The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, August 27, 1934 Page: 1 of 4
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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AY, AUoUs
'iVuaw'n r \ . V*M&
/I
: i
TiTf
f k«lA
l
YLWi
tu
f J>. -;M
-4«L *J
\
*
i'
fk
fi
■ (HH
Goes The Pound,
fort For Mr.
..* '•> life
liirai
as*
wn
IRL IN TR
I
of: goose CREEK, PELLY, BAYTOWN, laporte and surrounding area
GOO0B CHEEK.
.....- ’........"t"............ —
pone.
&
ef to God Protects.
Girls Arl Baffled.
mt
——
...............“'I.....T.l
0
len
VOLUME 16—NO. 71
TEXAS. MONDAY. AUGUST 27. 1934
Si
JrmI
Arthur Brisbane
—
>•
STORM i
I
v
ftijXtVJK1II miFilifiiKill
}{ excitement, in Paris es-
iftily, aboiH the sudden drop
itish sterling as compared
french francs. The French
that the British no lon-
to hold up the value
i pouml, anr fear that Rri-
md the United States will
“a cheap money’’ competi-
isastrous to those that re-
kroOdly on Che gold sfan-
e United States and British
i are cheap the world will
Britain and the Unied
I pi Cher than from countries
Bear money.
| is further confirmation of
Itemcnt that nobody knows
Kg about money.* The w irld
Ely guess, as events develop.
|AI. “CAPONE, able in his,
L, is indignant, his lawyers
1 weep because Mr. Capone,
[dead of night, is transfer-,
fern the peaceful prison of
t, Ga., to the rock prison
Etraz island .where govern-
[keeps its “most desperate
kr.s.”
[ Capone, who says he has
Pa model prisoner, as all
jarris will testify,” may be
bed by the suggestion that
iveriiment sees, in him some
dance to Napoleon Bonapar-
poieon was a model prisoner
^ island of Elba, but did
lay there long, and,' when,
ne back, made considerable
British transferred him to
llena, a rocky, distant island,
p, only ipore so. And
apolebn stayed till he died
secerning back in triumph,
iried in Paris.
IRIDGETOWN, N. j., scene
unpleasant strikes, "com-
t activities” are investigat-
mald J. Henderson, former-
iructor at Columbia yniver-
nd his wife being witnesses,
a. they admitted that they
:ommunits the investigating
asked each one. “Do you
in God!” Mrs. Henderson
le did hot believe in & *phf-
God. Her husband said, “I
I believe in ,the God you
t,-1 believe in God.”
riders of property rights
in that to believe in Cod
intipi to good citizenship,
WALTER MASSEY
FUNERAL IS HELD
■ t
HI
M 1mk am
4^
;
4^^-.....
?an
I
*
9
*■
*
*•'
*
fr
w
*
w
¥
*
* 9 •
9
*
9.
• 4
'
Hurricane Turns
^^■West And May
VOTE SEEN In FreeP°rt A
The tropical hurricane which was centered in the <Vulf
,v„.JKI$M0N"r' .y*b- A"*- 27 A v v LI fill/ AC of Mexicd east of Galveston early today had turned went at
a\t. A j OllUrv Ur * r • w.*s 1 P* IT ttS*
when he read the following afternoon in the vicinity of import, according to a special ^
•.passage about hi* fishing trip. . /VAlinifv rifrir bulletin front Washington receives! at the Radio Corporation
“Dr. and. Mm. Clakins ; I I I J\j L 11 [ L f\j I L of America station in Baytown.
Melilh Tungm'by theaw ik vUllI IDlIIl/L The wind, which had been blowing in fitful gusts up to
bass ami several other kind:, _____ about 80 miles per hour, apparently was subatdinfr at the
*. . oi fi»h — ” i same hour
The editor credited the best Primary Poll Called The warning said:
, futh story of the seasun to the n| J ........”,.......,,1. * ™ .-vr r -v..............— * .....t ... la’
ingenuity of his composing Blow to Ferjjusbnism Change warnings to hurricane west of Galveston to
room staff. a -r- i . P , Freeport. Tropical disturbance apparently turning more to
As I leket Approved ---------; westward and the center is
By Jim is Defeated I r-nn mrcrilT IT expected (o cross the Texas -
150U rKfcjtNl A1 coast line between Galveston
and Freeport, probably nearer
RIRTHDAV RITFS ,0 late this after-
Dliunufil lUlLkl noon attended by hurricane
[winds over, a small area and bjr..-3
f high tides near hnd a short dis- p
tance east of the center. Caution yf
I advised against possibility of dan-
90th Anniversary of
Congregation 18 lower * shelve* to guard against
, | , j heavy rainfall. They boarded up 1
Celebrated piste gloss windows. ;.:ai
_ Dock crews: at the Baytown re-—*
finery pumped water into frur
empty tanks on the dock tank
farm to keep them front
.
Alleman Makes
No. 2 Hole In One
On Local Course
Season’^ Best
i Fish Story Corhes
I From Nebraska
ICKES HITS
OIL CREED
IN ADDRESS
Wi
ZIERLEIN,
EPPERSON I
WIN POSTS !
Baytown Country- C^k-tor,,,
day has A new' member uf the
Hole-In-One club.
The new star is E. A. Alle-
j man, ,a bpginher who has
r been playing only about three
•weeks.
’ George HeodhiB
Hcuser clai^J
to frighten Hen*]
L man witbs
know Lis bulUty
il he read it in thei
j Alleman dropped his ball on
i No. 2 green and it rolled into
Government t, n tered the cup while he was playing
Industry as Aid to L'ntf -with — Mu“er
Public Interest, O i 1 John J. Keenan, .secretary
CL* tn 1 of the. club, said Alleman’s
'-Diet Ueclares feat will be brought to the at-
tention of the proper authori-
and if offers of prizes
Attorney Gen eral Is
Gjven Lead Over His
Opponent; Area Goes
Along With State—
SIX OFFICIALS
LOSE IN COUNTY Sy&X'ZS
ntrti Arm nninr ' "»»nation aa successor to Q:t.
RUN-OFF BALLOT-v^^^’r,
Saturday's run-off primary was
c tantamount to election. The regu-
Opencer, Con8 tables 'ar Section Nov, B, will be a mere
A J TL I formality and on Jan. I, the 34-
And 1 nree Justices • year-old attorney general will
Win Plarp*. fOpplant the governor whose pol-
........ "Bl * mvCP ic.vs he has flight for year*.
-KetuwnsL from 260 of fhe 2A4
counties, l5fi of them complete, to-
d»> gave. Allred 487.1!6fi vott s-
ifanter-lield 44i;7S8.---------— :-----
The election showed two things:
Texas’ confidence j» the hjimis
tireless, dynamic Alfred, an?
repudiation of former Governor
James K. Ferguson and the. poli-
cies which he has-pursued-in bis
wife’s name during her term of
office.
Allred will take office with a
program calliug for classifying <>f
property to equalize taxes, a bet-
(Continued -on Page Four)
.....ties
for holes-in-one still hold good
the gifts will be secured for
the local players.
TITUSVILLE, Pa., Aug. 27—
W.Pi—Secretary of interior Harold
Ickes in in address prepared for
Well Memtrr-
Voters; of East Harris county
chose H. R. Zierlein to serve them
as justice of the peace and Roy
Epperson to «4>e constable in the
second Democratic primary Satur-
day and gave James V. Allred a
handsome majority over his op-
ponent Tom F. Hunter in the race
for governor. Zieriein defeated C.
C. Fogarty. 1676 to 1466. Epper-
son Won over J. C. Shoemaker, in-
cumbent 1619 to 1616.
pother state races a majority
bF~votersTavored the sTme candf;
dates which led throughout Texas
_and. .-by about ..ihe- same percen-
tages. Walter Woodul of Hous-
ton had a long lead over
ponent Joe Moore in the lieutenant
governor’s race.
‘. ’Waiter-
Woodward in the race for attor-
ney , general, going opposite to
Harris eounty. Lon Smith was fa-
Sohn
3 ITALY’S |
delivery at Drake
ial Park here todav, scored
ged individualism” and •' “unre-
stricted competition.”
He warned Of further govern-
ment interference if the future
of the oil industry were endan-
gered by a "small lawless minor-
■rug
IN BAYOU CHURCH
BRIDE ASSAULTED
AS MATE TIED TO
EAST TEXAS TREE
S
•« |
ity.
"The greed of men for quick
profits,” he said, “without thought
for the welfare of the country
..has been defended by a school
of pfijliLirfl} whjgh hBfi ftt-
phemistically applied the term
‘rugged individaulisni’ to unpatrio-,
tic greed, ruthless waste and un-
paralleled selfishness.”........
Ickes explained that as much as ‘
"eighty and ‘ninety' per ceftt - hf
the oil is lost and abandoned in
the sands.” Scoring the lack, of
Conservation. He' said billions’ of
cubic fqet of natural gas was al-
’(Continued on Page Four)
Six more “ins" were defeated
in Harris county . Saturday, and
More than 1600 South Texans
ftttmiictl tho 90th MuniYtiMiry (iiw
dedication service at the Cedar
Bayou Methodist chqrch yeaterday.
The church aulitorium, - which
seats 250, was packed at all three
services marking the .celebration.
Many were turned away at*the
morning service at 11 a.m.
Bishop A. Frank Smith of Hous-
ton, presiding elder of the Texas
Conference, preached the sermon
at the morning service.
Mob Violence Feared
At Tyler Against
Ex-Gon viet
will retire from office on January
or blowing away.
Pumping machiaery at the
docks' was raised tu higher levels .
to prevent damage from high tides.
Pipe lines and other equipment “
wr.s anchored down. ■
The Morgans Point ferry was
taken out Or operation at 11a. m.
today, and sent to Cedar Biyou
for nrotection. J
The Lynchburg ferry was kept
1.
me,
ler
'
^ A\
*/ %
The list included County. Com-
xtfaAmtr Walling, defeated by fi-
JEL Spencer, Justice Overstreet,
and two constables, including
Constable Shoemaker of Precinct
three, and two ottffer justices of
the peace lost out.
The new legislators elected for
bha -county- arei
- TYLER, Aug. 27 Ol-r-Lynch
balk was heard here today as
groups of citizens kept watch for
the return of J. D. Willis, ch rged
with kidnaping a ne\yly wedded
couple and criminally assaulting
the bride. He was spirited out of
the back door of the county jail
yesterday while a miqb screamed
for.hi* 'Hfr'from-thp-firont. •
Authorities feared violence if
j Willis was returned here today to
face a grand jury. He was held in
jail somewhere in the vicinity,, but
where police refused to. reveal.
The 19-year-old ex-convict was
positively' identified by Maxwell
Herring and his 18-year-old bride
whose honeymoon was interrupted
last night. Willis was arrested
driving their car, with Mrs. Her-
ring’s engagement ring in his
POCfC6t«
' It was believed the grand jury
would return an indictment against
Willis today, w'hether or not be
was permitted to testify before it.
He may be tried later this week.
The Herrings had stopped their
machine at a roadside sofe drink
stand. A man climbed in, pressed-
a gun against Herring’s side and
forced him to drive TO miles to a
woods. There Herring was made to
to his underwear and was
to a tree. The bandit told
Mr*. Herring to undress. She re-
fused, was slapped, knocked down,
and assaulted while ber husband
't
-
vored over
road commissioner and Judge John
S. Sharp had a majority over H.
(Continued on Page Four)
Pundt for rail-
-.
HI summer fwrijta fH
(Continued on Page Four)
JPosition No.
ALLRED TO TALK
TO LEGISLATORS
afternoon exercises which i.egnn at! TCYTII C CTD1YP
2 p.m. Other speakers included IHAIILIj jlullVE
John Ilfrey, former member of the
church, of Houston, Dr. W. N.
Brooks, Mrs. R. P. Ellisor, and
Rev. Morris Kilgore,
Dr. A. J. Weeks, editor of the Hi ,
nrMfherf^the 600,000 Workers tO
pioAchod tho serman at tne evt* ^ ^ p
ning service which began at 7:15 Go Out On OF Detore
P-m- Rev, S, P. Wright, pastor, ,
presided at the evening service.
~ Friends, former members'of the
church, and neighboring pastors, WASHINGTON. Aug. 27 (UP). -
enjoyed a basket lunch and old _Wi(]e of OT0,000 textile
time re union at noon. Visitors , Tr. ,.j j ’
joined the throng throughout the wor'tPr* ^ callcd.on
day to pay tribute to the church. SaJturday, Francis J. Gorman,
-^^church was pstabliwhed -Tn chairman of the speciat strike com-
1R44 a.Agtlcxander’s Chapid, named nf .u. United Teatile Work-
in honor of Rev. R. Alexander, pre- Umttd "
riding elder of the Texas confer- er*> *8I“ to<1*y-
ence at that time. Gorman’* statement indicated 4
During its 90 years of service strike leaders had virtually \com-
the church has been a center of de- pleted plans for the walkout and
velopmeflt in this section, and a did not expect mediation attempts
pilar of social and religious pro- by the government would be sue- J
gttliL' " .4 - ■ , ctasful in averting the strike,
He aaM lbat under 'iastrucUona ;4«|
of the strike convention in New 'J
York recently he could not-divulg* ‘i
the hour of the walkout until 24
hours before.
"The strike must be called on or H
before September 1,” he continued.
“The date has been set by the -4§L
strike committee. It did not begin :4
today and it will not begin tomor- ^
row. It must begin by Saturday. ,5.1
I cannot say whether it will be he- il
fore Saturday. The important fact' m
is that the strike will take place S
and that it will be effective.” *
Concerning the sUtement of a
George A. Sloan, chairmap of the ijl
Textile Institute, that a strike is ,|3
“inconceivable,"-Gorman said: 'll
"The strike itself will answer f|
the ‘inconceivable’ part of'what -If
Sloan has to say.” -*4$1
’. How-
SCHOOLS TO HAVE
18NEWTEACHEI
: against A. M. Tripp, ie.4!i3:
Position No. 2—Roy Hofhelnz,
who received 21,244 votes, against
: Harvey W. Draper, 20,270. «
Position No- 8--R. H. Holland,
Remainder of Faculty J Governor Ferguson In
Position No. 4—R. Emmett 1 laste For Relief
Morse, re-elected with 26,461 n l 1 '
votes, against Frank E. Mann’s DORG Issue ’
16,693 votes. . ..... .....
E;o-ht,W new will Position No. 5—Kenneth E. Mc-
i ! in iL!nrf! [ Gaila, with 23,040 votes. against
slS t , r Allie Anderson, Jr., with 18,701.
R A m- Other totals in the county were:
perintendent of school, Mias «i-
mooced. • TlA^lred^'
The- remainder of fatuity list Jaroes , ;„„7jn,,nr7v,Vorn,.r
is not yet complete. Mr. Smith . M Lieutenant Go ernor
said it would be announced in its WnTre^w, -r~
entirely later this week. Wi,iter Woodul -------
Three of the new teachers will . T,tt“rnej' <,ener#l
tie in the junior college. They William McCraw
are L. A. McGee, of the University Waiter Woodward ..
of Texas, who will teach history; , . (ommissiooer
Tom S .Perrin of San Marcos, --
A f hU i ,nJi„ hrlnlcn- ^ who will, teach science; and C;»C. John P.un<,J r~— 16.154
inreivene - ’ iIlavie’ of Kan^r Jan™ Ooiiege, . Jwtjce Siipreme Court-
Mre- Herring was bound to .an-'^U ** ttrtine*. adminis- fj;h"g ^^ ?$»
m^heir'ear, taldn^the clothes and The other teachers include; A>
her engagement ring. Mrs. Her-
ring saved, her wedding ring by
putting it in her mouth.
After two hours, .she freed her-
self add untied Heruing. 'IT-,
got clothes at a farmhouse : mi
were lirought here. A few hours
later, Willis was arrested in Palesr
tipe. * Jie denied the Herrings’
charge, saying he ^i be.
(Continued on Page F
Mrs. Henderson said “we
b in an African god called
bJumbu” or “we believe in
I" or “Allah, and his pro-
Mchammed,” or “we be-
1 being Parsee," that would
feen satisfactory,
that is reasonable, easily
ood ,on the theory that if
lieve in M umbo-Jumbo, or
ber god,.' you probably be-
au that you will go to hell
take somebody else’s pro*
If you don’t believe in
-Jumbo, or Allah cr Bud-
• some supernatural pow-1 who died Saturday at-'his heme
may conclude that there after a long illness.
ietl; in;'which case,
of -course, you would steal
ing possible or even- divide
perty of the rich among
>
4 3S
,» i '•
DATE UNCHANGED
Pioneer Rrtj^i dent of
Bayou Succumbs
To Illness
to Be Announced
This Week
Sep t e mber 1
Funeral services were held at
Cedar Bayou Sunday for Walter
Lee Massey, 66, lifelong resident
of Cedar Bayou, and brother of
Commissioner Charles D. Massey,
AUSTIN, Aug. 27 T.Pi-Attrr-
ney General James V. Allred,
Democratic nominee for governor,
will lie invited to address the 'fex-
___ 19,619 as l-.-gisl .tors 'during the speci il
2iiA19fsession which opened at noon t>
day.
Definite
Which will
of the senators
I
or
for the pwt|
t also concern Ai
, was the fed
ia. The map I
a, which formed)
1 Austria-HunfliJ1
Jusssiini;-
lander »f Yugoda
as a r
dence at 3:36 p.ms, with Rev. S.
P. Wright,, pastor of the Cedar
Bayou Methodist church, officiat
ing, assisted -by Rev. W. H.
Brooks.- Burial was m the Cedar
Bayou Masonic cemetery under the
direction of the Paul U. Lee funer-
al home. Cedar Bayou Masonic
Lodge, No. 321, was in charge of
serv
_ 7,967
34,606
for the address,
a joint, meeting
and reprrsenta-
„— 18,723 tives, are. waiting on Allred’s re-
23,9817turn tfriaAuatfa from Wiciiita
Palis, M?mi>ers will consult him
about a suitable time.
Gov. Miriam Ferguson in a mes-
sage to the specf-T session of the
Tex is legislature this afternoon
urged haste in supplying addi-
tional relief funds,
plans
be to
>r.
strip
tied
MG ladies of Hungary, as
;can testify who have sailed
Die Danube and visited Bud-
Are Ixauti'ful, and tempera-
. .So remperamental in fact
make Lupe Velez; Dolores
io and JO# female Americ n
ood temperaments roiled in-
bntinued on Page Four)
.'20466
ice* at the grave,
etivrpallbearer* were Harry
Massey, Percy Massey, Loraine
Massey* Charlie Massey, Scott
Swaej!> and Claudifc' TompkiM. , '
Survivors include his, wife, Mrs.
Walter Massey, of Cedar Bayou;
on, James Massey, of Goose
; a daughter, Miss Nora Mas-
sey* .of Cedar Bayou; three broth-
ers, Charles D. Massey, Cedar
Bayou; J. F. Massey, Houston, and
H. H. Massey, of Houston, and
A
Charter Arrive* for '
She advised legislate r# Tnff LocaLPainters Union
all probability at least $20,000,- * , ' ' '---—' •'
600 will be needed to provide .re* Charter Tor the local chs>>ter of
lief funds that will be required.be- the Brotherhood of Painters, Pe-
mfrmy provision • can be m 4e eoretors. and Paperhaager* of
by the regular session of tbojiext ,America has arrived and a meet-
legislature. *
She -(eked, therefore, that the
entire 89,600,000 remaining bread
bonds authorised by csnstintion l
amendment, be issued by the Sp)i|.
gewionr—
STOCK TK.UIE LIGHT
NEW YORK. Aug. 27-CJ9--
-
ALF0R
State Senate
John M. Mathis IS,764
■■ “ ' to'-*—.....t.. nMi
L: Iiennett, Mt. Pleasant, Eng-
lish; Charles Bonner, Cieburn,
Vnatheniatics; Gladys 11. Qmtwgy,
Dall-.s, music; Frances Couch,
(Continued on Page Four)
DAUGHTER HORN
Mr. and Mrs. WTR. Sherrill,
Second street, announce the
_______, .. . oT."#■7-pithd girl baBY at
Kcur) ..... 15' p. in. Sunday. - -
Weaver Moor*-----------
County Commissioner, Precinct l
J. A.,Walling 30,519
R. H. Spencer .-^4-15,362-
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 1
Tom Maes .*._______
C. R. Overstreet n—12,646
Constable-Precinct 1
.
,
ft:
’on nd lown
the Tri-Cities: Wandell
Mks that his “paper carry-
friends” be intormed , that
BjHm —’’ mt. at. Big
*
ing of the group ,will be held at
the city hail at >c30 p. m. Tues-
day. Jack Jackson, secretary and
treasurer, announced, today.
' ’a
other-craftsmen interested in lw-
comine members ire invited to at-
this meeting;
one
sff
R. J. Martin ...
Neal Polk .......
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 2
Thomas r.'* Decker ....
George L. Ricker
12,486
.......... s.
pnager of the Daily Sun,
|i8 vacationing in El Paso,
Is that although h%
I there several days he
pet been across the inter-
im bridge into Mexico----
I- Roul, Sun city news edi:
[b on his way from Semi-
I Oklahoma, to points in
Ms today.. . .Ted Dzilsky
R a fast airing to Hany
liy. Bureau Creekmore arid
I Eberly ... . Helen ’ Farris
[Ruth Crabb having a fine
[ “P and down Goose Creek
p early today... .Velma
K admits that this is the
[ thing she reads in the
Man.....Bruce Harper on
Ny to work. . . .Mrs. John
bre—Clyde Foster check-
bat (or Huntsville to escape
;*ppro3chmg storm.... Mr.
Mrs. Roy Sherman back in
l after visiting Llano and
a and Pther points west....
■ Badgley congratulating a
«al opponent on a point
■•...Henry Dittnr.n with
« on a light post lookin'!
Texas avenue____Mot tie
rWilios enjoying a skating
[.•■..Mara Nell ! -Tarred
m an old family friend.
U Porle: Father Flem-
living « sketch of storm
^ons,.. .Mrs. VT G. Smy-
WviKtg up on the curb
slowly but very uninten-
Hy—Max Wall aiid
Calvin Critchfield en-
M over their violin les-
p.Mrs. K. C. Fuqua step-
* the hem of her dress
®*n having to sew 'ip the
19,739
Defeat of Parr Is
. Big Political Upset
BSP*
han
tend
*i-: 2,267
I
LATE NEWS BRIEFS
ha ■
2*209
Trading was light and price move-
ments irregular in a narrow range
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kiber an- jat the opening today on the stock
nounde t(?e hirtKof a boy at Port exchange. Cotton eased a few
Arthur last night. Mir. Kiber points, the dollar firmed, and
works at the Tri-City cafe in Goose I behds were mixed in quiet trad-
■ . ing.
COTTON FUND HUGE
WASHINGTON, Aug. 27-—CP)
—Cooperation in the 198ji cotton
acreage reduction program had
paid 1,089,125 farmers a total of
$38,114,245.55 up to Aug. 16, the
AAA announced today.
McALL'EN, Aug. 27 (Mi—One
of the most surprising election up-
sejtr in recent years was recorded
dfcday with the defeat pf Archr
Parr for re-election to the state
BOY IS BORN
NEW YORK, Aug. 27 (IT).—World production of all growths
of cotton in the 1934-35 season will approximate 22,367,000 bale#,,
compared with 25,361,000 bale* Iasi season and 23,585,000 bale#
known as two years ago. the New York cotton exchange estimated today.
CHICAGO, Aug. 27 (LT).-After a mishap that-nearly ended
their quest for the women’s flight endurance record, the two jfirL
from'Texas, Hene Le Rene and Mary Owen#, in their “Lone Star”
plane today continued to circle lazily over the curtiss-Reynoids air-
port. : ■
HAMILTON AIDE
SUSPECT HELD
Creek.
the Benavides
the “duke of Di
cause of his long-standing
cai supremacy, trailed Jim Neal,
-Chiton lawyer and Webb county
ranchman, by more than 7,020
votes.
fiepprts from 17 counties of the
27th district, 16 complete, gave
Neal 28,694 votes to 21,464 for
Parr. •
Allred Soon To Add 'Governor' To His List Of
Titles Including Jimmie, General And Daddy
t
BALLAug. 27 (ITI-Austin
L. Avere, escaped Texas convict
under indictmnet in connection
with Raymond Hamilltm’g break
from the death house at Hunts-
ville, was held here today. j
Detectivs arrested Avers last ■
night at a house near love field
where he was hiding. -7*
Avers escaped from the peniton- .
several months ago, officers
An indictment returned in
Walker county charges he and
Kirk Borders aided in " .....
AUSTIN, Tex., Aug. 27—<IT>— , Allred plstyed "forty-two” with mail carrier, one of the “common
Meet the next governor of tex- ; Judges and with assistants from people,” and is proud of it.
a- lame, V Allred 35 black- 1,18 own department. Out at L’tti- Jimmie graduated from high
a-s. James v. All rep, .55 0f Texas’ gymnasium,, he school when he was 18, and join-
haired, dynamic and tireless, i# (l|ayw( handbaii with professor# j eci the navy. After the world war,
‘'Jimmie to ins intimate friends,! and-atudont# alike. , he went to Wichita Falls as a
“General” to the state caprtol, j Eaxctly how much of Allred’s stenographer -for a law ffrm. Alt-
“ Daddy” to two little sons, and program for economic, recovery red saved. and borrowed enough
soon will is* "Governor” to some and for a re-distribution of the money to attend Cumberland uni-
6,000,000 Texas. tax load came out of those games versity. He returned ..to/Wichita
James V. Allred is more than on the hundbal) courts, Texas pro- Fall* after graduation and was
that to residents of an Austin bahly will never know, appointed district attorney by
■neighborhood noted more for its His firm conviction that concern Governor Rat M. Neff,
children, ami dogs, tricycles on (ration of wealth works to' the; J ,e .Betsy Miller of Wichita
the sidewalks than for it “fash- detriment of the common man i Falls was playing at a piano re-
innable” air whore the Allreds g,#.# farther back than Allred's jcjuF the first time she met Jim-
live in a six-room home, he also games of handball with Univer- imie Alfred. She gave up her mm
is known as a good neighbor. nity professors. He made speeches | .#iCal career and married young
Th$ Allrisdl will move nett Jan- agahtlt chain stores long before j Allred in 1927. She hopes her sons
nary. F°r the first time in four he ever ran for attorney goner- will become farmers—intelligent
years the dignified ‘.‘White House ’ *1. If----
k Texas, with its high-ceiiinged That conviction may go ba$ toj
drawing rooma, winding staircase, his bbvhood d*ys in the “h^:; sa’-t*
MINERAL WELLS, Aug. 27 (UP)—Hazel Butler, 14, believed and historic furniture, will be gay in’
kidnaped laat week, was returned to her home here
“seeing the world for four days. Officer# found her
.........Sfc.T'? 'j.StfS-i TeT:
HYDE PARK, N. Y„ Aug. 27 -President Roosevelt life the sum-
mer White "ftopse at 8 a.ip. C.S.T., today for Warwick alfl West
I’oint, N. Y., where he will inspect cadet# at the military academy.
Stocks Close
27
Courtesy Citizens State
Bank and Trust Co.
AMARILLO, Aug. 27 (UP).-Earl Fleet, Kansas City, piloting
__ a Tranacontinentai and Western air mail plane, landed safely near
r> * South Laquesta, N. M.
into prison the guns u*
ilton, Joe Palmer
(Blackie).. Thompson i
Rational escape July 22.
Stan. Oil N. J. -4..
Humble Oil
Gul Oil ... .........
Texas Corp. v---------
U. S. Steel
Cons. Oil .....
Pure Oil -.....
Nat. D tiry ..
Gen. Motors
Curtis Wright
Anaconda —
Cities 'Service .. —;
Lambert —
Packard -------...
Skelley .........—
Am«r. Rad ............—
I Atlantic -------------
Con. G a —.........
H
in
1-2
, No Sale
PAULS VALLEY, Okla.. Aug. 27 (UP).—Three prisoners beat
Jailer John Barnhill into submission early today and escaped from
the Garvin couiity jail with his keys. It was.fhe second jail break
here this summer, »
—
24 1-8
SUSPECT IS HE
FORT WORTH, Aug.
—Officers here were adv
ubert Hulon
85 8-8
9 1-8
. 8 8-8
17 S-8
30 1-2
12 5-8
I *
IVaor, in it
waco jail
Erath
AUSTIN, Aug. 27 (UP).—Resignation of state Senator Gtis
Kussek, now serving a term in a federal workhouse after conviction
of violating federal banking lawn, waa received here today.
liery v
Member d
board from
t rather
ton, D.
- 2
____No Sale
____.... 3 3-8
____ No Sic
...— 13 3 4
______ 25 7-8
1 of Bowie. It was there -with dar
mie Allred washed dish- her hair
t shoes and neddled D8D- Gauss it s
■* 1 j ^
Si
eyes
of young Tex-
. ■
with tho
to have been
today, after
yesterday in Brownwood.
iking 9®’
ans: Jimmie, Mrs. Jimmie,
Boy,” and David.
#vffS».
a
10 5-1
it
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, August 27, 1934, newspaper, August 27, 1934; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145080/m1/1/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.