The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 6, 1938 Page: 1 of 8
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ffts.
U. the ,
1*00.00
^optnmx
to the
ll.000.tr
yalties on (
'PinK *y«tem .
<L for .
Mi-rice f
«ign that said: ;
I tomatoes,” B*«
lthc sign, rsotfl
Lt he sold ill 1st
Iny who bought,
|;!g«. c.imeback j
eason was over.
nato juice wai
. He thought it
I handle, to n(
I told OD about
Id to make and
lores m tot*,
yery day, «d
r of his bottles
■put an advet-
by thouswh
laid:
1 AD’S ruu ,
lie, red, «*•' *’|
I and good lot
In."
lboutit,flK»{l
1st the supply
^D’s name o«
asked for it
Itoes from his
nato juice *
ed more peo-
r itanu ten o*
aintain the
, becauie
on AD’I
t the rwtebe i
k he sold, «fo, J
kM j
xtended afl 4
| tncrtasd, I
d morel
j juice, a
.as nows
| bottles that
.ADand
RRIS—Mostly cloudy to-
j Sunday-
20—NO. 41
iCTION IN
ITUCKY IS
IVY, QUIET
of Ballot
apaigns Is Not
cted At Polls In
Jy Primary
ILLS, Ky., Aug. 6 O)
, Kentucky'* primary
to select nominee* for a
States senate seat waa re-
j to be moderately heavy and
Millay.........
Lg followed a bitter cam-
•m whleh blood was spilled
. which President Roosevelt
fjaterested himself on behalf
Igtow Deal B»t from ill
, #f the state today came re-
thit balloting was quiet,
i hint of violence.
Satisfactory
ugn headquarters for U. S.
Albert W. Barkley, senate
itr leader and the president!.*
Tind for Gov. a, &‘Tfopwry;
Jer, opponents for the sena*
nomination, said the voting
i to be ‘ satisfactory.”
nor Chandler spoke briefly
jikfort before leaving for
lilies to vote in his home pre-
*tor Barkley, on His way to
to vote, was involved in
accident at Clinton. The
tile in which he was riding
I fire and he had to transfer
her car. He was not hurt;
i early threat of rain did not
lire. ’ ■ ■
ChandlerStreag..........„
straw votes and other
of public opinion indi-
i a Barkley victory and Ken-
j political observers agreed
(them, though Chandler, who
rtook to "shake hands with
r voter in Kentucky/ was be-
ta have mad* strong
i Kentucky Vote Pago 2)
JUST FRIENDLY ENEMI1
kIthESE KENTUCKY
t:""I............................................
iE ADMIT
[OW DOOMED
ition Is Prepared
lo Continue War
To Finish
BANGHAI, Aug. 6 «J.K>—Ohi-
t military authorities indicated
r that they were reconciled to
[eventual loss of Hankow, the
al capital, and were pre-
I to continue the war without
(after its fall.
ary observers predicted that
■ would be major operatioins
i in the Yangtae River Valley,
at Nanchang, 85 miles
i of the river, where.the Chi-
ere massing thousands of
1 Chinese hoped that by de-
rail strong positions in re-
action, they could inflict
^maximum of losses on the Jap-'
' while suffering a minimum
ferities. |
y-four Japanese airplanes at-
I Hankow taday. Their bombs
160 civilians.
|>und Town
g^JMMIe#! Earl .W
lumberman here,
agreements for a big
Janie Higginbotham
I by with the wherewithal
Ifc*. Effie LeCompte out
early . . j Elmer (the
1 printer) Bentley carrying
" «ie one-and-only Dale
hopped off for Lub-
ay night for a few
That make* three of
. vacationing "‘ now,
» it »o good! ... Mrs.
/ DujdantU breaking out
1 keraile as big as she Is.
• * W. Nowlin being tagged
11 few word* ... Hra. Aaron
lending . helping
* M. ‘'Steady" Butlers
! reunited In New York to-
*^*r hi* six months ab-
m Aruba ... the Mra.
1 8teady at the dock this
Tom Pruett really
I that 49 he shot today.
• w best he's ever shot,
*bo«t the’ Lcameradie
of Ws bridge club
1 ^Pt it going for eight
' ** Porte; Prank Reynolds
rfterawalkfoSfSrt!
,to*y not
hut the poor pedea-
^wting to cross Main
8*twfeay night won’t
to complain . . . It
1 a tough political cam-
year between Georg,
and Ed dark for
* U Port. . . .
who funUahe* the
Senator Alben W. Barkley, left,
and Gov. A. B. (Happy) Chand-
ler, shown shaking hands, have
waged a political battle in Ken-
tucky which the 8enate Investi-
gating committee has charged
Golfer Suffers For 144 Holes To
Win Bet To Find Wife Is Winner
CHICXGO, Aiig. 8 (KB—1That old Virginia plantation for which
J. Smith Fercboe, a broker, played 144 holes of golf in 13 hours and
32 minutwj was owned by neither him nor the man who bet he couldn't
do it, it Was revealed today. f i\ . ’ *'':
It was owned by Mrs. Ferebee and Mrs. Fred Tuerk, wife of
Ferebce’s business colleague who entered the all or nothing bet after
a disagreement over managerial
methods. And at least one of the
wives—Mrs. Ferebee—kncw noth-
ing of the. wager which was settl-
ed amid ^blistered feet, thunder
showers, and enthusiastic gallary.
ites yesterday. ■
* ■ / is liMin':'
But theire will be no difficulty
in Ferebee's collecting his win-
ning, any;more than there would
have beeifiif Tuerk had won. Win-
ner and foser explained that they
had but ‘the property in their
wives names for convenience. Fe-
rebee was; a little worried, though,
as to his wife's reaction when she
learns thAt he spent a day play-
ing golf ; and risking his half
share in (he plantation which has
been in his family for some 300
years. / *// •% ' •; :
Tuerk was a good loser.
Wjarth More Now
“I guess Smith ought to be the
one to ha^e it, anyway,” he said.
•“The place has been in his family
a little bit over-estimated. We
paid $30,000 for it is 1933 but
(See Golfer Page 2)
GIRL MAY TESTIFY
AGAINST FATHER
Daughter la Called
To Take Stand In
Murder Cas$ - .
SOUTH PARIS, Me.. Aug. 8 (BE)
—The state must decide today
whether to call 17-year-old Bar
bars Carroll to the Witness stand
and require her to help convict
her father of murder/
if called, she will be salted if
fter father seduced her. it is
Prosecutor Ralph D. Ingalls’ the-
ory that Incest was the Indirect ties. The Mexican reply was to
^ — — “bfoak of diplomatic relations with
London, and they, are still broken
today. * ' !
Hr. Hull didn’t raenti
uf his case On
motivation of the atayer of Dr.
and Mrs. James G. Littlefield.
The father, Francis M. Carroll,
was charged with incest last May,
before he was indicted for Dr.
for a long time. Its value may be uttleficld> mur<kr tor which he
a little bit over-estimated. We „ on ^ The basis for the
charge was found in Miss Carroll’s
love letters to her sweetheart and
high school companion, Paul Dwy
er, 19.
These letters, written two years
ago when the girl wa* 15, were
read in court yesterday. j They
told of her ‘'aecret shame” her
•loss of virginity.” The girl la-
mented that “It's me, not you.
that’s not decent . . . You really
deserve-“something better than 1
can give you.”
Barbara Carroll and her moth'
er have been eubpeaaed by both
state and defense. They have
been spectators in court dally,
0‘Daniel Will Face
Split In Home Town
FORT WORTH. Aug. 6 (BE)—
W. Lee O’Danel, Democratic nom
Inee for governor, will return
home from | vacation next week
to be greeted by rival delegations
pledged to support him at the
state Democratic convention al
Beaumont Sept 13.
One group at the county party
convention last Saturday, headed
by Rev, J, Leslie Flnnell, for-
warded ifllat of delegates to state
Chairman Myron O. Blalock of
MarahaU. A dissenting group, led
by Joe Steadham and A, L. Min-
er, presented i separate list to
state Secretary Venn M. Kennedy
of Austin.
NEW KAMO STUDIO -
SAN; ANTONIO, Aug. 8 (BE)
Radio station WOAL owned and
operated by Southland Itidustries,
Ins., celebrated today the formal
opening of Its remodeled $80,000
studios.
STOCKS CLOSE TODAY
Ceartesy A gaa.
HTATE BAN! AND TRUST COMPANT 2
24 1-2 Allied
17 1-2
Phillips ............................. 43 1-4
Pure OR .*• ja 1-4;
Skelly-------------------— IS
8oc. Vac. ---------- 15 5-8
Stan. N, J,.....——57 1-2
Salt Dom| U
Sun ray Oil ..— .......—----- 3
Texas -------------------««— «
JH331-9
Tidewater
T X L........-................—........ 11
TPCO-----------------12 1-4
Amer. Mar. .................... 3*4
Amer. Rad. ...........-................ 15 7-8
Anaconda Cop. ............. .... 37 1-4
Cit. Service —.............— 8 3-4
Comm. Sriv. ...—..........12
Con. Aircraft ................... 18
Cona. Edison ........................ 28 3-8
Cons. Oil .................-.....- W 1*«
Cur. Wright J J*j
Elec. Bond ft Share I..--' * »4 . ,
Elec. Power ft Light —... 12 1-8 U. Aircraft----------------- 28 7-8
Freeport Tex. M 3-4 U. Corp. -------- .* {
Gen. Motors ....................-
Gulf .......—..............;•••—
Humble
Kroger Oro............. .
Jjambert ..........-..............
LorUlard
Neeh KeL ............
Nat. Dairy —-—
Nat. Power —...........—■
Ohio OU .........................
Packard
wgmIm ..........■ H
U, S. Steel .......-.e.'**-.........
MIS LEFT
BY FUGITIVES
Four1 Convicts Flee
Sugarland Farm In
Daring Break; Guard
Slugged And Robbed
AUSTIN, Aug. « OtEi—Search
for four convicts wno escaped
from the state prison farm at
ed in Centre! Texas today as as
I automobile in which the meh dr#ve
off wis found at Thomdal*. f
The car, stolen from W. R.
Klaische of Houston, was found
by thirty marshal of Thorndale.
The convict* had abandoned it
there, transferring to el- truck
whkh was found later today near
CircleVillc, Williamson county.
Grab Gun J 2l t
The felons slugged Guaril C. L-
Kline with a shovel, knocked him
btt Hfei horse late ye.uenSr $hd"
took ii pistol from him. Nineteen
other prisoners made an attempt
ta flee with the desperadoes. '
Capt. R. J. Fiannagan, Centra!
farm ^manager, reported that pur-
suing guards had trailed two of
the convicts to Galveston, but
Sheriff Frank L. Bisggne of Gal-
veston county ssrid his men had
failed to find any trace of the
folia* thare. ,, . .//
m Five Can Halted
The fugitives were John Barish.
19, serving five years for robbery
and auto theft from Dallaa and
Roeftwall counties; Homer King,
25, under four-yeer sentence from
Haskell and Parker pountfea; for
burglary and theft; Gilbert Sind-
_ . .. _ a.. , erson, 23, serving 15 years from
now met the same response from Mard[D ^ D#j]ag c^ntkM for
Corrigan Holds Out
tor sfob At Flying
with political "pollution.”
ley, “bleseed" by l’rc«ideni
eevelt, is expected to wi* il
balloting today.
Bark-
i Roe.
in**--
u
T7 7
U.S. CHANCES FOR
AGREEMENT WITH
MEXICO BRIGHTER
British Startd Seen
As Aiding Hopes
For Hull
WASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (BE)—,
Great Britain and- the United
States have sought a solution of
the Mexican problem by widely
different methods, but both have
Douglas (Wrong Way) Corrigan set MO from Ireland fir New
York and actually landed there, at the above pkture ahowi,, The
.par.?
Friday which rivaled that given Undbeffh. More Corrigan picture*
............- —-.......-.....—..............on page A. ......
Rail and
Shares Take
In Advance;
Lose Early Gains
NEW YORK, Aug. 8 (BE)-
Stocks swept forward to
the best levels in 10
active opening dealing*
j Bond* were higher. Cotton
I were unchanged to 3 points lower.
Many stocks opened at new highs
; for the year and longer. Rails were
strong. Deleware ft Hudson hit a
j new top at 20*. K and Union
Pacific spurted a point. ■ w
! General Motors opened inn 4000-
share block af a new high of 46)4, -
up % and Chrysler gained % to
i 74% on a 2000-share block, Cop-
pers soared. American Can waa up
a point
V. S. Steel opened 8000 share*
up H and Bethlehem
u, 60%. utr-
Oils had small
Mexico. The terms in each case
are thoas of irreconcilable rejec-
tion.
Realizing the inability of Mexico
to compensate, the British rested
their demand on immediate return
of British expropriated oil proper
on oil. He
put hia case on toe recognition
of a principle. It was that foreign
property expropriated should be
adequately paid for in cash at the
time of expropriation. He baaed hi*
claim on the case* of needy small
American land owners, suggesting
international arbitration as a way
out for Preridenti Cardenas.
Now that the terms of the new
Mexican note are available in faith-
ful translation jin Washington,
With enough sidewalk already
laid to reach from Goose Creek
to beyond, the bascule bridge on
Cedar Bayou, If lt were stretched
out in a single link, the WPA
crews engaged on the current
y project today was moving into
another sector of the city.
The section lying between Tex
as and James avenue aut of
Goose Creek street has been com-
State Department officials find-no pieted, and work wilt start Mori-
important proposition in it on ■ * | ■
which to base evidence of a desire
of the present Mexican government
to forestall settlement.
Court Bart Jewish
Surname for Child
BERLIN, AIM. 8 (HE) — The
court et appeals uphe# p .lower
court ruling today under which the
clerk of the vital sfotfatics de-
partment was justified in rsfutlng
to record the name Of Joshua for
a German child because it was
"typically Jewish.” v*
The court cluslfled first names
aa follows; %i'# r ,
T. Typically . German, haring
their origin » |Htory or the sa-
2. Foreign names adapted into
the German language,
S. Old testament names of He-
brew origin.
The father in tola cast protest-
ed that Joshua was a traditional
name in hie family but the court
said the family tradition )s "out
of step With Buriem times and
must be given up.” f
Pearl White Givdn
. Simple Burial Rite
RIS, Aug. 8 MID-
PARIS, Aug.
White, old-time
Pearl
sUr of
Wilson Co. IJJUM-.. 8 84 "The Perils of Pauline" and other
OU_____________ 9 1-8 thriUera,- was buried today In the
Hudsfitvlfet,
Katy PM.
White Truck
9 3-4 Paesy cemetery,
10 1-8
14 8-4
Curttae Wright A.
Union .
H 14 pUal
There was no church ceremony.
A simple service was read at the
InU. Paper iu......... ....... » *4 graveside in the presence of only
Gen. Elec. ............................44 about 20 close friends, la acco
about 20 close friends.
MS
Murray Corp.------------10 'torn
,
,y ,
(See Auto Stolen Page 2)
SIDEWALK CREW
'INTO NEW SECTOR
Over 25,000 Feet of
Concrete Poured
On Project
day north of James avenue. |
Property" orders living ta that
sector who haya not made ar-
rangements for taking advantage
of the 80 per cent discount, to-
day were asked to contact W. L.
Dfrey or City Manager John W.
Harkins, at toe dty halt.
More than 28,000 linear Mat of
sidewalk have been poured to data.
The WPA la furnishing the labor
and the property owner’s coat is
for materials only, ’j O*
Hfrey said today that aa soon
as toe sldowalk program ta aeta-
pieted, construction of curb and
gutter wffl be started on the earn*
bMt*’ .V —.
New Council Named
For Maritime Union
NEW YORK, Aug. 0
new national executive council rtf
nine members, Including five who
had been termed "antl-admtniS'
tratlon.” took charge today of
tiNf*fatlonal ''Maittini».|;tFnion
(CIO). yt
Ballots cast by U288 members
throughout the country were tab-
ulated at a meeting last night ta
opstu bouse, with
2,000 rasmbers present. Joseph
Curran, president, and Fsrdlaand
Smith, vice president, were elected
without opposition
NO TEETH—RUNS AWAY
SOUTH BEND, Ind., Aug. 8 (BE)
—Peart Frost, 17, arrested while
sleeping on a perk bench, told
police she had run away from her
m
NEW YORK, Aug. 6 <UE>—Douglas CorrigW, a weary and batter-
ed hno, spurned a dozen fortuttes today. and decided to remain just
•notosr young man ta search of a llying jotr.
Offer* were accumulating for the hour for hip> to axkiWt himself
on a stage or..t«dk- the radio at pries* «f *12,000 to |S9J»0i.to
become a movie actor for even
larger sums; to write stories of hi*
life and endorse product- he doesn’t
08€«. -a —- '4 — *■ 4/; -*-r~~
Steady Flytag Job ,
But Corrigan .riwsk >is head,-^,*3*,
demanded with * trKe of irish |^aj Brothers Taken
anger to know who ttrodhta firtaf*1
ta a beer advertisement without
permission, ami said he’d just wait
untit somebody offered him ”
steady job,
It will have fo b* a flying job,
he said, and if it wasn’t forthcom-
ing soon (he had only $18 when
he landed his $900 airplane in
Dublin after an ocean flight July
18) he would pick out a few prod-
ucts to endorse for profit, but they
would ba only those ha actually
used on hia flight
Ts Review Regiment
He had to have an X-ray made
today to determine how badly the
he took at
;ion in his
TEXAS FUGITIVE
.. 1
tlcy Broth
Without Battle
In Arkansa^JM
HOT SPRINGS, Arh„ Aug, 0
(BEi—Mslvta Haley, 85, and hte
brother, Wilson Haley, 23,
In jail here today, awaiting return
to GreenviUe. Texas, where they
•tabbed a guard during a Jail
break four week* ago.
Officers trapped toe men ta toe
Hot Springs post office. The fu-
gitives were armed but did not
put up any fight.
The Haley brothers and two
^■■1 companions got out of toe Hunt
cartitage tahta chest hwlbeenA^ooun^, Texaa. jail at GreenviUe
"‘ after overpowering a guard,
Claude Ward, one of the fugl-
Uvea, waa captured a short time
later and taken to Drilas to await
transfer to the Texas penitentiary
to serve a life term for robbery
in Denton county.
The-other fugitive, V, C. Wal-
ford, wss still at liberty today.
The Haley* were members pf a
gang of North Texas thieves who
operated throughout several coun-
ties. They already are under sen-
tences from Denton, Bonham,
Sherman and several other places.
■ ■• ■ ■■ ■
Hamilton Vioit to
Dallas Is Revealed
DALLAS, Aug. 0. <UPi Floyd
Hamilton, surviving member of
one of the Southwest’s moat no
tortoue robber gangs, was to Dal-
las the middle of tola week with
his latest hireling, Ted WaHae*
local officers learned today.
Dallaa officer* said they had
-_........ 4irfc, tk.ir w t^p tlta Hamilton Kang wouid be
i^mhome.'nedead^re Mr. here Wednesday night. He elude!
and Mis Bad, their fouur chil-
dren and Mr. and Mm. Jesse
Gillen. • * wm .«■ ■ ■'v
aolfofVoon. Aug. 6. (tut)
-The attorney for Mr*. War-
ner Gland said today that 01.
by the shoving
yesterday's wild
honor. J HU
Hia program for today included
a trip to Peekskill, N. Y., to re-
view a ' Fighting Irish” regiment
at the national guard encampment,
and a dinner of the Dublin society
of Now York at the Hotel Aator
tonight * , j ‘ ‘
Can Fly Again
His most cheering news today
was contained in a telegram from
Dennis Mulligan, head of the bu-
reau of air commerce, nt Washing-
ton, announcing that his five-day
suspension for Wfog across the
ocean without penfesaion had ex-
pired an4 he could fly again any
s (Bee Corrigan, Fage f) '
—s— -----—------------
BRIJkFS
OATLINBUR4f*«NR»' Mfi,
0. (UJO — Eight members of toe
Albert BnB family wuro killed
today when wnter from n flood-
ed creek ta toe Orest tonefcy
and, character actor whom
personation sd Charlie CkiM
Chinese detective, waa worid la.
mens, JOftlto , qtijt
WASHINGTON, Ang. 0
-Edwin 8. Smith, meeibrr of
the national labor relations
tHtair nsoerted today foil
charges made against him by
President William Greco of foe
American Federation of Labor
were "reckless and antra#/
sever-il trope and after a-one-doy
stop was believed to nave gcue
to WoodriviH’, Ill» where a bank
,nes*”iu.cr was robbed ol'i* *85,-
800 p±yroli yesterday.
Hamilton escaped from • Mon-
tague county, Texaa, |ul last
April.
district were eM>ected to rise
again by mid-week. **
Strength in roil shares wu
cribed partly to indications tL_.
federal medisttaWitay speed up a
showdown on the dtonosed 18
oiiunuvw aa ves Ww v|ivbou *w
cent rail wage rot
Rails came out in trig
Gains ranrimr lo a
Motors led industrials on
rise. !■■■■
General Motors, An
Du Pont,'
bey - Owens - J
Ward, Phe
and metqf
high* for the year on |
tag to more than two
Steel shares slii.
early strength, Delaware ft ]
continued to tend
up 2% points to
preferred gained n
points.
, ■% ■-
slipped off
JAPANESE HALT/
REDTANKATT
Fighting Continues Aa
New Effort At
Peace Is Made
TOKYO, Aug, 0 (BE)—Mass Rus-
sian tank attaeka at two poi
on the Siberian frontier were
ported in a war office c
today coincident with
tion from the foreign office 1
new approach would be made
toX'c^S^bly^"1 *
border cnitt pwtcpaoiy. ^
The war office asserted that th
Russians attacked at Hill 29,
fsntry (perhape 1000 mm).
At the same time, tha <
nique said, 80 tanka 1
talion of infantry
Japanese north of ,
artillery laid
gainst
arid, i
in both 1
A report from Marne
mitsu, ambassador et
his conversation with P
eign Commissar Maximum 1
on the frontier fiapute wm
... .a... _ .a tlr in f-iiiMmltawi mi
afternoon.
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 6, 1938, newspaper, August 6, 1938; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1023103/m1/1/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.