The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 28, 1937 Page: 1 of 6
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■•yum*
Mt the Mt l
t™rottag*|
putmm
rwiuiii
in*
■ «t
only
int A*
ITTLE R»Y
IR MADRID
ISSLACXENED
Loco Withdraw! To
Ew Zone: Rebel* to
Abandon Efforts At
Eterinf Capital
gADItli), ^«Ojr «4 «*»- 0«A
Li* Franea’a mkm nun
111 linn---YrY*—-
Lh loday UMM nsltehellft
i ksd deciJad to Meehan Mr
_* reenter offmmlv# against
i loyalist* m the (Mini front,
[j *0,1,1 Ik* —H—.Hat Mi-
te linear- M AabMl
kysliste -‘MCTlflMd'' JOjOOO
<X>(X l» defending their
■nd U*t nny aartor on
j (Mini front tn rataorobl#
»a nationalist stuck, the often-
, •eqkroed vitfc Mr departure.
km\ »hells crashed into Mi-
| brief intervals from 10:40
, bhIjI midnight tart night
[ i loyalist nmmaalqos said
I comparative tranquility pra-
te on the (Mini front.
[ feumsltsu, it wea mid, had
Nd, it Imt for tho timo bo
j tteir attack an the ouUkirU
| Villanueva Da U Canada, near
, »or» a aroall loyalist
ban boon boldine out
tl> against repeated on-1
mmiwm 1
[Ujralin troop* from tbo north
baurd effort# to braoh through
line* forming a •amkircl*
Quijorna and raoatabliah
mratMAa trltb tbo boaiogod
Wring
IN l). S.CHARGED
Propagandists Are
Named to Senators
By Dickstein
[WASHINGTON. July 28 C»~
. Samurl- Dlcxrtotn, D.. N. Y„
fad today that tboro exists
| "atU-orfantaod, subversive, un-
■tam apy ayilaM St tbla coat-
and Dated tbo locattOM of
t ha contended wore 21 “Nasi
In tbo Uattod State*
alao placed in the
____J record a Mat shOw-
! tbo rtaaaa «f 4S paraona whom
I fcacribed as “Nad propsgand-
agenU, PUol pigeon* and
Governor Phillip LaPottrtte af
WiacanaiA laid Northwertrra
aaltenlty ModeaU re** ally
there aaal be a poMliral re-
alignbm^M i* tbio jopotry, eith-
er wilhl* or withoei tbr rate-
tag pelilwal part tea, ta ordor la
group oil tkaoo «h# rorogaiie
the probirN* of thta Norbiar
age a ad oho are oilitag to rope
•ilk lbe«.
ROPER MAY GIVE
MATTERN MOSCOW j
FLIGHT PERMIT
Flier And Officials
Confer On Value
of Polar Hop
PARTY CHIEFS
SUMMONEDTO
WHITE HOUSE
Conference is Called
By Roosevelt to Put
Pressure On Solons
to Complete Plans
WASHINGTON, July M *»-
President ftoooevelt today Stun-
moaad bia congrroMooaJ loader* to
a ft p m. Whit* Houa* conference
to dtecuaa what legislation the ad
ministration would aaek before ad-
Administration force* applied
prooMiro today la an dfort to soto
Roosevelt's four.point tegteUUve
program from abondonmeot la tb*
Jaah toward adjoumaaoAt
Tb* praoaur* cam* from thro*
aourcoa;
Majority Lauder Alban W Bark-
lay. bolding aeoata aaaalona until
liU-each day, *>ld bo would move _
lb# meeting an hour up from noon •* MnounmmMta that
., **”*.,iV, ^ tbo I Hah republican army planned
Will tern Lrt ra£te benight- «• hoW • *° P^** «*•
bill, were not passed by night ^ ^ jgg ** q«k*n
4M0 Police Otlled
Pour tbouaand apociaj polka
wore mobilised, and many ware
atationed on rooflopo to
Irish Stage Uprising
In Protest At Visit
Of King And Queen
IKLFAST, July Aa wginlii la the atruoU of Mfiat
tad the bombing and bomiag of eualaaa* bouaao and railway beta*-
a* along tba Irlak Fro# State boedar gmud King Oaorgo VI and
Queen Elisabeth today ap« thair arrival on a coronation Hah to
flMNfWlMSMt i •.
Thair mejsaliae arHrod la the royal yacht, VktoHa and Albert,
at 11:11 aJb, aocoHod by thra* tialiiff and ala drotrorora, aad
motored from Donegal quay to the citp hall whom a municipal wol
»mlng ceremony awaited thorn.
Non* Injured
The royal procoaaloo raaebad
the city hall and the ruatomary
loyal addmea of wokomo *** bo-
tng rood when 0 terrific eaploaloa
occurred a quarter of a mil* away-
tilaaa within a 800-yard radio*
waa ahaU#rod. The explosion oc-
curred in 0 bonded warahouae, ap-
parentiy from gaa The atdewalk
la front of the warahouae mu torn
op. No on* waa injured.
Polk# apod to tho ocana and
cordoned off the warahouae pend-
ing an In*portion.
Polk* armored cart patrolled
the at reel* and many home* worn
aearched for arm# after th* ap-
DIES HERE
[H* Jemanded that congreaa bait
1 amuggllng hi of anaa, prop-
Ida and uniform# and all of
1 fooae-atopplng and parading
I the twaailka, tba Mack flag
[<te rad flaf." _ |
round Town
«» th# Tri-Citioa: Jack Heard
K up trad* for a king-
■ rida thia waakaad . . .
want* company on It, ho
w*.. ■ Ervin Flower* romark-
U>at it’a a ahame that the
wit remark* of aom* per-
muat be ex purged from
column* , . . Verde Malone
, Jg that If tka asn wuat
* hot ahe wouldn't mind taking
1 fling at bay flakin' . . , Baail
*y bragging about all thoM
he anagged yesterday . . .
»t Lao trying out an out-
I motor ha’t aerioualy thlnk-
ot buying . . . Louis Coaby
k from a awing down through
1 around Corpus Christl . . •
Yount- assorting ho foci*
'r today than a year ago
l time—tho infant |p one y**r
WASHINGTON, July M CB
Secretary of Commerce Daniel C.
Roper said today he would approve
a polar flight to Ruoata by Jameo
Mat tern If inspection of the fly-
er*' plane proved It to be suited
and if the war. navy and agricul-
ture department* agreed that the
flight held scientific value.
Roper made bU statement after
an hour and a half conferance
with Mattern. bia navigator, H 8.
Jones, official* of the bureau of
air commerce and the three de-
partments which aye weighing the
•cJentitle worth of the proposed
flight.
He said he would expedite bia
decision aa rapidly aa poaaible.
Mattern. after the meeting, said
hi* plane waa fully equipped aad
ready to leave immediately on a
non-atop flight to Moscow.
Ren. Morris Sheppard, D„ Tea**,
chairman of the senate military
affairs committee, attended the
conference with two Texas con-
greoamen and Lieut. Gov. Walter
Woodul of Texas.
HIIII* SINKING
LONDON, July M tUB — A
Lloyd's dispatch from Yokohama
reported today that the Japaneee
passenger steamship Selum Maru,
4.7g2 tons, of Kobe, waa sinking
after colliding in fog off Choshl
WIU the British steamship Ben-
mohr. 8,(20 ton#, of Leith.
Stocks Close
Courtesy Ottewa State Bank
and Truat Company. ,f
Anaconda Copper
Cities Sorviao -
Comm: 8olvent
Con*. Gaa ----------
Coos. OU
1 fall.
A bloc of 14 Democratic
freshmen to the sonata aonounc-
el after conferring with Barkley
that they would laatet congroa*
accomplish something" before ad-
journing. It waa admitted that
th* "something" Included the wage
and hour MU, ta* loophole legis-
lation
■
A M itratloo
Their majertka' arrival had
been preceded by nightlong dem-
onstrations along a 60-mile atretch
of tb# free atete-northern Ireland
border. Polka scoured the coun-
tryside in an attempt to round up
armed groups which had wrack-
A M itratloo armed groups which had wrack-
auppoi eluding sd customs house# on both sides of
Curtis Wright---
General Motora —
Gulf Petroleum
Hamble Oil -
Kirby Lumbar
Idwbsrt
Lorillard
National Dairy
National Power
- omu't—uw imam ib one jrc»r *%uift a 11 ........
I Way . . . Aubrey Whitfield Motor.
Rlsinmg directions about rid- pj,lllinl Petrolei
■t »i* bus , . . John Hill Mc-
ithney being advised to put a
""'ll of ice in his pocket for
while attending an indoor
wtiog this afternoon . . •
lne Cornelius McCulloch and
lizabeth Zierlein crossing th«
watching traffk, and
'ring to a passer-by all at the
l,he time.
•'a Porte: C. M. Agee re-
» he’* a little *hort on new*
Pt at the present .. . If the
‘“'i Jury i» *mfrt, they won’t
through La Porte tonight
their airen* open ... If
do, their invitation* may
", '
PHUlip* Petroleum —-
Pure Oil ~-i—------------------
Reed Boiler .....................
Shelly Oil -—— —"
Socony-Vacuum ,---------
Standard, N. J- ------------—— L.u
Sun OU --------------------- - *
Texas Company
TXL
Tidewater ........
■ p C O
United Qa* ....
United Corp.....
U. 8. Steel ....
Amer. Mar......
Freeport, Tex**
Sun Ray Oil -•
Wilson A Co.
H
8 harm Oeocg#
McGUl M. L*
FoUsti *r*. do-
cl ami of top
scUng Ms
slon ( do ths
Job In
Dem mrtlcu-
lariy d the
»4fMi -edlcted
thst c «P *
week I *-ifrte
also * > LM»d*
er Clu era be-
lieved o®™*
around
The kUUon
at thh vntirwly
abandc < »«ri-
cultur* eeeota-
ttvea t m at a
confers Marvin
Jones. te« *4
rirtiltu
The wh,ch
the sd. 1 to be
C !)
Str© n
ened
Wide * road
in the ijrtown
postoff Mutual
Benefit * pro-
ject an it »*»
by Con lassey,
waa un
The >t »ndi
O'* P*’
feet on "»•«*
Thia wi •« «*
fort to ffic on
the ati 1 read la
thra ft r Hutu-
.1 Bene r bu.i-
naaa fl «*•
Tba county i> supervising the
work and property owner* are
paying the coat of th* new curb
and gutter.
the border.
... Bridge Mined
The Mount Pleaaant bridge near
Dunkirk waa mined and partly
wracked, delaying thousanda of
visitor* from tb# free state an
route to Belfast to see the royal
visitors. Th* railway bridge at
Paughsrt on the Dubltn-Belfaat
line alao was mined, but passen-
ger and mail train* were allowed
to proceed after a th re-hour de-
lay.
Official* believed the demonstra-
tions hod been planned carefully
by fra* state axtramiat republi-
cans in an attempt to prevent fra*
$25,951,230 FOR
WATERWAY WORK
GIVEN APPROVAL
$3,228,000 Allotted
For Flood Control
On Ohio River
WASHINGTON, July 28 <Cf>-
Tha war department today approv-
ed allotments totaling S2&JI&1J0O
far maintenance work on riven
and harbor* throoghout th* coun-
try during th* 1(38 fiscal year
The allotments war* allocated
from the non-military section of
th* war department appropriation
for tba 1(27-28 fiscal year.
Largest single allotment was |3,-
22H.000 for the Ohio river, of
wMeh IMIM'0 is for lock and
dam rocs(ruction and |!,009,MQ ta
for open channel work.
For work on th* Miaaiasippi
river between the Missouri river
aad Minneapolis, Minn., 11,(49,-
008 was allotted, with an addition*
*1 1876,000 for work on the Miss-
issipp. between th* Ohio ami the
Miaaoun river*.
Allotment* approved included:
Sabino-Nechos waterway, Texas,
820.3,200; Galveston harbor, Texas,
$100,000; Houston Ship Channel,
Texas, $200,000; Galveston chan-
nel, Texas, $66,000, channel from
Galveston Harbor to Texas City,
Texas, $20,200; Anshusc channel,
Texas, $41,600; Port Aransas, Tex-
as. $182,000.
Channel from Aransas Pass to
Corpus Christl, Texas, $260,0(11;
Freeport harbor, Texas, $99,000;
Braxos Island harbor, Texas, (114,-
000; Leuisiana-Texms Intraroaital
cans in sn attempt u> pi™» —• -—- - —— ..... ......
Mate dtiaana from pariklpatlng »ate»J«F, Sabina river to Corpus
in the welcome to th# kin* and Christl section, $220,000; Port
FOUR MEN KILLED
IN FIERY CRASH
Gasoline Cargo Fired
When Truck And
Auto Hit
WICHITA FALLS, July 28
—Four man won killed today
i when a light eedan and a track
collided near Antelope on th* Wi-
chita Falls-Jackaboro highway.
Th* dead arc
Chariea Moffett, 2ft, Fort Worth.
E. C. Brannan, 18, Fort Worth.
J. M. Senter, Graham.
Lewie Back, Graham.
The two Fort Worth men had
obtained hare a truckload of gaao-
(Continued on Pago I)
STOCKS DECLINE
NEW YORK, July 28 <tt» —A
break for more than a paint In
General Motora aa raault of the
second quarter earnings statamsnt
unsettled the stock market today,
bringing I oases into most division*.
Christl roction, $220,000; Port
Bolivar channel. Texas, $26,000;
examinqtioni, surveys and contin-
genciea (general) Galveston dis-
trict, $66,500.
Examinations, surveys and con-
tingencies (general) Memphis dii-
trkt $11,700; removing snags and
wrecks from the Red river below
Fulton, Ark., $48,000; Cypress
bayou and waterway between Jef-
ferson, Tax., and Shreveport, U„
$1,630; Quachita and Black riv-
ers, Arkansas, and Louisiana,;
$300,000.
U.S. EMBARGO
ON ARMS MAY
BE ENFORCED
Roooevelt And Hull
Keep in Con»t«nt
Touch With Status
of War in Orient
WASHINGTON. July 28 «LH -
s «___1. — * If 1111 waivarlf ta "knafltM
I rwNtmH riMOToils ■
rloaa w*Ub' on tba Chinawa-Jap-
an*** sttuaUon orttb special Inter-
rot on safety of Amarkan* ma-
rooned la Peiping, tb* Whit.
Houa* a*M today
Bacood in th# pramdenfa Inter-
•el. It wsa teamed, was tb* poo-
albttlly of develop manta tn lb#
(Igbl which would roqulr# action
Invoking lb* U k aeutrality act
Mr Rooaavalt received tel#-
phonic report* on tba Chlnaoe-Jop-
snroe fighting from th# stat* de-
portment lost night sod today
To Ntay At Drok
Thera wsa * poortblllty. aid*# j
“j DEFENDED AT TAX
cruise aboard th# praaldsnttet I ri/lQIAft] UFiDIkir
yscht, to maintain hte watch on da- fclAjIUPI nLAAlPIU
vrlopmanu In the for #**t.
Th# law compel# President
J 300 JAP WAR
PLANES FALL
TO CHINESE
General Offensive la
Begun By Invader*;
Defeats For Nippon
Force* are Claimed
nciPiNG, July la CB - war
Mrs. Mina la Palmer. East Hsr-
n. rasters: f*r 2* TMn, eh*
died aoddaetjr at her hem* SI
1(2 ladisaa. Bayteea. yarteeday.
MRS. ROOSEVELT
The question
Negro Lad Held as
White Youth Killed
HOUSTON, July 28 0I.P) - A
16-year old negro boy w*» held
without ball on a murder charge
today in connection with the death
of Tony Black, 16, a white youth
who waa puahed from a street car.
Cleveland Reynolds, John Fleld-
en and Floyd Belxenski, Black’s
companions, said that they were
“hopping rid#*” on the rear of the
street car and quarreled with a
negro girl on the car.
Phillip Morgan, th* negro
youth, pushed Black In the face
and the boy fell ta the ata*et, frac-
turing his skull. He died in a
hospital, j;
Chinese Wild With Joy At
Victories Over Japanese
.
SHANGHAI, July 28 <UE>-Chi
ns’s great cities went wild with
rejoicing today on receipt of re-
ports that Chinese troops were
! hurling back Japanese attackers in
the Peiping area.
A military 'apokeimten at Nan-
king asserted that Chinese troops
captured 300 crated Japanese war
plane* at Fengtaf, Jsjsnes# base
south of Peiping, and that Chinese
stormed and captured the town of
Yangtsun, 16 mllea north of Tient-
sin, where Japanese were in occu-
ition.
Missing Jap Found
Jubilation increased when th*
•* ,
neae navy seaman whose alleged
“kidnaping” brought Japanese
bluejackets Into Shanghai Satur-
day had been found near Shanghai
—disguised as a Chinese coolie.
The ahame and helpless rage
that China had endured for years
under the president pressure of
ambitious Japan ware succeeded by
jubilation that sent thousands into
th* streets of such cities as
Shanghai and Nanking, exploding
fireworks and shouting praises of
29th Chinese army.
I The 29th is doing the fighting
at Peiping against the trained
_ of the Japanese. .
Ultimatum Sent Jape
It\looked hs if the 2»th would
take Its place along with the his-
toric 19th route army which to the
astonishment of the world gave
courageous resistance to the Jap-
anese at Shanghai in 1932.
The China Evening News here
blaioned headlines that the 29th
had sent Its own ultimatum to the
ultimatum-sending Japanese and
had ordered them to evacuate
North China Within 48 hours or___
the 29th would “blast them out.” gwty.
. _________aw- OA4k
at re ip
maflaas •
r"
■r
A representative of the 29th
army at Nanking asserted thst
the “Mg sword” corps of the 29th
was active in the fighting in the
(Continued on Page 2)
confronting the
and Secretory of Bute
Cordell Hull was that of deter-
mining when a "state of war" ex-
ists.
In official quarters It wsa In-
(Continued on Pag* 2)
DONATIONS MADE
ON DIVING HELMET
Firemen Appeal For
Aid On Device To
Save Drowning
With 250 letters yet to be malted
by Goose Creek Volunteer fire de-
partment appealing for contribu-
tions to the $250 fund for purchase
of a diving helmet and equipment,
contributions already are begin-
ning to arrive, W. C Grantham,
department president, announced
today.
The Baytown fir* department
contributed $25, Lutmxn Lumber
company sent In a check for $5
and George (Frenchy) Hebert, a
former member,* contributed $2,
Grantham aatd. The addiUonxI
tetters are going out today
Hebert, crippled in an accident
about a year ago, still Is unable to
work. Nevertheless, he desired
to have a part In purchase of the
apparatus.
The diving helmet was purchas-
ed by the department to aid It In
saving lives of persons In local
waters. With It It Is possible to
go down 40 feet and walk around
In search of drowned persons or
persons about to b* drowned.
Grantham went down about 18
feet in Cedar Bayou Sunday to
(Continued on Page 2)
Scrap Iron Thieve*
Take Windlass Here
The Tri-CItie* today had a se-
quel to the 70-ton scrap iron
theft at Morgan’* Point—an 800
pound sequal.
Pat Smith owned a cable wind-
lass weighing $00 pounds before
he wont to th* Pan American Ex-
position early thlk weak.
When he returned the heavy me-
tal cable “spool" had bean stolen.
Marks Indicated it had bean
rolled to the street In front of hi*
service station ta Lamar Court,
had been pulled down the high-
££ m un
loaded into**
Advice* from Nanking said that
3* Cb loses war plana* had laft
Nanking for Helping. Thia da-
vehement meant that th* central
Chinese government waa (rtttaf
efcaon, today defemted be- - ** ^
fore the cvngreaaional tax avoid-» _
ante committee, the arrangement ! **my atetlonod in the aiptng
foroetowriy la th* Poiptag area to-
night whit* forsignar* gathered
ta legation quartern for preUckfca
behin d sandbags and Ik# gun* of
their national troops. t!
So vagi fighting lira undid at 0
half dawn potato outside tha dty3e
ancient walla
Japan opened a general attack
at dawn aad fighting
throughout th* day.
A China## military ,
asserted today that Chinan* troop*
raptured 300 crated Japan#*# war
.tone* at FangtaL tha Japanese
two* south of Prtptng.
BorapTur* Team
Soon afterward U waa aaaartad
that Chin*## troop# raptured and
■tormed the town of Tangatun. IS
mil** north of Tientsin, where the
T* » roe* Hr-*."'' ... .
Roo#.veil "whan he ihall deter- Cummillg* Aide Sa>’8, ^
Giving Money To *-«*■*
between two or more nation*, to. » J .
proclaim the fact Automatically I L-nRlTty Legal
embargo provisions of the law go 1 --
Into effect, and it becomes unlsw- J WASHINGTON, July 28 (LT*—
ful u, sell or export Implements Assistant Attorney General Rob- -
of war from this country to either #rt H. Jackaon, today defended be- I JjJjJJ l^n JiBU1tli ,
of the belligerents.
Statu* Is Puxxle snee comnmiee, uie srrangemrnv
whereby Mra. Franklin D. Rouse- !•«*.
volt turned over to charity with-1 Japan*## assorted that thar
out paying income tax, $30,000 in war* winning, and thst their units
radio fees. j were joining so thst they could j
Jackson appeared in refutation j pursue retreating Cb'noM,
of charges by Rep. Hamilton Fish, j But Chlnsoo reports differed
Jr., R., N. Y., that Mr*. Rooaevelt j radically and the continued fight-,
had uaed tax loopholes in her ing gave evidence that any Vic*
charity donation*. lories were won dearly.
Treasury Alike Jap Retreat Cut Off
Jackson, who ass general coun-
sel of the internal revenue bureau
in 1934, when the radio contract
was executed, explained thst Mrs.
Roosevelt acted on treasury ad-
vice.
He defended her method ns le-
gal, applicable in his opinion to
taxpayers generally and as hsving
no serious effect on government
revenues.
“Mrs. Roosevelt received no in- 1 a • D1
come for herself, and was no rich- ( Dutch Airways 1 1&J16
er directly or indirectly for her 1
labors,” Jackson said.
(oairact Explained
The committee took up the case
of Mrs. Roosevelt in response to
n Republican request as the group
was re|sirted tentatively agreed
that the basis of tax loophole leg-
ialation, expected to i>e ready ear-
ly next week, must be “pressure
taxes” discouraging use of corpor-
ate devices to reduce individual
tax payments
It was reported that Chinese
war plane# arrived at the battle
front, that one J a pane## bomber
(Continued on Page 2)
15 ARE KILLED IN
AIR LINER CRASH
Is Wrecked Near
Brussels
Jackson said the contract was so
(Continued on Page 2)
AMSTERDAM, July 28 (I'H) —
A K. L. M. Douglas sir liner,
bound from Amsterdam to Parts,
crashed in flames nesr Brusssls
today, killing the J5 persons
aboard.
The dead comprised 10 pasoeng-
t #r# and a crew of four, and a mo-
1 chunk' en route to Paris to ro-
Inveetlgstihns thus far have
proved futile, Smith said.
Value of the windlass was set
at $25 with a Junk value of about
-& ■ ■■ ■ .j
BRIEFS
NOGALES. Mexico, July
28 <KK> — Hundreds of de-
vout Mexican Catholics, tak-
ing turns on the hard floors
and pews of sn historic
church, kept the edifice open
for worship in the third dsy
of a "kneel down” strike
against a government closing
order.
WASHINGTON, July 28
<UJ0 — Chairman Marvin
Jones, D, Tex., of the house
agriculture committee, said
today that enactment of com-
prehensive farm legislation be-
fore adjournment of congraoo
ha* been shendoaod because of
inability of farm organisation*
to agree on a program.
LONDON, July 28 <tt» -
Prime Minister Navllli Cham-
berlain has assured Italian
Ambassador Dta# Grand! that
Great Britain has no aggros-
tire tattaHarm toward Italy,
and that th# British govern-
ment desire* to promote peace
4*8
_____ all nstiona, it wsa re-
ported today.
a truck and hauled ‘ j CHICAGO, July SI ILMtar.
* tm Automobile traffic death, tar
the first six months this year
totaled 17.200, an inereftae of
2,040 compared to the 1936
period, the National Safety
Council reported today.
pair another sir liner.
It ws* reported the passengers
Included three men from th* Unit-
ed States named Mun, Ooldbtoem
and Kan ton; one Mexican, on#
Englishman and five Dutch or Bel*
1 Oik of the dead United Staten
passengers was tentatively Identi-
fied from Cologne as Ben S, Mun,
who arrived at the Excelsior hotel
tn Cologne test night, registering
his address as Long Bench, Calif-
bom In Texas In 1902 and engaged
In the oil business. Ho loft Co*
logne this morning by a Lufthansa
plane for Brussel*.
The crash was attributed to «
thunder atorm. Ey# witftaaeaa
•aid the plane caught fir* ta th*
and exploded whan It hit th*
ground.
La Porte Grand Jury
Fete To Be Tonight
Plan* war# completed today for
the La "Forte dinner tonigM for
the Herria county grand Jury.
The affair will b# held at 8:30
p.m. today in th# dining room of
^Membors^f'the^La Porte offi-
cial family, tha grand jury, judge#
tad offto«'attekdlng'’tta'ptad
jury will be guest# of the U Porto
group.
MAN HIT BY CAB DIM
FORT WORTH, July 28 <tt*>
I rUIU tv v*»*s»» ■ -J ---- ■
Joe P. Garrett, 44, died today of
automobile accident injuries taflto*
ted July 17, when he was run ov-
er while walking aaroaa Uu stttat
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 28, 1937, newspaper, July 28, 1937; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022878/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.