC1
No. 97, 300 vrs. I
from which a 1
brs. S 15 E 31
>. 73% E 750 raj
ieginning. conti
5 or less; _____
plication will
>unty Judge of ]
Texas, in the
lse of Harrii
the 18th Jay off
1933, at 9:00 o’dj
4RS. IRENE W. BR
guardian of estate of i
linor.
IK’S
Harters
ashei
MODELS
|950
\NGED
KING
-—— •*
Been Made BJ
*
fa
In t'kteafe.
IndirMiiaHwi.
• Still Ba»y.
f Arthar Brinbaa#
gone, the., real year
t begin*, and thia happi-
tyaar of hopo. The coun-
VOLUME 15—NO, 85
__OF GOOSE CREEK, PELLY, BA
INTERVENTION
ESr«|Fedef5il Oil Curb
Eff^scHooiHiT
CUBA
Effect Today
w known, aid Infinitely
firth* todMML there;
, |o> won greater than
> km woo before,
i a
> mia* Chicago’* wooder-
«tury of PM0NM espeal-
lit h possible for you to go.
i of the exp«Mea, ex-
fat thee* Ume* of de-
^ jaetifie* the eeurage ahd
i of Chicago’* eiti*en*.
_ lay 800,000 paid admit*
| th* exposition. More than
&5 hua apt hmi
i and for admit-
r' the fair opened. The
to, 4*te la nearly 14,-
Lod, cheerful for Chicago,
Labor of commerce eeH-
____than a hundred
r Bullion* have been spent
in botele, ihataurants,
, shop*, etc.
Vi thank* are due to the
\ bad courage to plan Qiis
, and energy to carry it
la CHca* >rie*a of
ante rials have been ad-
r the final time In several
te the New YcHc
_o’» "leading retailer*
increased 16 to more
F$fr' cent. ■ Btragthastag
■ hss influenced many buy-
itkipat* further require-
buy in September, you
> the work jf,rw)T>>y, and
for yourself.
BEGIN WORK
ON MONDAY
Over ^3 7 00 Students
Expected to Ejiroil a
Classes for This Term
Jn Lohal District
for yourser
R o.-l^pAM#v
nt that the era of "rug-
dualism" la not aompat-
I the policies of NBA, la
r W the average man. He
IrnilMlim in
ID. Roosevelt, and General
whom W'afe.W'
INRA. He believe* that if
j Cantrell, Mirabeeu, An-
or Napoleon should
i the scant, mdividu U*m
play ita part.
___ indivlduallam’’ of
r Hitter causes agitation
t Europe. England wor-
s possible Nisi attack
j be aimed at the Tyrol.
, determined at Versailles
conquered nations for-
lon their backs, are eager
Executive of the Goose Creek
Independent school system wore
ready to^y for the big drive that
atarta Monday'when )iv>re thin
8700 students will enter school for
the opening classes of tllb 1933-34
term.
New studentf from other dis-
tricts registersd at Robert E. Lae
high, and Baytown and Harate
Mann Junior high schools ysater-
day and today. R. B. Sparks,
principal at Lee high, today had
recorded 20 in that classification.
Monday at 8:30 a. m. All stu-
dents who attended classes in the
Robert E. Lae building last year,
and all new students in the tenth
and eleventh grades will be regis-
tered.
At 1:30 p. m. Monday, all ninth
grade students and those in the
high dMMon of tho eighth grad*
sflii arollad.
-mm Hat* work at senior,
high jehSoTwOI' get underway
Tuesday morning.
; In all other achool*, Superinten-
dent W. R. Smith announced ta-
day, all students are asked to ap-
(Continued on Page Eight)
nc.HTS LONG
Mrs. Hilda Phelps Hammond,
New , Orleans society woman
and chairman of- Louisiana
Woman’s Committee, urge* that
chargee filed in the Senate
against Senator Huey Long be
aired publicly.
m
:*. *
f-i '*i
*
FIREMEN APPEAL
FOR AID IN DANCE
Merchants Urged By
President to Push J
I / Ticket Salas _/?.
An appeal was issued today by
Oscar L. Cooper, president of the
Gooee Creek Volunteer fire depart-
ment, that Tri-Cities business
iMUtea co-operate with the depart-
/au/'//TrZtw, ,n ,he **,r -
MASSEY DEMANDS
BRANCH HOSPITAL
BE ERECTED HERE
GUARDS
POSTED
RiOGR.
Lowl and Inhabitant*
Evacuate to Higher
Ground A* Crest of
Flood Approaches
RIO GRANDE CITY, Sept
<UR>—Workers patrolled the bai
of the rising Rio Grande today in
an effort to avert further hard-
ship to tho hurricane damaged
lower valley.
Crete of th* flood reoulttaf
from a 10-inch rain in northern
Mexico i* due here today. Water
started through tho flood system*
at Ojo De Agua and Gran Jeno
l*»t night. t
■ Two hundred roaidents of Ojo
De Agua and the 60 at Gran Jeno
evacuated to higher ground with
their livestock.
The Red Cress continued relief
work throughout the section and
Texaa officials took additional
steps to halt suffering. Additions
were expected to the Red Creee
hurricane death list of 84.
Fruit worth million* torn from
the trees by the wind will ho sal-
CONTROL
z£.tr EXPECTED TO
Hra OUTPUT
Coenty Commisaidner C. ft 1|e- r. Ibfte
[ bar amp, ••
t Hitler is necessary.
I in Rusal* has invited his
r enemy, M( .phal Pilaud-
I of Poland’s government,
Moscow as Russia's guest
i red army celebrations
7. And It'UIn sinds
on Pag* Eight)
jTOWN
i Tri-Citiee: Fred Clark
ay to Houston ... and
tis ditto ... ‘Frenchy*
| strolling nonchalantly1
Albert Kiber hdb
new ... R. B. Warae
Hth a golf stance . . .
Jones operating, a
Ph . . . S. A. Jordan
[through the window ....
parade ballyhooing (
dfering, creating more
i a flock of duck* . ..
IlKvtn with another arm
[Firemen’s ball placard*
■ Coe leading the
in skull practice .,
with his hair parted
Oscar Cooper
[stuck for about five or
i of coffee , , , .
J Porte: Mrs. <*. C Lfok- ,
piling around ,. . Rojlie 1
oring hfflrato for
(tl*r performance
Fwring reading a letter
navy department
of his
annual Firemen’s Ball, to be held
laidamhiTan ......
Cooper said today Gust U*
of tickets to the dance has.been
light, due to the fact that the
committee in charge of ticket sales,
hekded by Chief N. J. King, has
not begun an active campaign. .
When it start#, Cooper latd, the
.tarittaa men will be asked
support the department u n»d>|be
sorely in need of
funds,” he said, “end « the daw*
Is not a financial success we will
be forced to curtail some of our
activities." .
The dance win be held at Tri-
City Beach. Placards advertising
the event have been distributed
over a wide territory, including the
towns having departments with
membership in the Gulf Copt
Firemen’* association. // M .
Each department member of the
association will be asked to pur
chase a block of tickets and to
send * targe delegation U th*
event, Cooper said
sey at a meeting of the conftnis-
sioners court in lluust.m this
morning put that body on notice
that he will-oppose My plan to
build (he proposed city*
mnty hospit-l unless provision is
mad* to build • unit in Gooae
Creek.
Commissioner ' lUgsey’s an-
nouncement waa mad* lit connect
tkm with,.* plea pntapMd by re-
presentative* of labor for immedi-
ate building of Oie structure. Four
labor leaders appeared before tha
comrhission and aakad that an af.
fort be made to finance the pro*
Jpct •through! the federal puljic
Mirtilf* 1(^881
wumi nm«r»
by J. E. McDonald, Text*
sioner of agricurture. The, order
forbids the movement of immature
(Continued on Page Eight)
that unless provtaioii If'mad* -
East Harris county liy butld-
least a 50-bod hospital
MAN SUFFOCATES
IN POLY BLAZE
Marcontell Home Is
Damaged; Firemen
Rescue Victim
L. 'G. Dickerson, of Peily, today
waa recovering at his home after
_______ narrowly escaping death by suffo-
-I want it strictly understood following • fire at the
j Creek you hr# going to bear
(this Irishman," Maaaey laid.
horn* of Jimmie Marcontell, In
Pally but night.
TW
Marcontell family was
away, and Dkkerson, who resides
1
Girl Stay* in Jail
After Fine is Paid
NORRISTOWN, Pa.. Sept. 8 <W9
■iStSSST^rz m'f,
tenced to serve 10 days In the the driver.
Montgomery County jail for pick-
eting a clothing plant at Red Hill,
• J elided her self-imposed fate r*"-
^When she was arrested Wednes-
day by ..Montgomery county depu-
■ • - with 17 other strikers
upon a unit of the city
hospital being erected in
**• If »-
to build a hospital in Goose
■ Mr. Maaaey ba» -W-
than 30,000 people would
better service by such an
n than by building one
in Hopston and it might
save many lives. Person*
be brought tut hospital in
Goote Creek in juat a few minutes
from * U Porte and the bayshore
section, from Peily, Baytown,
(Continued on Page B»ght) J
WOMAN HURT BY
HIT-RUN DRIVER
HIT^RUN
Complaint waa expected to be
led ftoday by the husband of a
oman who was Mtocked down
yesterday on the atreeto of Bay-
town by t bit-an^-nii) dAver
Mrs. P. Btansatt was aUghtly
injured when a car rounding the
comer of Main atreet Into
. highway struck her HgHtly. Driv-
er of the car did not atop to offer
reflection of,the blace through
^TTulC was filled with smoke
from burning rag*, wimloj| blinds
and curtains, and Di&arson was
: ha^on the smoke fumes be-
o taka effect
YORK, Sept. | «J3-r
giticism from philatelists
I new NRA stamp fetal Ml
i lie stamp It waa «taaia«l
aspersion upon Am-
Uadquist, publisher of two
laagasiMa, said he had re-
letters from all parts at
. complaining the stomp
"capital out of atop with
I '• ^ ^>fTi|-ii die A*1 ~ * j -yH
design of the stamp shows
a business man, an ap-
mr and a woman. Th*
r, laborer and woman all art
with their left fete for
___The business man Is step-
ping out wiht his right foot, which
ta about half aa far forward as
th* toft fate of the others.
’.RELIEF
CAMPAIGN
LAUNCHED HERE
4ul Response Msde
to Apoeal Issued
4 By Governor
Tlking the toad to collecting a
fund for'relief of flood suferers In
the Valley, an organisation was
formed at the Baytown Refinery of
UNDER
receipt of
spreial pollre guard
id to Prtncoa*
Dun Francisco CaravRa,
Janet Snowden of New Y—,
who toft her royal husband aft-
er a five-day honeymoon.
Battle Lines Drawn
for War On Effort to
„ Fix Prices; Standard
Leads Opposition '
WASHINGTON, Sept | <OFJ-
The oil industry began operating
today under federal production al-
lot menu designed to (totalise out-
put and price*. Battle lines were
drawn in a fresh controversy over
direct government price-fixing.
The powerful Standard Oil of
New Jersey again waa in th* lead
in fighting price fixing. Outcome
of the battle apparently will d*
on how the industry fires
under the restriction! designed to
balance production and
lion.
Secretory of Interior lakes, oil
code administrator, laid down Ike
regulations which limited national
oil output to 2,409,700 barrels
daily, effective at 7 a. m., today,
and allocated this p
among the various fields. He waa
prepared to adjust the allotments
if they failed to lift crude price*
a point that wfll enable prodac- ~ a
ata to meet lacreaeed coats of op- .a, —. .. „ ... ■
♦ration under the code and give Stin rtregglinf
profit—a price eati-
TPMIGHTHAVE
* BEEN 0S
The storm yrhieh devastated
th* lower Sio Grande last Mon-
day might have swept this sec-
tion Instead. That it did not to
« ut good fortuap, . . _ | - .
Th* American Red Cross has
asked for a( fund of 8100,000
with which to aid the thouo
ends Of homeless In that area.
Officers and men at th* Bay.
town refinery are contributing
^teJMtMuE OMtorcHfiMtecr
the ires should do as mad.
The Daily 8dn wHT hr gtad to
rectev* cheeks or cash donations
to ka forwarded to th*
Crass. Make your contribution
today.
the Humble 011 and Refining com.
party today to solicit donations
from awn working there.
Tho organisation was formed in
able to extinguish the''fC *•- *’
water
iMklMil
He waa able to stagger to the
front porch of the houa# where he
collapsed just aa the Peily volun-
teer fire department arrived at
the scene. '.
Chief T. Wilkin* said today that
embers of crew who answered
the alarm worked over Dickerson
for nearly 30 minutes before re-
viving him. Artificial respiration
and other flint aid methods for
smoke victims were applied. ;«
Dickerson returned to conscious-
ness shortly before Dr. William E.
Marshall of Baytown arrived.
Chief Wilkins said today the
(Continued on Page Eight)
*r, with Frank Read, superinten-
dent, Tom E- Driscoll, W. T. Wfl-
Ha and C. E. Carlson present,
Driscoll was named chairman of
the committee to make solicita-
tion* in the refinery. All Other*
present were named members of
th* central committee with
to appoint subcommittees.
The organisation also appealed
to the Tri-Cities to join in the drive
to raise a fund for thia area. Com- The Agriculture! Adjustment Ad-
mitteemen are1 (to ha fened to ministration demanded an exptan-
make a solicitation in Felly, Bay. ation today from th*
them a fair _ WM
mated at btewsM |t and 11.26 a
barrel far mid-continent crude.
Whether or not the government
(Continued oh Page tight)
SLEEP SICKNESS
DEATHSMOUNTING
42 Fatalities Within
Past Seven Days
„ ReportedT”
-8T. LOUIS, Sent. 8 <U»-fttal
Ides from sleeping atakMsa
than at any tiase since the
u
Air and
Mobilize
Revolt is
to Rout
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8
MRS RHINE GIVEN
CHANCE FOR LIFE
STILL JSJN COMA
Mate's Burial Rite{
Awaiting Arrival
of Father
dfalft Vi*. Herac^l X Rhine,
who has been onconarioo* la the
Baytown hoapital ainet ah* waa
* fasmd M the flmw of tho hath-
room at her borne in
Ttwaday evening with a gaping
bullet wound through her brain,
today waa given a possible chance
rte
Mre. Rhine wu found at the
me time aa her husband,'who
died two hour* later ia the Bay
town hoapitlar He had rimt him-
town hoepltlar He had shut him- • grim...
Mif|thn»dgh^hMt|Fheory of Act
Ruled Out
erdlct of auickfa waa . .
yesterday by Justice of the Peace
Enid Flower*.
irvm Bisevuii Nwneito A4fcott|l lip kflf JMMt fMflfe*
sharply durtng the last Week * U>'
_ day %u odSi/l Tk. WflHam B
pbalitis epidemic began hme July Marehal, her attending physician,
|R v - to
. Forty-two death* from the dta-
eare were reported in the late tev-
ea day*, 10 of them yeteerday,
bringing th* totel dead to 91 Th#
tsmhsr «f kaitefa «mm increased
te 06, and dattaM tada many
in the city have not been re-
porwu.
after an effort to prove
leM Lamson died frem an
dental fall waa blocked by Ju
R. B. 8y*r. ,
lEfaMeutor Allan P.
dealt swift blows at the
- •“"* •• **• ■*
ity Mrs. Rhine might recover, but
the probability ta ex-
tremely remote. ,
“That portion of the brain
ported. where the wound is taeated,” he ^ bet
V This increase was In the face of raid, “doe* not control any of the 2g.mr-old’ wife to death
five weeks of effort by some of vital center*. The chief loss is in . . ... . .
tiw wWrid% leadmg aeienttsU to cerebral tissues, but a wound ... p.pr'
b/ th* billet from a M
calibre gun, uaually ta fatal." "<
Meanwhile, the body of her hus-
band la atilt being held at the
Paul U. Lee funeral home, pend-
ing the arrival Sunday from Mar-
tinet, Calif, of hi* father, Frank
Rhine. Funeral arrangement* will
be announced then.
find a checkmate far the myater-
Unit***! State*
PnWk the sren*.
headed by Senior-Surgeon J. P.
(Contbroed on Page Eight)
BREAD PRICE QUIZ ASKED
WASHINGTON, Sept 8 «U9 -
military
fleet of
ment of marinoa—awaRad the :
haw.
Official obeervan were
to expert h MW revolt ia (
which would remit !>'■
of the revolqtionary
of sergranU” and J*.,---- .
elgn live* and property. If
danger was too great
would become a real
But It wu balievad that If
tender for power ,__.
and effectively and set up a <
,, _u-s.rusm.-i.al-l a —
Kuvpmmeiu wivnom niucf
Ing, intervention might be i
Report* from Havana tha
# nsuiuliLslal tl_- _i j__»
rwitirn oi pnjvincimi i itbiqpiu
lot Manuel De Cespedes tc
government wu a
brought iso comment in
quarters where every eff
IT)Lo Evoid L2e!
ance of trying to influence
to the United States when
crfiicd former
Machado, and It
return to puwor would be
ed here.
Preside.., ■
depsrtmenL officials stii) i
(Continued on Page '
STATE SCORES
TRIAL OF
SAN JOSE, Cal.. Sapt
—Defense tactic# in the
trial, of David A. Lamoon,
tome Staaford University
trican Red Cross for a 8100,000
(Continued on Page Eight)
Bakers Association of high bread
town and Gooae Creek. Dain. r»»»v,H —B—rr.
This movement was started In price* in Atlanta, Ga, O-rtateon, a priet u ounce_______
response to an appeal by the Am- 8. C., Mobile, AJa., San franelsco, for Mwly mined gold which may
■■■gfeMU CaL, Savan*ah, Oa., Scranton, Pa., ’---“ |-* ** J“
and Seattle, Wash.
GOLD PRICB FIXED
WASHINGTON, Sept. * (UP).
-The United States treasury fixed
pipe, faltered and
habitual composure in
aihination.
Judge Syer uphcld-
objection and
Charie, M. Rl
X-ray expert, from
he believed Alien#
'fall in the bathroom
son c*
Alto.
He refused to p<
Weber, Palo Alb
to demonstrate
be
be told abroad and to
users under license.
9*
---------------------------------------------
Designed to safeguard students
anjd to prevent auto collisions, a
»[stance. new traffic control syrtem will go
Mr, Blansptt said y * _ into operation at Robert E. Lee
•enter high school Tuesday morn-
ing and Principal R. B. Sparks to-
day called upon motortate to co-
.......; --------pj*®!#
A aeries of sign* have been pre-
lh rough traffic will move along
the higWKp as In the past. Car* [pared and wltt be erected Mom-
stopping at the achool to discharge [day, with a alt on the Baytown
or load students will pull into th# aide of the achool and another “
safety lane to their right. It will
not be necessary to leave the pav
ing,
Goose Croak side. Tha first
of there will read "8chool, Go
Slow*; the second will read “Let
with
solution of
ping to pick i
possible to do
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 84, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1933, newspaper, September 8, 1933; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022903/m1/1/: accessed June 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.