The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 205, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 17, 1938 Page: 1 of 11
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RID
^n^NO. 204
ILY SUN
For 50e
This Newspaper Give* Yoo
AD the Local News . 1
Plus State, National
And Big Foreign News.
. 1
GOOSE CHEEK, PELLY, BAYTOWN, L A PORTE AND SURROUNDING AREA.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17,1
Mi.
li-
ana and
1 fc
WfuiMlj
n today,
were _
harden ’
'Kt-hening of ^
sitiqns, ■
and
■animation iJ
looking „ *
freshman i
is raw man
for Cliff
Sander*,
will bear™
targes
*Pi*-ar?d' |
position*, i
for end dutrl
■ mfiit
with
fori
’ertook fc]
fi>>hman :
>i 'T- i
'
P BILL TO [
PLACED IN
EFFECT SOON
^0n and Tobacco
"Marketing Quota to
:ge Called for By
Next Week
I WASHINGTON, Feb; 17.—OIE)
Lrtetary of Agriculture Henry A.
!«* announced plans today to
/into immediate .operation the
fans program designed to
Iflj,. agricultural production,
I formers against low prices
I «msunters against food short-
II ..... —
fje aid he would make acreage
* i production allocations and
J for s referendum on mkrket-
a»Us for cotton and tobacco
, th« neat few days, -Marked
RESCUERS
■ • • . •« 'P*.< .
- -’4rV» -a*;- *
j
IRl’ARY
ork
rrvic,
TUDW!
eek Street (
re Station
I quotas will become effective
pi rejected by more than one-
i of the farmers voting in the
nulum to be held before
,r
| ID.
Battle Won
ffWident Roosevelt,
I kill for which he called con-
Vinto a special session last
nber, said it “represents the
ag of one more battle for an
lying farm policy that will
I The new program strengthens
^ present soil conservation act.
| provides, in addition, marketing
r crop insurance on wheat
purling in 1939, and increased
to farmers for storage of
mm in good years for use in
i of scarcity.
[ President Roosevelt Said the
i pregram does not entail any
1 annual cost than the pre-
; soil conservation , program
i tire exception of “parity f>ay-
^ Parity payments will be
i additional revenue to finance
1 Wallace said.
Six-Point Program.
| Wallace said the act “makes
hie a good beginning toward
; up a workable ever-nonnal
r (the storage of farm com-
s in good years for use in
g) which will give consumers
t protection than they ever
before.”
[ He announced a six-point jBSh.
i embodying the 'basic princi-
»” as follows:
1. Continuation of the AAA soil
ation program as a part of
i permanent farm policy. .,
, l National acreage allotments
com, cotton, wheat, tobacco
i free at levels designed to meet
die consumption and export
Jids and establish reserve
Federal Loans
l *■ Federal loans to encourage
Here’s the Soviet icebreaker
Murrain, which yesterday dis-
patched two planes to the ice
floe off the coast of Greenland,
on which a party of Russian
scientists have been marooned
since they encamp^ on the Ice
months ago. rrr
GIRL SLAYER OF
TOT TELLS JURY
IT WAS ACCIDENT
Athlete Takes Standi
In Trial in Death
of Child, 5
■ ■ _ .
PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 17 WS
—Mary Keenan O’Connor, 19,
the witness box today and told in
a low voice the story of what hap.
pened last labor day when Nancy
Glenn, 5, was killed.
The courtroom was crowded to
hear, the testimony of the husky
. ’ • - * . ’ > . • __ - ' : '
Miss Coast Sector
TownfcohJ^^^veTo GERMAN"”AUSTRO PACT
BLOCKED OVER CABINET
Hitler Insists ffponl
More Nazi Selections
For Important Posts
FMffBgff—.........,y.,w m.
Weather conditions ranging from blizzards to tornados to balmy
temperatures under clouded skies covered Texas today;
At Mertzon nine persons were injured when a tornado struck the
center of the town at 4 a.m. today.
Damage was estimated at $50,000.
More than a dozen doctors and nurses were rushed there from San
Angelo, 30 miles east.
Broken arms and bruises were reported to have been the most
serious injuries, but the doctors
were busy examining all the cas-
ualties.
Highways Blocked ~-
Highways to nearby oil fields
were blocked by debris for sev-
eral hours.
Power, telephone and telegraph
communication lines were, tom
away by the twister, and the place
was in virtual isolation. ■
Small cruft warnings were or-
dered up along the Tpxaa coast
EVANGELIST GETS IN JAIL
°S& V
The bureau warned of “fresh to
The United States weather bu-
reau forecaster at Dallas eonclml-
ed that the hard freeze in the Pan”
handle and the West Plains pro-
bably would affect no other por-
tions of the state. - t— ~ -
The freezing line this morning
extended diagonally from Lubbock
to Oklahoma City.
. Snow and Sleet
The Panhandle and much of the
staked plains lay under snow and
sleet, as rains fell in most other
GOOSE CREEK IS
GIVEN MAXIMUM
IN FIRE CREDITS
25 Per Cent Allowed
City for Record
dramatic dash to 'Berlin by Dr.
Arthur von Seyss-Inquart, new
Austrian minister of Interior, as-
sumed international Importance
today in negotiations between
Austria and Germany.
for the removal rtf
had been forced back onto Okla-
homa by low pressure areas in
West Texas and New Mexico.
5? Wh° t ^[delth iaSfn5lfgSturfoteUhId
striklng^Nancy with her fist and pronounced upon eariy blossomiig
day , that received the maximum
deduction for its fire record aver-,
age for the past five years.
Baytown received a 15 per cent
credit, but E. Wv Buelow, chief
ten days, the forecaster said, an- thc Bftytow™ firc department
ticipated blizzards encroaching and manager of the Baytown Util-
through the Panhandle apparently tt*®a Corporation, said that e did
— - not consider the figure correct
sections of the state.
The city of Goose Creek today
ded the full 25 per cent
good fire record credit by the
state fire insurance commission,
The new credit is effective March
1 and represents a five per cent
increase over the 20 per cent al-
lowed last year. Charged with violation of the Mann set. Rev. Cecil Everort \( hap-
Goose Creek was one of two man, 29, of Lincoln, Neb., and Winds Pinson, 15, also of Lincoln
cities in the state announced to- are being held in jail at Union, Mo„ after a five-week flight from
Lincoln. The evangelist is also charged with contributing to\de-
linquency of a minor. ‘ v .
____—____________________Ll_,____— — La___
LONDON, Feb. 17 01E> -Euro,
pean statesmen looked anxiously
toward Vienna and Berlin today,
expecting further developments of
international importance tn a sit-
uation that left them puzzled.
There were reports that the In-
elusion of Nazi elements in the
Austrian cabinet, and a blanket
tic storage pi surpluses
l big crop years for use in years
(Continued on page two)
[Around Town
l» the Tri.Qties: Rev. U. S.
Glint putting in a real plug for
*I»»no artist . . . M. B. Jones
P'w the situation a quick scan-
*®0 • • • So does P. B. Rawson
The new rage is to weave
for women instead of cro-
or knitting them—
VW* *• V**v, VUUU UTCI
and put her head in the water of
kthe mud puddle ?’’
“I didn't do anything except
what I told you.”
A few moments before Miss
O’Connor began her testimony,
(Continued oi. page two)
Uwless surveys the
t»v«*es of a dry fan ... In mo-
“r P*rlanre, that situation, he
is comparable to a dry
Metbook on circus day when
JW'wrea kid ... . A. C. Kraft,
F' Harmon Lowman and John
■ mnev may or may not have
Waking news when they
"Potted out behind the
ftown elementary school. . .
• Williams must have an
canine ... He was on his
some to administer treat-
^ • • .He was seeking the ser-
1 of Dr. d. Y. Arnett ...
Ip0* *tnow the first thing these
I- ”ll)e*n dictators do when
Itt* k lnt° a hole to heighten
|®*Mn on newspapers. . . From
lit »!Sleleration showed M.
7°°*rtwn must have been In
» iT ’ ’. you know Mrs.
., Martin and Mrs. Vernon
oil were sisters? ... The
1 Md a sidewalk consulta-
'««n»ultants being Elton,
' Wton, Grady and A. E. . .
11L Kiber says two by
!Jj* means two by three. . .
J^nchy Kiber still “back-
* Barbers Hill.
Porte: Tain’t every
™t has « city engineer
of the best foot races
winter pitted Fred Hill
1 hw spotted calf. . . The
■ • • U Porte Save-
c*X*rs handed trimmings
)* - ^'own Merchants and
* t*am® of recent
They are entering a
C°«h JeffNick-
th« hig noise in the at-
■ E. Emu,,, i,
putting her in a mud puddle whei-e
she drowned.
Her voice breaking with emo-
tion and an occasional tear trick-
ling down her cheek, the O’Connor
girl said the blow that felled the
child waa accidental, f : 'V
'7 had my back to her,” Mias
O’Connor said, “mid when I turn
ed around the back of my hand
struck her. She fell over on her
back.
“I thought the child was dead
because I couldn’t feel tmy. pulse.
She was lying there in the road.
I got a piece of tin and put it
over Nancy. Then I got out of
there. I was scared.”
Defense Counsel William A.
Gray leaned forward and said
slowly:
“Mary, did you hit that child
deliberately?”
“No, I didn't,” Miss O'Connor
replied.
"Did you turn the, child over
Houston Lumberman
Is Victim of. Stroke
HnnyroN. Feh. 17 am —J. j.
fruit trees and other plants in
East and South Texas. The weath-
er bureau pointed out, however,
that it was unable to forecast how
much longer Texas’ unseasonal
Spring weather might last if the
freeze that was predicted' actual-
ly is eaesSed. . .
19 at Amarillo
Low temperatures Thursday in-
cluded 19 at Amarillo, 38 at Abi-
lene, 32 at Lubbock, and 38 at
(Continued W page two) —
TWO WOMEN HURT
IN CARACCIDENT
Barbers Hill Pair
Injured As Auto
Hits Bridge
fcarroll, 61, prominent lumber and
amateur expert on bird life, died
today in a hospital. He suffered
a stroEeTS 1933 and another yes
terday.
Following Carroll’s wishes, his
body will be cremated and his
ashes spread over the Texas coas-
tal area where he visited often to
take expert photographs of birds.
Carroll, president of W. T. Car-
ter Lumber company, spent much
of his leisure time on Bird Island,
sanctuary in Galveston bay, and
his family planned to place his
ashes in that area.
Two Barbers Hill women today
were recovering from injuries re-
ceived late yesterday in a narrow
escape from death when their au-
tomobile plunged through the rail-
ing on a bridge on the Crosby-
Barbers Hill road.
They are Mrs. J. F. Sullivan,
driver of the car, and Mrs. E.
Bolton, both of Barbers Hill.
Mrs. Sullivan received an injury
to her left arm and severe bruis-
es and Mrs. Bolton received lacer-
ations on her forehead and body
bruises.
The accident occurred when
Mrs. Sullivan lost control of the
car. The machine crashed through
the guard rail and the right side
slipped over the edge of the
bridge, a wood span, but the left
wheels hung on the bridge tim-
bers, leaving the car suspended
half over the water-filled ravine.
Both women were, treated at the
Bridges Clinic in Barbers Hill.
Their injuries were not serious,
but both suffered badly from
•hock.
Wright To Be Freed
On Insanity Verdict
have the
- ' r?
and would seek to
amount raised.
Baytown Losses JLow
The credit Is allowed on the
base rate for low losses in pro-
portion to the premiums paid on
fire Insurance policies. If the fire
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 17 <UB-P«il A. Wright, exonerated by
the verdict that he was temporarily insane when he killed, his wife
tnd John B. Kimmel, remained in jail today awaiting only a formal
It remained only for him to prove that he was at present sane.
The same jury which decided in four hours last week that he
record is bad, a penalty of up to
Iff per cent can be added. , ... .
Buelow, is announcing that a Dy
was guilty of manslaughter, agreed yesterday evening after 16 hours
of deliberation that he was “not*,--------:----—---—--
reason of insanity.”
protest may be lodged, pointed out | Wright had made two pleas
that Baytown had but two alarms against the murder charges, which
during 1937, one of which was a
grass fire. The other resulted In
an insured loss of little over $5,
he said.
Five-Year Average
required two trials. >
To Go To Parents
Today, although technically siiii
a prisoner, he waa making plans
U.S. FLYING FORTS
PASS CANAL ZONE
» ' ‘'V ' :■
Six Huge Army Ships
Over Pacific On
Argentine Hop
4M;. -t»; - ■ ••
FRANVE FIELD, Panama, Feb.
17.—-Six "flying fortresses,”
largest and fastest aerial fighting
machines in the army air corps,
Wright plans to go to his par. roared over the Canal Zone at
ter classification and haa the full ants' home for a visit with his 3- 7_,3 a; m_ toi aj]d rac^ M
15 per cent allowed. . (year-old daughter, Helen, then to . ’ , . ...
The Goose Creek fire losses last » desert rC^rt with his father, jg! g Buen^A?r‘l
amnesty for Nazia imprisoned in
Austria, represented only the first
HtZZUZEIZaBi
advices were
private
the crisis to a new deadlock.
It was because if the difficul
ties over consummation of Nazi
f Dictator Hitter’s; plans, observers
believed, that Seyss-Inquart, a
Nazi supporter/ hastened to Ber
tin and conferred with Hitler
■Well informed quarters under-
stood that Hitler was Insisting
upon the removal of Victor Kien-
boeck, governor of the National
Bank of Austria and former fi-
nance minister. The failure of
trade negotiations, which were
broken off suddenly Monday, was
ascribed to Kienboeck’s opposition
to extension of further credit rope,
facilities for Austro.German trade. It *«* assumed that the sltua-
An impasse also was understood tion would be clarified Sunday
to have been reached in connection when Fuehrer Adolf Hitler ad-
with the press and propaganda of- dresses a special session at the
that Germany was not completely
satisfied with measures which
Austria already has taken.
\m Halt Next Three Days
Possibility that Austria might
be requested to undertake closer
military cooperation with Oer-
many, and that she might be ask-
ed to participate formally tn tha
German-Japsnese-Itaiian , "anti-
communist” alliance, was discuss-
ed In well informed quarters.
There were indications here that
the next three days might prove
of considerable interest to Eu-
fice, The present chief, Walter
Adam, former array colonel. U
unpopular ,1a Oenaeny because
Reichstag nailed after his shake,
up of his own Nazi regime Febra-
ary < c '
of his past record as a violent *----r Gravely Worried
The five-year average Is used.fw the future which had remained
In computing the raito of losses [uncertain since be walked Into the
r zsrzjLT £s rr.rrr -
or over, the full 25 per cent can,Nov’ 9 and found his wtfe ttnd
be allowed. Where the figure is Kimmel > In an emorace
figure
less than $20,000, only 15 per
cent can be granted.
La Porte falls within the lat-
wh'ch
caused him such an emotional
shock, that he shot them to death.
year approximated $1600,
usually low figure, bringing
(Continued on page two)
Car Stripped A*
Women Play Bridge
While several La Porte women
last night were learning some new
tricks at playing bridge, thieves
were teaching La Porte officers
some new tricks in car stripping.
They jacked up Mrs. Martha
Chaloupka’s automobile, stole the
right rear wheel” and the spare
tire from in from of the H. J.
(Continued on page two)
FOUR LOTS SOLD
HEREfOR $7000
Amnions Brothers Buy
West Texas Avenue
Property
Purchase of four lots with # city
West
Pfeiffer home while Mrs. Chalop-
ka and others were playing bridge. ..._______ ^ ..............
Officers called and investigated mons and Dr.- Ben F. Ammons, lo-
A fllAft k.t# OA.,1 A __. . ...
Trontage of 100 feet
Texas avenue, and the same on
South Whiting street, was an-
nounced today by Dr. C. N. Am-
Lt. Cul. Itobert OWe, command-
ing the, flight, radioed that the
flight Is proceeding without halt
to Lima, Peru "weather permit-
ting.”
Racing southward at an average
speed of 172 miles per hour, the
planes completed the flight from
Miami to the Canal Zone in slight-
ly more than six hours—a distance
of approximately 1,100 miles.
At 8 a. m., the bombers report-
ed that they were over the Pacific
ocean, 180 miles south of Panama
the theft but could find no trace
of the missing wheel and tire..
BRIEFS
STOCKS CLOSE TODAY
Coarteay
CITIZENS STATE BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
Amer. Mar. >y.................. 7-8 Nat. Power ........................... 0 1;2
Amer. Rad.................. 13 1-2 j Ohio Oil .....................-....... M 14
Anaconda Cop................... 32 7-81 Packard .............................. 13-4
Cit. Service ................... t 5-8 Phillips --------—............... 39 1-4
Comm. Solv........................ 8 1-41 Pure Oil .....-......... 7 6-8
Con. Aircraft ....................... 15 3-4 j Skelly ................-............-..... 28 1-2
Copy Edison ....................- 21 3*4jSoc. Vac. ............................ 15 1-4
Cons. Oil ................................ 9 1-2 Stan. N. J.............-.............50 1-8
Cur. Wright ......... 1 1-2 Salt Dome ............................ 20 5-8
Else. Bond A Share........... 7 |-8 8unray Oil
Use. Power A Light .......10 | Texas
Erie Ry. _______________— - 3 V8 Tidewater
Fi report Tex. .................... 28 5-8 T X L ........
Ooti Motors ...........-.......... 36 8-8;T P C O ..............
Oul? ............................... <0 1-2 (U. Aircraft .......
Imixria' Oil ................... 18 5-81U. Corp..............
Kirly .......—s ------ — 1 6-8 U.
huger Qro.................. 16 J-8iU. S. Steel
U. Land ........................ r 5-8 j Wilson Co.........
Lambert ....... 5.............. U 3-4 July Cotton N. Y.
Lorlllard ........................ .. 19 3-4 Miy Wbut ...............
Nash Kel. ------- -............. » 1-2 Houston Oil ..
WASHINGTON, Feb. 17
<UA>—Josepb Curran, national
maritime union head, told the
senate commerce committee
today 28 of hi* union mem-
bers have been killed and 168
seriously injured in the past
two years.
MOSOOW, Feb. 17 (U.R) —
Roman Biske, expert legal
I Interpreter for the United
States embassy, has been ar-
rested In the current "purge”
of soviet citizens working for
foreigners and foreign organi-
zations, It was learned today.
Make disappeared three days
ago-
LUBBOCK, Feb. 17 <U.» —
The bodies of James McMul-
len, his wife and their six-
month-old baby were found
today In their trailer home.
The had been asphyxiated,
TIJUANA, Mex., Fev. 17
<UB —Juan Castillo Morales,
24, confessed rapist-murderer
of 8-year-old Olga Uomanrho,
urns permitted to “escape”
from his captors today then
killed In a volley of bullets
fired by a squad of I
cat dentists. jp||R!JjBp|
The cost of the four lots , wjj»*
$7000, it was announced by" the
doctors. „
The four lots were purchased
from Mrs. Frieda Stern of Pelly.
“We bought the property strict-
ly as an investment,” they, an-
nounced to The Sun.
Tha four lots purchased are novy
occupied by the Hemphill Pontidfc
Co. '
Four Trainmen Die
In Railroad Wreck
TRINIDAD, Colo., Feb. 17 0.R>
■ The Peruvian capital is approxi-
mately 2700 miles south of Miami.
With approximately 1100 miles of
the trip behind them, the fliers
Still had a jump of about 1000
mtleafbefpre the first scheduled
halt.
The 2,400 gallons of gasoline agency.
carried by each of the bombers,
however, gradually was being con
sumed, lightening the huge ships.
The lighter load was expected to
enable a faster average time or
the flight from Panama to Lima,
Olds Jed the 22-ton bombers
anti-Nazi. It was understood that
Scbuachnigg is not willing to drop
Adam but may appoint a Nazi as
assistant director of the office.
Something Wrong
It was understood here that
Baron Franz von Papen. German
special ambassador to Austria, in-
tended to leave today to join In
the talks and It was reported that
on the result hinged momentous
developments.
It was an open secret bsre to-
day that something had gone
wrong. It was asserted that
Fuehrer Adolf Hitler was not sat-
isfied with concessions which the
government had made to Austrian
Nazis. Sources close to the gov
eminent said that Hitler insisted
(Continued on psge two)
LAD JAILED HERE
HELD IN ROBBERY
One of Trio Arrestee
Here Wanted By
Houston Police
An 18-year-old Houston youth,
jailed here by the night patrol of
deputy sheriffs, today was turned
over to Houston police investigat-
ing a hi-jacking there. •
The youth, Dewey Gibbons was
arrested early yesterday morning
by Deputy Sheriffs Rsy Allen and
Jimmie Faulkner with two com-
panions as they hid from the of-
ficers in a car parked on Pearce
avenue near the Fcfton automobile
Dry Agent Sit-Down
Is Ordered In Borger
AUSTIN, Feb, 17 (UR) — Sit
down liquor law enforcement for
Borger was ordered today by. C.
—-Four trainmen were killed an<lj ^ Paxton, chief supervisor for
eight persons were injured last,^ xe3[M liquor control board,
night In a collision between a I Paxton announced that a force
freight and passenger train near j0f agents had been moved into the
Folson. N. M„ according to ra-. Panhandle city because a single
ports received here today. I agent was manhandled there last
The dead: Gus Piemer, engineer|Sunday
of the passenger train; R. E. Hel-J "No dealer Is so ‘tough’ he can
ders, fireman of the parsonger rtaunt the law,” Paxton said grim-
ly. “Borger once was notorious
for it lawlessness (In oil boom
days) and the good citizens there,
I am sure, do not want to see
those old days Come back."
--—
tra'n; C. E. Hampton, engineer
of the freight, and C. H Cook,
b.akeman of the freight. All liv-
ed fcere.
An emergency train was
route here with the bodies.
BUS WAOE PACT SIGNED
FORT VHORTH, Feb. 17 (UR) -
Bowen Motor Coachee' employes
today were working under a i
one-year union contract
vided the second
Two of the youths were hidden
in the tonneau of the car and the
third was lying on the running
board bn the side away from the
street
All three were placed in jail,
but the others were released after
Gibbons was turned over to Hous-
ton officers.
Paul E. Carroll, 25, of Conroe,
is in jail here waiting hearing on
a forgery charge following hie ar-
rest in Liberty yesterday. He was
returned here last night by Deputy
Sheriff H. C. Spence and Capt
Roy Young.
Unimpeachable aources had
made It plain that Britain was
gravely preoccupied by events In
Austria; It was admitted author!-
tatively that Britain and Franca
would ask reassurances regarding
(Continue*) on Page t)
Trvir t in irnic
TEXAS LAD KILLS
riTUCD IN CIEVD
i AIHliK in jLlli
Boy Say*
Motherless ooy
Nagging By rarent
to Blame
BOSTON, Texas, Feb. 17 (tt»-
Fred Parsons, 14, who was com-
pelled to keep house in his moth-
erless home, shot his father * bead
off because the parent complained__
about the way the work was done,"
Sheriff Henry Brooks said to-
day.
The boy bad worked hard at the
domestic duties, the sheriff said,
but tbs father complained inces-
santly that things had never been
done right since Mrs. Parsons
died. There was another son,
George, 7. at the farm home near
Simms.
The father j, B. Parsons, 35,
was found dead in bed yesterdsy.
A shotgun blast had decapitated
him- The shotgun lay beside the
bed and on a table was a not#
reading: “Gosdbye boys."
The sheriff questioned Fred
about the note, which was In a
childish scrawl, and the boy
mttted having written tt«
The boy was taken before
Bowie county grand Jury.
'He told them that hie fal
was always complaining and
just stood all he was able,'
Brooks said.
Sometime Tuesday night, after
bitter quarrel. Fret) got the
shotgun and slipped to his father’s
bed. He pointed the gun at the
man's neck and fired. Then
retired for the rest of the
pretend that It had been_____
cide.
Brooks said charges would be
filed against him today.
DOHERTY HONORED
NEW YORK. Feb. 17 rtiRt
Henry L. Doherty,
the Cltle* Service c
&lved
Safety Board Will
Meet at Baytown
The executive board of the Tri-
City Area Safety Council will
meet at the Baytown Community
House tonight.
This board includes all offlcere
of the organization with the chair-
men of all standing committees.
Ksrl Low* Springer, president,
urges each officer to be preeent.
WESTFALL IN RACE
AUSTIN. Feb. 17 (UP)
today
medal f
nuuizn, »vv. si -
Leonard Weetfail of Spermont to-
te-1 day became a candidate for atat*
-M.. mu
I ^ 1
Huey Long’* Cou*in
1* Killed By
SHREVEPORT, La., Feb.
a>.R)—Mrs. Alma Howell Long,
woe held incommunlca
do parish Jail today o
of murdering her busts
Long, cousin of the
Huey P. Long.
Long died late
shooting
Mrs.
mhS ■■
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 205, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 17, 1938, newspaper, February 17, 1938; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022643/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.