The Daily Tribune (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 23, 1931 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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^ ■■ ■■■ ..... . .
N
Dealers
l0J!>-TkJ
dealer* || y
!his
Local
»and
m to vig|
ty Beac
'tilted,
ks, r of I %
Tobaccl
IM
A.UX,
Safe.
WEATHER:
kSE CREEK and VICINITY: Generally fair
’ TEXAS: Generally fair tonight and Tuesday
lonsidereble cloudiness on the south and west
ico&sts.
Batly Srtlrmt
ri
FEATURES
—
URVEY
| GOOSE Creek city council
Bto another record session
night As usual the lion
jded in its den and the
\ members came out with a
war looming ahead.
Goosc Creek, Texas, Tuesday/ June 2Jrd, 1931. 4 pagts Number 19 I *n" “ _........... 1
threats fly in city couTchTsesson
; ‘Picking Your Right Job** is the title of a u.
teriea feature in the Daily Tribune. Ita purpose w
m inform young men and women unable to choose
ietween career*, the qualifications for a wide field
»f activity. Parents and children alike will find the
teries of interact.
>«-riwes*~x.-^inr——— I
TUCK POST TO
STUDY JULY 4
FETE PLANS
ACKS ON tapping charges,
jtes, service charges, and
measures applying to con-
f costs were made by the
[ members. All are of the pi* 1 . ——
1 that present rates are un-J1 HlaJ Arrangements To
|,l should be remedied. Be Set At Meeting
1 onight in Baytown
j A mistake to believe that
) company would “give” the
jy thing. It is true the initial
the one and a half an
Tuck Post, V.F.W?\t°fitf mSiSj j 5™“ of ft foF Se'Ler*!.wi|
in the Baytown community build- | * / °War< fam,*y' -
ing tonight. ’ • ■ j" ; 1 -- -■■■*■ 1 ’•'
Final Plans for the Tri-Cities
id July 4 fete in honor of State- De-
, service line charges have partment Veterans of Foreign
luccd. The company makesj.Wars convention delegates will be
ieet, however, with restric-/ ---- .i ~ . . _
bd reservation long enough
pnf using.
pINATION of the reconnec- j The post will be called to order
arn is a ‘‘nigger in the) ^th a roll call at 8 p. m., and im-
f. The company still, mediately go into executive ses-
! the consumer $1.50 for (Sion to complete details of the
I a connection and the city, celebration, Groved K. Edge, com-
: $1 for issuing a permit. | mand«f, said.
L ner still pays the $2.50 Rations Ordered
i Purchase orders for barbecue
fPt- ’ FuWi
DRTUNES are said t, , _
I groups of three. The Tri-! cussed by a-meeting
pyrevisited with three rob- ~~
he past weekend but that,
use for a letup in the vigi-J
' officefs.
Twin Plum Trees
Bear 5 Bushels »■
Another fruit record for the
Tri-Cities has been set by JS, C.
Howard of 510 East Main ave-
nue.
He has two plum: trees \yhich
have produced, mone than five
bushels of high grade preserv-
ing plums thig year.
The trees are only six years
old and were literally loaded
with golden fruit when a Tri-
bue representative called at the
home-Monday.
The twin trees furnished
enough plums for several .neigh.-
38 Join T rj-
Cities Girl's
BHP -_____ Club Monday
.rations, courtesy car arrangements,! . \
Pcmianent 0 r ga niza-
““-— tion Is Set Up at
Meeting. hr Baytbwn
Community Hop&e
Contractors Start Work On
Channel Crossing; 50 Men
Will Be Employed Next Week
Ground work in preparation for long, UM feet, and . 20 feet wide,
building the Tabbs Bay Causeway^* will be built of creosoted timber
was started today. t piling with a timber deck topped
A tool house has been built and by concrete, (
as soon as the pile driver, expected The job of gathering material
later this week, arrives about 50 will be started Immediately, Mr.
men will be put to work, accord- Diefendlrfor said. j
ing to W. T. Diefenderfer, super- The pglc driving equipment Is now j
lhtendent of construction ft* Dodtls enroutefby barge to the Tri-Cities
ami Wedegartner of San Benito, approaAi,
Texas, who were awirded the con- Th* fcuil.lin* of the bridge is
tr*f^ expected to consume four and a
The bridge will be almost a mile, half months with normal weather,
----— (conditions prevailing, .Mr. Diefen-i----------—
Masons Will | fwien t0> Hired Pcllv Youth
Install New Held Here On
Nude "As ls“
Not "As Was'
Deputy Sheriff Hamilton re
calls an antidote for the carp-
free nutie bathing that*has been
rumored to be popular around
the. Tri-Cities.
“I restrained my partner
from bringing in just as they
re a party of six We found
two years ago," he said. “It
was his idea to present them in
court—evidence ‘'a* is."
Hamilton told the peade offi-
cer it wasn’t heceseary to bring
them in while mjde but give
them a chance to get “as was”
before they were "as is”.
OFFICIALS HURL EXPLOSIVE
REMARKS IN ARGUMENTS ON
PROPOSED CHARTER CHANGES
(WHITE Star Laundry safe
ared away before they!
By their nefarious trade. In?
Ird robbery clothing was
■om a downtown hotel room
.. BUCK TO-BE HERE
Major General Beaumont B.
Buck of San Antonio will he one
of ‘the - honored guests at the
Tri-Cities July. 4 celebration,
The noted war leader now sta-
fcionea at Port Sam Houston ac-
cepted Robert R. Tuck Post’s
invitation to attend in a letter
to Keene this afternoon., \
Joint Public Ceremony
Will Be Held At Ce-
dar Bayou Masonic
HrII Wednesday '
The Tri-Cities Girls* Recreation, Goose Creek and Ceuar Bayou
permanently organized at Baytown A.Fi and A.M. will hold a joint
11 HWlln'll luiftT or* iVl/’i Vi a ■■■n rim-mb a-llattisk raw# ■ --J&S
HHBR
for said
{ v-mjaiu/cn ill WIIC UIDC
I on the actual construction of the
Lodge Heads - -number
augmented by the ones needed to
concentrate materials, as well as
the laborers employed on building
the approaches.
The benefits that the Tri-Cities
wiH derive from this high wav ar-
tery are numerous. Besides^?
creasing the distance between here
and La Porte by about 16 miles
it. will, bring much'of the Hug-the
Theft Charge
2 Month Search Ends
When Hamiltqn Disr
covers Y o u t h In
Friend’s Home
BY ROSELLE HARRIS
A City Council session that began with all the tranquility of a
prayer meeting Monday night, ended with tumultous roar of banging
political fireworks. * _ . " ~ -#•
Such vitriolic remarks as “I’ll whip you if it la the last thing I
do;" such epitaphs as “your dirty lying thief," "you tossy English-
roan” crashed through the Council chamber where a few minutes be-
fore resounded the quiet voices of.
the commissioners and mayor, who
had, for the first time since the
inception of the present adminis-
tration, "got together”
problem—the gas company is not
giving the city a square deal.
Smiling . complacently council
then disposed of a few minor mat-
ters. ;
Then the fireworks began—
Proposed amendments to ,thc(
city’s charter came up for a read-
ing and for discussion,
Charter Changes
The -first to be given ■ an air-
CITY HALL WAR
ON GAS RATE
IS IN MOTION
Mayor Myers Hints At
Charges “To Suit the
City” In New Ordin-
ance
I green Friday. nesday night.
Miss Rosa Lee Winterhalter Ish w- Burch will be installed
i- COOPERATION-of 'Ctti--| ." ■' "" " ’ .. „
reporting out of the ordin- mittee in chsrge of the affair at
....______ .. f . A mnah'nm in __L ....
lurrences, and keeping on
lout for indications of crim-
Irk, should be given officers
pt them in safeguarding
* * *
1 HAS been sent to SUR-
em the citizens of the so-
fGoodman community” to
Baytown Monday
a meeting in
night,
The committee is composed of,
r. v
ROTARY HEADS
TO TAKE POSTS
Baytown and Goose Creak cham-
, bers of commerce, the Tri-Cities
Lions, and the Goose Creek Rotary
club, and Tuck post.
George Keene is chairman. Othei;
“the good work On the
i in that section. A bit of j
----'ui.huj vuiiiimiMiVy LU # -----------*
council to expredi grati- memyei,s attending the Monday
meeting were Dr, G? D. Emberton,
S. W. Dobson, Cyril Ptacek, L. A.
for the city officials is al-iLovel!**’ W‘ W- sloan' G- K-
^preciated by the men who B1?e- Fred Lintelman, and C. P.
brunt of prejudiced at- Trotter-
Courtesy Cars
■“ Lintelman,, chairman of the
transportation committee, told the
group that arrangements had been
made for 50 ears to carry the dele-
gates around the Tri-Cities.
Two Harris county motor cycle
officers will be here to aio in
handling Traffic, he said. The
Goose Creek traffic officer will
, '■ X r ■«««• UUtlCM
The public is invited to the ex-
ercises which will start at 8 p. ra.
Refreshments will be served.
The Cedar Bayou officers to be
installed are: Glenn Barber, senior
waraen; W. S. Shirley, junior war-
don: John M Marlin trnoBumr-
Officers For Coming *• M,rti";
Year To Be Installed ?
At Wednesday Meet
great deal of the time.
* * * •
sLY ONE hundred , boys
* studied in the daily vaca-
hie school of the Grace
|st church, and made one oi
xhibits of its kind ever
the Tri-Cities. The dis
de3 in interest the annual
Biatrict affair.
■MUCH commendation for
■ring efforts of the school
I in working with the stu-
finot be given. Jhe stu-
fiemselves are to .be con-
on taking such an m-l’
i their play and study,
SCHOOLS of that sort,
The Goose Creek Rotary club will
„ ! install officers to serve thb ensu-
' ing year at its luncheon in the din
ing room of the First Baptist
Church Wednesday.
Dr; F. L. Robbins will become
president. W. W. Sloan is the re-
tiring president.
John Kilgore and Walter Fehr
are to he installed as vice-presi-
dents. C. P. Trotter is secretary
and G. L. Keene is sergeant at
arms. .......
The new board of directors in-
also be on hand to atd m dtrecting c,udci Dr_ Robbins> sloani Fehr(
the throng.
Sloan stressed the importance of
reception conSmittee for the visi-
tors. One group will meet the boat
(CONTINUED""ON PACK 2)
Deveraux, tiler; Lee Swint, sem'or
deacon; Frank A. Mulkey, junior,'
providing for the creation of
hoajji of managers, to supervise
... ^ the eiw’* utilities, ? v *»:#
Jae Atkins, Pelly youth, was Tt"‘ proposed amendment was
M.I Mt. BolAu ™ , n<nlbcr ■,
charges of theft and burglary. was ascompanied by a letter sign-
Atktns was arreetpil by D«i)uty ed by*Henry Cathriner, requesting
Sheriff A. T! Hamilton while din- that the board of managers’* pil-
ing at the home of a friend* . p0f,al , .MfW in- proposed
- , . -------- . Hamilton said he first saw the amendments to be voted u
,, mat*lied, will handle youth aahewaa driving dowti Pru.- Au>«*t.
tortheminland* ^ ChamWl ^ f*1’ Ations with Another Commissioner Bobbie
Now that the Vridge construcion
----- ----- „— _.. , n»e gas war has begun again,
ing was the proposed amendment with lhe cit 4g thc ..mnns0r",
Drovidine for the creation nf a , „ , . . .
fojjowtng discussion of the “un-
fairness" of the Gulf Cities Na-
Comjwny's interpreter
Masonic Hall Wed- will be made between the lower
Ship,Channel points.
; V/ . Direct Route
•The bridge will join a road'on
Hog Iaknd that will lean down to
the pq|nt of the island from where
“ -mm
tural Ga*
tion of the recently adopted
is, actually under way, the supple
mental work Of building ap-
proaclies, Hie island roadway and
installation of the ferry, will be
carried on simultaneously, contrac-
tors said.
who anouier - one,
boy was sitting in a porch swing, wiled upon the mayor to voice
and when he passe4 he boy oarted hi* opinion of the matter, evading
GIN MARRAIGE
Goose Creek Officers
The Goose Creek officers are:
M. Wiggins, senior warden; Nat
Pace, junior warden; Jeff Tanner,
treasurer; G. Kincannon, secretary;
D. T. Brooks, senior deacon; J. C.
Sloan, junior deacon; R. W. Wea-
ver, tiler; H. C. Durham, senior
steward; and D. V. Gillespie, junior
steward. -'' -- ™
FELLY DELAYS
ACTION ON GAS
Carl McKinney, J. D. Dowell and
Henry Cathriner. ’ _ T ___ ,
Entertainment JS-J, Ctandp. Oog LlCCSC
LAWJB BLOW
Texas Clerks Says Ok-
lahoma Is Getting All
Wedding Business
This state** law requiring filing «.f
three da^s notice of ii^ention to
wed is causing a depression in the
marriage license business in north-
west Texas counties bordering oh
Oklahoma Ilia, according to coun-
ty clerks.
ftteide the house,, Hamilton said.
Follows •Suspicions
Council Monday nigiti
Under the ordinance, the Ga*
company ha* agreed to reouce the
tapping charge-and eliminate the
$2.50 service charge, provided the
city appoint an inspector.
Mayor Myers and the commis-
sioner* hinted Broadly that the Aid
Carter, ,m(inRnre wou]fj be repealed and a*
’ new one which "suited thc city"
would br enacteo immediately, if
upon
1
■m
it ? * n ------- w ciiwvvcu Jiinumiui
? the real issue in a rambling taikj the Gas company did not
.by saying that.jie was in to .terms;’’ ’
“come
Becoming suspicious* of the boy’s th\f,r ot some changes before the
behaviour, Hamilton went to Pelly question came to a vote,
and asked Constable V, C- Porter “I would like to sec the people
to accompany him to the house to get an opportunity to vote on the
Challenge Issued
“We adopted thc ordinance that
the gas company presented and
..... . made very few changes in it; now
proposition, but I also feel that if ; if they do not intend to abide by
’ their own ordinance, and be fair
"J •“vjjwvuiiv wiiv /B HUW
appearing at the NuGulf theatre.
w.ga> ON FAQ* 4)
Fined
[Theft Trial
Water and S e w c r^.*2^2,
Engineer Reports Famous
Gold Mine In Old Me
' —_____ | i an gas war in uoose creek is
JUAREZ, Mex,, June 23 ffiEl—A j sleep there for the hordes of fleas,”] responsible for holding the ruling
tory of fabulous wealth in placer The entire Tambor district, in abeyance. The old r*te «nnli*0
Charges Talked
Pelly city council decided last
night to hold up on final action on
ah ordinance to settle the gas sit-
uation.
The gas war in Goose Creek is
story of fabulous wealth in placer J The entire Ta
gdd in tee El Tambor, Sirndoa Ochoa: reported,
districL has bean tom^^ bsck by! square miles and there ara- otlftflj tioose
Victor L. Ochoa, southwestern j creeks and numerous arrpyos, allf8ai<1-
mining onffinppr nf uriiihli «x**n !i«o$ dtA
mining engineer.
His report was made after a
survey of the properties in that
district held by Manuel Llantada,
.mbor district J in abeyance. The old rate *ppli*s ^ *'
las, F<mt Worth, Wichita Falls and
Juarez and Tia Juana gambling °t the area.
:hani for lifting suitcases
>scoe Jennings and Ever-
^oth of Pelly, to take an .
vacation from their habi- conce*81onna‘re- _.....- ......
<. There is $135,000,000 worth of
unrecovered gold, Ochoa reported,
in the strip of territory he covered
seven miles long and averaging 50
yards in width. It is all a placer
proposition and the dirt will av-
erage $50 per cubic yard, he said.
After working the district for
Inspector Named
Already an inspector has been
of which are just as rich in gpW
as in the main Tambor creek vj-. ... ™ — —__
cniity, Ochoa further states that ; appointed by the city and as soon
Llantada controls practically all a8 the ordinance Is adopted he will
" assume his new outies. J. W,
pleaded guilty before Jus-
P^e Peace Flowers Tuesday
F8 a suitcase from the Car
[Riley of Baytown. lt was
kenious way of reciprocat-
pvor Mr. Riley extenoed
them a ride.
was unearthed in the
s; G. Wright on Riggs
Pelly. by Deputy Con-
'■ntcutt, Cohstible Jr C.]ph°itl tpfd^nic
and Pelly City Mar-
er- Huniicutt filed the
ftrt' thr men;
wrved a 80 day *en-
* similar charge a year
The El Tambor n#e, Ochoa re-
three mountains
lates,/consists of I .
so old they have reaped % poiflt
of obliteration, considering what
their original size mult have been.
"Where these mountains hads
eroded,’ ’Ochoa said, "the gold ha*
been left fit dirt which is 50 yaws
Riggs received the appointment.
Two otter questions that came
up were ordinances to make ..
compulsory to carry out a clean-up
campaign and to license dogs or
else keep to*£ ;; m ..tredft.. b*
eluded in the latter was a resolu-
_ tion to restrict people from letting
thick on the top and sides of the ^e'r fow*s s4ray’ ”^*ere have been
-----mu. ^.» .— .. too many compiamts of chickens
* wuriung wic uisuiL'b AU* j ----— "— ^
seven weeks, however, operations!mountains. The fill from these , _ . - ----,
topped and the mine return- j eroding mountains runs to the Pa- gpront/ th te^der *ho<rt* "*d
were stopped and the mine return-,
ed to the citizens because of a ty-! <ufic Ocean.”
Mueh of the lum*r centuries,
the pack-road which
bor Creek has been
her bought for the operations waa
used instead to build coffins for
were remanded to jail
°ut the $10(1
But Ochoa said he would return
in several weeks to resume oper-
ations.
"When I do,” he said, "I am go-
to build concrete houses to
sprouts in neighbors’ gardens.
Water Charge*
nacio as an outlet for
silver, but no one e«er
taking a look at the Ts
tion.
Alfred Alacon and
(COimRWH) Oft
ItoMstisateJBBBBBPMPji^^B , r________, —
When officers arrived, a woman this council permits this proposi- u.™, uwn wnunance, aim m mt
denied that Atkins wls at the tiori which is & unjust dne-iio with ust w» will adopt an ordin-
house,• saying that be had ‘‘gone I will not say unjust, but irnot a ance that suits the city, and they
out the back way.” : good-on#r because it was not can areept it,” Myers said,
j Officers found him hiding Iw- brought up by petition, hut by a The Council contends that the
I hipd a door of a back room. | small number of men, was permit- Gas company require* the city to
Escaped In April ted to rome before the people of make “such rigid and thorough in-
Last April, Deputy Sheriff V. K. Goose Creek sis' it is now and if ^portions aa the gas company
Donson, discovered Atkins with an by some/ misunderstanding, it "ever did make,” and yet has not
overturned car loaded with chick- should pass, the responsibility actually eliminated the service
ens, Dodson questioned Atkins would come'back to-us. I am in '‘barge. . ___________
who. said he wan hauling the chirk favor of some change* m the pin » M fortune, transfer and
ens for a Mr Brown. Dodson ,,wttlon Ww> It to 3 ^ Tscei|rt,
commandetT him to return to “Mr. Commissioners Martin and Rowing that the Gas company has
Brpwn,s house to prove his asser- QuarU pxprpH^,) (|i*Hp|ir0va! of levied a charge of $1.50 upon a
U0"' . ' , , ,, , the (letition as a whole. f*mily when 4h« company was call-
1, -Atkins, driving .a ljght coupe. .. «.________u
ofttalT'eT'S ^ C', "l am in ««,rt with
outdistanced Doosom and escaped. pJan ^ th„t kjnfl; however I do
ten
taw, „f i' r— »«"*<* w-jSSVTSi'SrS S
who owned thc chickens. .. 1 ~ (continue!, on r\c.g t\ J(io R» and I’ve seen them inspect
7“ :———_.— ---— ------------*. _ at least a hundred homes.”
IT L Of « a r*i * I "All they (lo Is take a match
/UTRS Jrlan Move Io Arouseand hoW u near the tonriectos
ed reconnect a meter and Inspect
Jhe appliances.
In Hardeman-co not a single li- ft ftbft! Sngh|tTa ft F,,rtune^ the ***
........ • ' * • ^ 11 *8 "«* 8 mandatory .petition and I emR'oy<** had
connection with the theft of two , wou)d chg p |t fomph;Wy be-j f”und prem"rt teirt on an'
__________________________ . a precedent.
Altos, Oklahoma, got all the busi-
Wiibarger-co also reports a
distinct slump in marriage license
applications. Frederick, Okia., is
close at hand. H
Marietta, Okia., which has a
population of 100 is doing a land
(rther large Texas cities. DuringLArousing of an intemrified tram-j made at Aleshar,
| and if they are not leaking, it is
A National Spirit In You
- - repaired.”
City Manager Manlev reportet
Cnicago,
speemM^freepofwtetrt of Cmcago, tmdnttfr week co«= 1 m
—!';rr^r irr. -
. . . .. .... . annrnvsul
uSt T *• - wah - a. ™, wJ
number <mly 150 were for Okla-
homa couples. All the others were
Texans,
Mrs. Ida Gray
“ Dies At Pelly
OTHf.. ......m to establishing
dominant ideas of a new political; that the Hittites were, after a,!,
era just ushered in by the conven-j Turks.
ing of a special congress of thei The first step in the youth
People's Party in Angora. [training movement was the taking,
Both ideas are sponsored by, over of the Turk Ojac by the I’eo-1
Pres'dent Kemal and from now pie’s Party' This national imdito-
tvery effort will be made to ue- tion, with some, two hundred and
Turkey, was organized to keep
a!i j r Turkish home idea.
I' i- with these Turk Ojac
is to be brought up at the next
tor me (W ift nection of water if the wore fail * - ■ -----
to pay titter their water or sewer-
age bill. An adjustment for past
due accounts for sewerage service
jyiMiiifniy fiilni
veiop in tire youth a clear undci
srauding of what the republic
means to them.
Mrs lot r», a,, MmA .» a . ^ lcadef- Kemai will urge his ---
today at the home of her*pr,rt> to follow eertmn ideas sad, ganiralions and building* that
daughter, Mrs. B* C, Littlefield j detfs *rf thJ* ft* training will commerce.
pejjy f 'Gmrd Asscmbiy. Tbe Turkish us- j Wlui<* details have not yet vbeen
She. is survived by two other I ir
daughters; Jfrtf. W L. Lowe jfj*8- <*tew - the- Hnfi
Pelly and Miss Kit* Peerman ofi^ lime no ** «• uejiurc anu political wyaity, ,or u ■*» 1,,c
Luling and four sons, G, C„ Pelly; ***** * Turk- Tammany touch 1. given the plan f* comp«ty’s ]
; L K1L- j ^ na tionai con*«ou*newi of alaince aR the TurkAljaca are u-nv- i>eTtt«emapa
to as is coming into the
pipes, the test would be sufficient,”
he said. M
We ore not jeopardizinz our
mere of getting the cut ra
the city does not feel that it j
known that the lose anything, regardless of
H-thliif ~ ttlit 1_ _ .............
to bet tore, and political loyalty, for a »**• The cftyTas abideu’hy
approved.
Plumber Protests
George Hamilton, plumber, pro-
tested that the city was making
too “rigid a test” ot appliances.
“I would not jeopardize ourq
sibititie* of getting the rate reduc-
tion by using too heavy a test If
the Inspector would apply pressure
’ft
w * •
gore, and Grady, Harwood. .
grandchildren also survive her.
the body will be earried o —
land by Paul U. Lee to Houston!H- 'on der Osten,
jQg^fi^wSna’ ancient' past
Prre:dent Kemal is also greatly
over-) niterested in the discoveries of H.
■ mm
tYe property Of the People's Pally, j1
and will cuntinue under the par-
ty r direction, with the youth t*-
ing educated m •
for burial
key of the HRtite
-YS*-.
I Of {of good dtiteUShip L ,
'l ...»
...................
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Rogers, Chester. The Daily Tribune (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 23, 1931, newspaper, June 23, 1931; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021222/m1/1/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.