The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 225, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933 Page: 1 of 6
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THE TRI-CITIES FIRST-
I line* were
Ion the Iiihj!
oblt *vemi* will:
ose Creek itr
jork ha* been i
|° street throe,),,
feet to
300
lou*e which *t**(
W ha* been
r 1 ' (r,‘ t and i
JraiQafce f^Em
I he completed
k t«* Street
|iasioner J, ||
arms, home*, i
for cash,
Jin* &* Loan, |
Par. Humble i
re. Joae* & /
St- Phone)
^^■30JT
*te woman
sly. Will
“X” care dif'J
223 la
Idle aged
eping or
520 East
»ur-room house a
at Defee
Aron. 221)
our room
tent. Modem
dartin Ad
erring, .Gulf (
odera unfu
ent. Threet
’at?r paid,.
Illinois, Bail
ed into
now loci)t^-]
in Pelly j
nr trade
paints and
somethin*!
trade it ttj
sou can use,/
ducks'ori
{’S, now hi j
orner Main
illy. 210
of key
rmy Ti
nLCitica.
224
m
■ j
i
White Mice.
^ Astor Not Flogged.
Worry In Europe.
Strong Love Of
(gome.
fj Arthar Brisbane I.
mi
; j, cheap, its value drops
*.other value*. New York
[seeding 1*000 white mice for
experiment, buys them
i dee Ozark Small Stock f mr
field, Mo., for lean' than
I cent per mouse. Five years
j price was 31 cents, sixty*
~tli isl?133~prlcei. ~~
[ thousand guinea pigs cost J
over 23 cents each, l
•hundred rabbits were
; for 73 cents eac!:. Los
breeders Will tell New
is high. - ......1
THE TRI-C
OF GOOSE CREEK. PELLY
V
BAYTOWN
VOLUME H—NO. 225
(•OOSE CREEK, TEXAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21' 1933
Successor To Dally Tribune
CHINESE RAIDERS CRIPPLE JAP
Delay Looms On Texas Dry Repeal
ROOSEVELT
; man, below, More, the senate Svfi#Am In TnWOfii 162
RESOLUTION
TO DISCUSS
WAR DEBTS
Testimony of parley Boze-
mnn, below, More, the senate
committee investigating Loui-
siana elections, caused Senator
Huey Long to shout “liar” at
■the witness.
N
n5ffi^Winif1SIIP%' ■mmmamrrrrz,
r might give scientists in-
i that would save millions
lives. '
| tie Rockefeller institute, in
department, managed
(late Jap .nese scientist, No-
i who sacrificed his life to
, you could see white rata
kite mice with cancel^ much
than the animal’s body.
55ttr-.^S»«»
Result of Conference
With British Envoy
Likely to Sway Two
Cabinet Selections
itolf a cent 'seems a che.p
rfer a w iee mousse, consider
1 that you can get a white
( being for nothing.
nothing at all to adopt
, to w ieh {-. human mother
nted much care, thought
defing. ■ ......—
NKW-YORK, Foil. 2( a\R)-An
exchange of views on the war debt
ow«^ the ‘ United States by
France was predicted today with
announcement that President-Elect
Roosevelt would confer this after-
noon with Ambassador Paul Clau
del of France.
The announcement was made,
without comment as to the nature
of the conferenca..but .it was point-
ed out that the president-elect
mm 0f
Passed Bv Senators
itSIWAITED
State Convention
AUSTIN* Feb. 511 (UP).-.-The.fetjygttm.and putting all public j
officers' on a straight salary basis wasfavored, today by the senate.
- A constitutioneLji^ptoept abolishbtg the fee system for all of- j
fleer* except"'notaries public, surveyor^
eincl officers whose iirccincts do not include a city or town passed the Limited Payments of
j senate by a unanimous vote.
It now go;s to the house. If.it fo&ives a two-third* vote there.1 ^ |L f ^
it will be submitted to a vote a? toe people-- . To Defer vAll f O f,
Most public bills for years Tftve been blamed on the fee system.
' Under the fee system some county ,■ officers haV» made as much
as $25,000 a year. Justices of thew~T —"tf"——r- : r—
peace under the fee system have
made $12,500 while district judges
r?ecived only $6600. Constables
have made about $10,000. ■ >
Arrest of train riders, crap)
shooters and the practice of sher-
iffs,of making big profits on feed-
ing prisoners so they cduld use the}
RNEY ROLES
POWERLESS
HEROINE
President-elect Roosevelt has
written tty ’P. Ctnaa,
Wmm Miami physidan,
thanking her for spoiling the
aim of Giuseppe Zengara whan
the Italian sought to assasMn-
ate Mm.
B
Ml
British houJe of commons, !c“ff*rre1d'yester,iay with Sir Ron'
rge Lansbury, annoy ■M L‘ndsay- the British ambassa
Lady Astor’s fighting qu I-jdor’ in reffa!'d to the d;bt mtua
exclaimed - “your■..toothedt?”' * . „ . li
lave flogged you”.* Lady' Rer‘nt md:cat",ns 1,ave
immediately wanted to know lthat France was eager to reopen]
the honorable member }debt conversations, although her;
IsBeves in flogging'chil- i Position is different from that of} - --.....
.'Britain in the eyes of many Am-Jni ry i
, ■ erican legislators- because Britain * Y CiansL/e C I 3 f 6
paid Tier December debt. install -j Gun Victim ,
inept while France defaulted. Improving
CHICAGO MAYOR
JS REPORTED AS
NEARING CRISIS
AUSTIN. Feb. 21 «I L*»-Little
liklihood was seen today that the
Tcxijh Legislature would take
stqfctgwnft .awiiar y^^wiMiiW»'|s
to act on repeal of the f deral pro-
AGAMTHAZARl
j Gonzales, a leader in the forces w
......„....—. ...— —--'t . .. . “ - " j young demoernto who got a re- lJ
excess for hiring fee bill employes (Three New Members peal endorsement from the State
have been encouraged by the fee l Qf BuilfJinff Board j democratic convention at
syMein,ni^slato(s ’ ~ ........Wi tB
A long legislative investigation r\re /Appointed exact wording of the federal pro-'
of the fee system resulted in re- ' ' |posal before the state inaugurates
covery for the state in hundreds of Until the l,oard created for th'J I action.
purpose, of revises the Houston Rep, p. L. Anderson, San An-
building code to fit conditions in tonio, in«mber of the state-,vide
Goose Creek, the city of Goose organisation for change in liquor
E,
RAIL
DESTRO'
ZfrrtT*
Ini ti a ti ve, InTWar
Against Invader^H
JEastem,,
Feb. 21
m
Aster’s-g<>9#--V wgiiH a-
r had flogged her, instead cf
1 her and showing her how
■ herself look prettier, the
|lew blow* of the flogging
broken Lady Astor’s
libidi. is her mainspring,
sane thing diiat can help your
; succes* in life is course
at is easily destroyed by
f in childhood. ' ■ .
Astor would not haw
Ifoglish women how to get
iiament if she Fad had her
dug broken by a•severe
r When she was f- little girl.
PE has a new worry, aAt!
often happens, the Worry
ReTTalliah'sr
lthat troubled part of tjie
JR was believed here today that
:hr
, (Continued on Page Six)
COOKING SCHOOL
New Ideas But In
Simple Manner
I thousands of dollars in fees and it
revealed many abuses of the sys-
tem. •
1 Several county and district of-
ficers were-indicted for actions
under the fee system as a result
of the legislative investigation. -
Constables and Justices
Th:> proposed, amendment allows
commissioners’ courts, at their dis-
cretion, to retain under the fee
system constables and justices of
(Continued-on Page Six) —
the president-elect will announce' MIAMI, Fla*., Feb. 21 tl’.R)— |
the name of his secretary of state pjtysicians continued their optimis- j
(Continued on Page Six) ; reports *o nthe . condition of j
'Mayor Cerpmk of Chicago today,T ■"*-*————7
but private reports circulated - flTV Tft PA I F FfT
I widely were that liis condition -var V*1 I 1V vVliliiiv l
i TO BE PRACTICAL *",e ,h“ w” ^
t .... ...___________.1 Mayor Cermak has been restless!_____
x/. , Tvr-ri /-\rr {throughout recent nights, when 10 , ,
MlES iates Will Oiler I„. wa* reported to have been ‘‘5ecretary
sleeping quietly, these reports j Get Money OT Cut
suid, and has suffersd considerable j Off Sf*rvirf»
abdominal pain, —i .... j..
His physicians however, issued
the following bulletin at 10:30 a.
"«• -«*“.22? r1*22 ■ rt
regulations, and fire hazards, if ]elMj8rs
any, do not- become hazards until i Timp of hold ing, the proposed
they are regularly defined in an convention, number of delegates,
official eoiSe * officially 'paMeO^^f method pnd time of sedeetjng
the city sommission.
OTYTOENFORCE
LICENSE FEE FOR
MILK PRODUCERS
A gold.n mouthful of real en
joyment,
-Mayor Cm-mak
of Miss Beulah Mackey Yates,
[ W.'.erc one pistol shot in j who copies to the Tri-Cities
t.rted the great war, a niw
i is horn, made up of three
. «all <i t e -“little entente”.
►■Slovakia, . Jugo-Slavia,
nania, with 45,000,000 to-
nhtion, have practically
similar rival combina-
(iungary, Italy, hew Ger-
Ltod badly crippled "Auslri
*e sameSHng to isy afboa
Minued on Page Six)
February 27, 28 and March 1 j
to qopduct the three day- cooking j
sehmd under the auspices of this j
newspaper, ' ■ '
Do you know- how to vary thej
breakfast meal_ with surprises 7 Do j
you know ”T3ow™to hake a real',
3PPl?..pie?.. Can you prepare
Continues to,
show steady improvement. There'1 cm out
(Continued op. Page 6)
CL' ISOR DUE TO
AID GARDENERS
___Harris county
agricultural; agent, was to meet
emergency lunch when unexpected
guest® arrive
today with membfos of the garden- I s
irp committee of . the Workmen’s I submitted
►UNDTOWN
in a deep-sea tour of
i-Citieso-^-A counle o
uties from the sher-
p itment asking Lr
erson . . JR. R. Zier-
ng on Fred Lintelman
*■ Flo McElhany an
King holding an open-
baw i *
C-. C. Ellisor, ______ .
orT’water bills. Water tiommia
sioner R. C. Goodman last week
submitted to the commission the
Council, organization of the up-' last of those with unpaid^ bills,
Ybu can learn ho-.v to do all j employed, relative to beginning j but no action was taken,
these thingd very easily by at- j work on gardens on three tracts! The. subject was brought
(tending the three-day Cooking [donated to the cottfiil, P.P} Bur-
TRttt was the gist of an oral
ruling given the.. commission last
night by City Attorney Vernon
Coe, , who was asked last week by
Fife and Police Commissioner J.
D. .Jones to.report as how far the
WATCD ArrAITWTC c*ty cou- K0 in C0miemning*and
Yf A ILK ALLUlInllJ r<>moving (buildings deemed fire
V hazards.
• -r " i IfeYeraT mbnt1wTi|b th¥ com-
IS I Ola to | mission decided to adopt the Hous-
J ton building code and named a
j boned to revise the code to apply
. _ j to local conditions. Members of
Residents' of~Gpi»sc Creek wholthe l,flar<l were Henry CathHnt‘r'
' E. T. Arnett, I. M. Jones, C. 1.
i, and B. J. Smith,
manager. — —-
, Cathriner and Fortinberry r>
The city commission last night j sj(?ned) d Smith was depose(i aS
instructed Henry Whiddon, acting jcj tnuutgeF. Eo last night the
city secretary, to collect th» bRla, cornmJttSoi, appointed c. V. Jorrf-
make arrangements for delln- ’ So, Aro„ and Hanr
quenus to work them out, or have j t0 tak(,
c wa er cu o j the places of those who resigned.
* ____tlnfijl fh*> KabiyI pnmplfiLPR if.a
thfjm are all
sidered.
matters to be con-
Health Officer Asked
ta Inspect Dairies
. For Permits
In- order that the election of dsj-1
(Continued on Pago G)
are delinquent in their water bills ’ . .
p7fli^bErforced~-to~- pay them, Ormer cTiy
dig a well
PLAYERS GUILD
SCORES TRIUMPH
There is at present
rPwater bills.
........ of the Tri-Cities Sun and row announeea.
J c’o-operating merchants. Bach af- . Ellisor was to be here at 1 p. m.
' ternoon will
'ternoon will be crowded with new
1 ind modern ideas for the ‘‘Happy
Kitchen”.
Nothing will drag, every min-
ute will bs packed full of spark-
Ing instruction which whets your
The land to be devoted to garderiF
is l.cated on Pruett street neiir
the interurban tracks, and in two
other parcels northeast of the
city.
Burrow today *»ked that as
again last night, and Whiddon was
given his instructions. Leeway
(Continued m Poge ^)--------
‘The Fugitive’ Staged
Before Capacity
Audience
Playing to a capacity , house at
Horace Mann auditorium, the Tri-
Cities Players Guild last night
scored a triumph in The Fugitive,
modern adaption from a pla>
Th? Eyes of Love.
Action Smooth
The players were able to «.
tyhid- strongly convey their feelings that
‘1 the audience responded emotionally
in a, way which is entirely unusual
fo ran amateur production.
Because it has been rather dif-
ficult to determine the “daily
verage number ~flf gallons ofr ■'
[milk from each ^>w furnishing
j milk for the city", the Goose Creek
[city commission last night decid^
to set a flat fee of $5 for cadi
six months on each milk producer
soiling milk in the city,
fit* Ban Jacinto creamery, -id-
l?fclPI#G.
apaneae war machine to. Man-
churia, posed for an onslaught
aimed to drive 150,000 Chineee
troops from Jehol Province, waa
crippled today by Chinese raid-
er* who destroyed a strategic iron
railway bridge on the line para-
llelling the eastern Jehcl frontier.
Traffic over the line, connect-
ing Tahuaan and Tunglla, waa sus-
pended and Japanese troop move-
ments to Tungliao were halted
temporarily. In Manchuria opposite .
Jehol city of Kailu, la the main
■ concentrating point for Japanese
troops on the eastern frontier.
There was no indication that the
Japanese drive through Kailu bad
started, despite Geneva reporta
that large scale Japanese maneuv-
er* wers under way. There were
[clashes en the Jehol frontier, how- f
ever, and Chinese hero expected
that the Japanese drive would I
start by tomorrow, at the latest.
Dispatches from the front to&
cated that Chinese guerillas wsro
•taking the mWatft* against the
Japanese. ft
1 V; Hriah Skirmishing f\-■> |
An official Chine** communiqnh j
(Continued on Page Six) T Ty
study of the code and makes the
necessary changes, and the revi
sions adopted by ordinance, the
LIONS PROPOSE TO
ORGANIZE SCOUTS
Leader Being Soiig|f
to Head Work For
Local Boys
| though not a producer, was inelud-
e.i in the new ordinance decided
upon 1st, night, and will be !%-
quired to pay ,a similar amount ; ” —
Henry Whiddon, acting city sec- j Reorgaftfzatlon of the Boy
reiary, at the meeting called the J Scouts in the Tri-Cities area,- tyith
gggjgrtBSl* ttict appointment of * new
Hut although the milk permit dr-
dn.ance was supposed to provide
The action was exceprwraiTv
_ smooth find well timed, inJicating
’l j exceptional direction on ttys tart
.u. j , . 3 i of George L. Keene ; n J Karl L,
city has no building code and ha? { *
no regulations to enforce, Coe ‘ Gn)ff ScoreN
4^. ........* 1 Miis Gol'd-} Groff aa Gails
A s«urance Awaited on
Safety of B O e ttcher abfe to enforce them
However, he said that the com
mission could declare an emer
gency under eeratin conditions,
land could set up regulations fit-
ting oertato cases and would be
Harry was easily the outstanding
membliioti' } ttoaE
(Continued on Page Six)
jpiftrfnr TrMTTwTT^
nd a pining hot oven. Know, the;the meeting Friday night at which (IJ, kidnaped nine d;.ya:ag^ would
----- t No definite action was taken to- J
DENVER, Colo., Feb. 21 ittPr—| ward declaring any emergencies,1
Examinations Given
revnue for the city, it was falling’
down -on the job.
The old ordinano.* provides for
a levy of 20 cent* a gallon on-the
‘•daily average number, of gallons
ot each cow furnishing milk for
the city”, with the 20 cents per
’‘"■“TCon^ -
wa* discussed at today's meeting
of rim Lions club. The dub mot
at, Grace Methodist church, with
Dr, L. A, Hankins presiding,
. Unusual entertainment was
fered the club by a group of Bay-
town junior high school students,
whose gymnastic* under the dir*c-
tion of W. M. Dowell brought tre.
CRAZED MOROS
SLAY 7 NATIVES
MANILA, r i., Feb. 24
Two Moros, crazed by the dread
“jungle madness/’, ahwhetL seven
nrtives to death today with, bolo
knlvesTand wounded three other*
before they were shot down by
members of the constabulary,
hfadquarters ef the Philippines
mendous applause? ^
The youflgsters went through a
serious of tumbling, balancing and
gymnastics, bringing forth voci-
ferous applause from-the dub for
their skill. M
“This goes to who* that we need
look no further than our publia
SHOVELS GIVEN
TO AID WORKERS
For Cemu. Taker. Z2EZZ Z' w.JTkira
»g hi8 morning round cl
Wion of schools, teachers
Hobby driving Mr*. asily forget/ Miss Yates has a ar.d Burrow asked that the wo- l portwi
was decided.
te” in your own kitchen.
Fundamentals are discussed in
ic most forceful yet simple way
in a, way that you will not i
enumerators,
E. Lee high
ornia ,', Tony Halt- ||
looking for the court 'in
“ Creek . . . Fire Chief N,
yellow tabby dozing
ton . ,some of the
have started spring
ling ... the operator
• saw denying,he is the
ut-up . . .. Asj Drew
*ting, the better to il-
wnat he is talking
• • a hamburger doing
^disappearing aet in the
r* of a hungry lad . . .
INk t:klng advantage of
ties Sun’s new lend-
. an aboriginal
e suit, six-gallon
long hair tied with
Rev. S. P.
‘rfS’?
t I | J IHHBH P,.. PIP .. on th* code by V s new members - 'More than # ipplk*nta this if-
be yours and your wives of unemployed men, ; nd i be returned safely to hia family of4
amilv’s by learning how to “ere-- women without work, will be or-l it ransom were paid, was awaited
- ganized.* ' • b> the young millionaire’* father,
Miss Opal Roberson, county.' Ci?ude K. Boettcher, today. .
heme demonstration agent, will; The elder Boettcher requested
give demonstraitions on canning, j it te yesterday the corps of re-
porters which had been st iHoned
' ome and at the home of
tunity. , i y- ung Boettcher be removed.
^ ‘ •' .............m............
iSS [Here Are Cosh Prizes For
iat-Rflimw rwi,MB«at an Bon- j^-anit sddittonal shovel* i
scholastics census
HHHpRl given: at fetartHPPPHPR
TWO HELD HERE !«“ „.mln.ti0„ „re
FOR GRAND JURY u» ««*{. rf w. *.
—4— . (Smith, superintendent of schools.
A charge of burglary ag in.,t‘( Twelve will be chosen for Hie
Mend* Hutton, 25, filed by M. L. 'work. - *
Pace, of Stewart Heights, today) --—~
gaw island of the Tawitaji group.
f L.tf A.. |
from .nut to 1
native village, slashing their vic-
tims indiscriminately. ■JHHl
Constabulary men who shot
down the Moros said it was iwporo
sibie to take them aUve. It was the
fit at recent outbreak of “jungle
madness” which once was fairly
common.
leet Ro»(Jberg Squad
Eight members of the Pelly
.olunteer fire department tonight
.ol'
.......
jtpiii a contest with firemen
hero, ® fire drills. • zl is
Men t{? make the trip are Dave
and Manuel Wilkins, Boots Wil-.
[jams, Mack Redmond, Clifford
Thibodaux, Fred Mason and Er-
nest Neal.
They will leave at 6:30 p. m,
Students Of Roman History
■-----
Here's an opportunity Rr ft*-4ba*t,,Hffl give two pass-s
dents in the Tri-Cities area to wirt to see “The Sign of the Cross”.
................■
i
a cash prize or free tickets to see (Which comes to the Arcadia tlieif-
the new Cecil B. DeMille roadshow1 si in Baytown for three day*, be-
spectacle, "The Sign of the Cross” ginning Sunday.
of the Peace J. E. Flowers.
Pace swore out the complaint
og .inst Hutton after the theft of
a coffee urn from his barn on
MmmWr____________________
For Year Late Post Mortem
Ttye mortal remain* of minutes but the minutes showed he was
of a meeting of the Goose Creek to have started work May 16, so
needed in order to
PHp,wo
R. F. C. relief projects,
Clawson, construction
the Houston Lighting and
company, yesterday br
used shovels to the Sun i
Dan MeGary,
Goose Creek sub
informed of the
tools will be used to j
ai men to work with
Mr. Clawson «
picks and i
available
BANKS TO CLOSE
On account of Wedneaday
the birthday anniversary
- •ith burglary in connection witn . ____
■ Ithe attempted theft of boxing May 9, 1932. last night were ex-jer $8.33 paid
by brushing up on their Roman- In preparing this essay, b: sure gioveg from the Community House jhumed at a meeting of the com- ■ services those five extra
history and writing as fasay on to confine it strictly to the Em- a< Baytown, w*s bound over t*j! mission and a post mortem exam-j an alternative, he wiggt
the Emperor Nero. peror Nero, who was the sixth of the grand Jury under bond of $800. ination held over the dead body, jail other city employes hired y
The Tri-Cities Sun wifi give1 $5. the Roman Caesars, and who aa- ———---
in cash to the student turning in sumed the crown at the age. of 17. j WASHINGTON PROGRAM
ithe best essay on Nero between He is classed as on? of the mon-i Students of San Jacinto elemen-
now and 6 p. m. Friday. AlFstu- stroua. figures in
Carter for his
As
of the the then new city commission be
request paid extra. , ,
The microscopic f
IJSars-c-eZSi’SSl a
...
the last i
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 225, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933, newspaper, February 21, 1933; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1020826/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.