The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 150, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 5, 1935 Page: 1 of 6
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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—
-'
i.. n f a
i Dcsye, Ethiopia, dc-
Haile Selassie,
mr the front. "He
the American Seventh
mission, and with-
i-jSSSTBl
ose hands was cut off by
i victim* •
, off the Jjand that stole
’ must hate been pleasant
robbed, but a "civilis-
l emperor” calmly look-
have surprised the
mission, ries. ,
TO FLY AGAIN
e is a prospect of axree-
tconcerning Ethiopia. Eng-
1 no fight, especially
; France to keep her com-
. and supply men. FranA
; fight, if it were possible
| ft. Correspondents, well
, expect some sort of set-
You notice that, while
t (ovemment rushes in where
g concerns It^to prevent oil
s to Italy, the league of Na-
i has not yet enforced the oil
“What will Mussolini
question disturbs Euro-
They would be more
perhaps, if Mussolini
I to answer that question, with
Just recovering from sn sir
crash in which her eo-pilot was
killed, Ruth Nichols, noted worn-
an pilot, says she will fly
again before she can walk.
“Aviation is too important to be
hindered by an accident," she
said.
DRASTIC FEDERAL '
RESERVE SYSTEM
SHAKEUP BEGINS
Terms of Chairmen In
All District To
End March I
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5.-01R).
A drastic shske-up in personnel of
the federal reserve system under
the 1985 banking act giving the
administration new control powers
taantoday.
The retiring federal reserve
board, which ends its duties Feb-
ruary 1, ordered terms of office of
Borah of Idaho, and
i Hamilton Fish, Jr., of
York had a long talk and
“guess” that Senator
and Mr. Fish have agreed
i aide by side, Senator Borah
KPresident, Mr. Fish for vice
It is not safe to "guess”
t Senator Borah, but it would
* for the Republicans to de-
Uncertainty does not
i : : “ ■ ■
I SAM borrows nine hun-
dred million dollars more,
the national debt
i thousand five hundred mil-
dollars, but forty thousand
below the amount that
i "great bankers” told Presi-
t Roosevelt this country could
k wry. Congressman Hamii- ,
Rah, Jr., wants President f* !«■■* chairman at each of
to tell who the great the 12 federal reserve banks to ex-
TWOCHARGEO
IN SLAYING OF
FEDERAL MEN
J I
tiff1
Owners, and execute
than 200 of the country*. 1,
industries moved today to elin
New Deal principles from the fed- /
-_—
'
[’
PEACE.,.
Deal ID BE HANDED
ITALYMONDAY
_
campaigns to "educate”
public to the industrial leaders'
nt, and the exercise of a
;ive influence against govern-
CWner of Club Where ,he ,M# *
Shooting Took Place Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of j to oratory,^speakers, almost unani-
And One Other Helc
Without Complaint
TULSA, Okla., Dec. 6^-<UJ>J—
Two men were tr.arged with mur-
der,. two others held for investiga-
tion and additional arrests waps
predicted today in the combined
state-federal investigation *0f
night club altercation in which two convention of the National Manu-
,—, also, borrows money,
I one loan of about one bil-
l * half dollars and another
ve hundred million dollars.
> *>"ds will be "readily ab-
tf*. A nation doesn't know
t it is, until it begins bor
It retired as Class C directors,
Owen D. Young in the federal re-
serve bank of New York; James
Simpson in the Federal Reserve
bapk of Chicago and E. R. Brown
in the Federal. Reserve bank of
Dallas. These officials have served
in excess of the six-year term fix*
ed as maximum for this office.
HATrvro r ' The banking act of 1935 estab-
MWLR the Leaguf of Na' (jshed a neve federal reaervejjtardl
teas uid our state depart- of seven members to rtpla^he
men were slain.
Murder charges were lodged
•**ta*t George L, McCullough,'
night club caterer, a«d Tyree
Parks, parking lot concessionist.
Roy Staley, owner of the Sheridan
club, where the men were killed,
and J- L. Burkhead, an employe,
were held without charge*.__
Louis Pappan, United States In-
ternal revenue collector, and
George Stewart, former Tulsa po-
lice captain, were slain In a gun-
fight at the club early yesterday.
Owen J. Watts, in eharge of the
state branch of the investigation,
said he had ordered the arrest of
several other employes of the dub.
W. I. Giles, agent of the depart-
ment of internal revenue, was re-
presenting the federal# forces. He
concentrated his efforts on deter-
mining whether Pappan was killed
in the line of duty.
McCullough and Parks admitted
participation in the shooting. They
said Pappan and Stewart had guns.
Giles said a recen/ report from
General Motors Corporation, Pres
ident Clinton L. Berdo of the Na-
tional Manufacturers’ Assodation
and Robert L. Lund, chairman of
its directors, and Bruce Barton,
speaking for the advertising indus-
try, urged that industry stap into
politics "in self defense’’. ^ " r
A convention committee of the
"congress of industry”, the annual
fscturers’ Association, completed
anti-New Deal "platform” to
guide the projected campaign. Its
approval by the congress was con-
sidered certain. ....
Tentative plans called for use of
direct influence bn stockholders
and employes of large concerns, ad- m*nt problem.
mously condemned President Roose-
vplt’s policies yesterday.
Sloan, head of one of the largest
Industries of the world, keynoted
the drive lash night at a dinner hon-
oring 88 men selected by the Man-
ufacturers’ Association as the coun-
try’s leaders. He said one of the
most important tasks before indus-
try is ^’liquidation” of the New
Industry must Expand its con-
ception of responsibilities to in-
clude the entire national welfare,
he said, but he added that govern-
ment spending mortgages the fu-
ture and endangers prospects of
Proposal Provides For
Ethiopia' to Get Port
And Rome Portions
of Ogaden and Tigre
(Copyright |986 by U. P.)
PARIS, Dec. 5.—(UK)—French
and British foreign experts have
completed the broad outlines of a
proposal for peaceable settlement of
the Italian-Ethiopian war, it was
understood today.
lit is intended that Premier Pier-
re Laval and Sir Samuel Hoare,
British foreign secretary, perfect
the plan here Saturday and send
•ley In
Today Is ]
To Settle
natural solution of the unemploy-1 it to Premier Mussolini next week. J agreements are reached.
NEW YORK, Dec. 5.-<fi!>-AH ship
North Atlantic and the Gulf coast
representatives to enter labor agreemi
Longshoremen’s Association, President Joseph P. Ryan
ciation said today.
Twenty-three companies that operate both on the Atlam
board and in the Gulf were affected by the boycott ordered 1
midnight to force recognition of the ILA, Ryan said.
“The only thing that can prevent settlement of the <
for the Gulf agents of the compainles to refuse to carry i
orders from their offices here,” he said.
■|A11 the actiop in settlement of the boycott necessarily
be in the West Gulf ports, 65 explained. Shipping representatives
deal directly with Michael Dwyer,*--
vice-president of the ILA and dis-
trict Gulf president. ,'
As the companies sign for ILA
labor the boycott against them wNl
be lifted in other American ports,
Ryan said. He expects to be Mk
vised-from Dwyer’s office as the
ACTOR IS CHARGED
IN ABDUCTING AND
ATTACKING GIRLS
dollywood Playboy Is
Jailed As Extras /
Are Beaten
England’s ,
1 to country, “
»«•
reserve system, is to have wider
to- power over operation of the federal
Pappan indicated he intended to
(Continued on Page 6)
cleanFweek
PLANSDRAFTED
Plea To Co - operate
fa Made By City
Manager H
HIGH COST OF EATS
GOES STILL HIGHER
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5-<UJ!>
—Retail food tosts increased
another one and four-tenths per
cent during the two weeks end-
ed Nov. 19, principally because
of sharp advances in the price
of dairy products, fresh fruits
and vegetables, the department
of labor announced today.
The bureau of labor statistics
said that while the price of
of flour fell off 2-10 of one per
cent, the price of white bread
rose by the same fraction. Meat
prices rose 1-10 of one per cent
and pork chops rose seven per
cent, beef items and other pork
cuts falling slightly.
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 5-0)-
Two film extras today charged
Charles A. Wilroy, Hollywood play-
boy and minor actor, with abduct-
ing and beating them on the out-
skirts of the film colony.
The actresses, Marion Volk and
Loraine Crane, reported to police
that Wilroy took them to the To-
luva lake district, home of screen
notables, and administered severe
beatings.
Miss Crane charged she was ab-
ducted at the point of a gun, as-
saulted and thrown from the ac-
tor’s car. Wilroy admitted taking
Miss Crane for a ride but denied he
made advances. ,
'.A plea for Goose Creek property * Officers found in his automobile
xtA*c,,r £: xsntArt
Owners, renters, merchant* and Miss Volk said Wilroy also had
French opinion is that the plan
is onaMussolinijna*,feeble to ac-
cept ir Hoare is sufficiently concil-
iatory as regards present divergen-
cies in the British and French
ideas.
It is regarded as certain that
Mussolini will not flatly reject this
plan, in whatever form it reaches
him, as he has done previous plans.
Mussolini knows this may be the
last peace offer by Britain and
Franch under present conditions.
The sketch for the peace propos-
al has been worked out by Rene
De St. Quentin, Ethiopian expert
of the French foreign office, and
Maurice Peterson, Ethiopian ex-
pert of the British foreign office.
Uyeaves certain divergencies be-
tween British and French ideas.
These are to be worked out here.
It is believed that Premier Laval
acquainted Vittorio Cerruti, Italian
ambassador, with the sketch last
night, which would mean that Mus-
solini already knows about it.
this week.” . ■
"The Christmas
holidays *wHl
ha- reserve banking system. soon be herJ; fod if every one will late area. ministration tfficials. were tepre-*1
* in English, even without
’ George Bernard Shaw.
' vssS-S ssSksms
Stums*--
new position of president created.
He wiB be selee** fey doctor* of
the bank <91 the approval of
new board of governors at Wasp-
Salvation Army girl
- singer, waiti
tW rara^e^ld nTkM the'^wly"formed board of goyer-
„. 2 2 r^i^'-rr'r
thust hang As is usual, **V. ^ tj,e banks. Other con-
«Wr ■»!
1** 2SL SsiSfiifiS. ■
>•»» £2"-
WORLD AIR HAIL
CONFERENCE HELD|,„rH€Si
-- [Somaliland at the bottom of the
Ameriran and Foreign IRe<J sea> a wide corridor of
' OfBdals Meet At ,and throueh wWch Ethioma could
Wadiington
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5-<Wf-,
the worldWr service was, expected
to result from an international con-
land through which Ethiopia could
build a railway with funds to be
provided by the League of Nations.
Modification of tfop frontier of
Italian Eritrea in the north, giving
Italy a portion of Tigre province
into which .columns of its troops
have penetrated. However,, it is
said the ceded territory .would be
arrived from
2ST -Gw
L - would supply a good the banks will be abollshed and a the garbage department, and if 1 ^ hv ,out of the car.” favoritfg a North Atlantic airmail.....
** .................. jsx'ssiras "r?*rs-,,, ■
jrair.rnSL;
him. They drove to the outskirts of came from recent establishment of
the film colony where he allegedly the Trans-Pacific service. Immed-
attempted to attack her, iate point of discussion was the
Wilroy was held on suspicion of
ized Harkins to proceed with plans
for the campaign.
"Gather up all trash, tin cans and
other rubbish,' «id place it where
trucks cah pick it up. In burning
trash and other rubbish, be very
(Continued <h Page 6)
■w..,.....-—. ——— -- - - -—
BRIEFS
WM.'
. GERMANY, England, or I ___
^United States establish the ALLRED TO PARLEY
8inCe pA0Son of the Texas Sheep and
Gist Raisers Association.
* country tn
to aid
rjp-
Town
LAj?r-r of
an!
asking
Stocks Close,
Courtesy Citixens State
_____
1 on
Jersey............
Gulf ...................
Texas -.....................
Steel .....-
Cons Oil
ii£
...........59 i-d
............491
Dec. ^~4U.R>—The
L company, an
American company, has com-
Hpleted arrangements for con-
struction of a modern oil re-
,* finery « Naples at -a cost of M
-.■#.000,000 lire ($5,100,000), it ,
wag said in an authoritative
quarter today.
Gen. Motors
Humble
New Jersey...........................g9 ^
24 3-4
47 7-8
10 3-8
13 3-4
10-6-8
56.1-2
28
23 1-2
6 5-8
.................. 1®
................... 32 5-8
v • 31 1"4
.....*■.
..........
-........ 3 H
WARM SPRINGS, Ga.. Dec.
5. _ (U.R) — President Roose-
velt hopes for a short congress-
ional session that will be
terminated early in April, it
was indicated today by Sena-
tors Walter F. George and
Richard Russell of Georgia as
-;4 they left the little White
-81' N’<nae' _ -
VERMILLION, 1 D„ Dec.
5.—(UR)—Three members of a
Boston Students In tf
Anti-Italian Meeting
BOSTON, Dec. Polioe
dispersed a crowd of student de-
monstrators from Radcliffe, Har-
vard and Massachusetts Institute
of Technology today outside the
Italian consulate in downtown Bos-
ton.
One youth loosed some circulars
from atop the' Park Square build-
ing, where the consulate is situat-
ed, condemning Italian invasion of
Ethiopia.
The four or five foreign lines
operating in the Gulf that do not
touch Atlantic ports in America
have made no offers for settlement,
as far as the , ILA headquarters
here knows. *
An executive of the Luckenbach
Lines said, that a meeting was be-
ing held in Houston today to nego-
tiate terms of the settlement He
knew that at least "several” of the
affected lines had ordered repre-
sentatives to enter the negotia-
tions. - ' ,
OUTCOME RESTS ON
HOUSTON CONFERENCE
HOUSTON, Dec. 5.—<U.E>—Out-
come of conferences between union
leaders and officials of two steam-
ship companies was awaited today
(Continued on Page 6)
SANTA WILL W
EVERY NEEQITOI
UNION OFFICIALS
FORECAST ACCORD
IN HUMBLE PLANT
H. Fremming, Head
fl Workers ‘
In Parley
Oil Workers Speaka
mm
Complete accord between the
Homhie Oil and Refining company
and the oil workers union was pre-
dicted today, following addresses
here last night by union officials.
Harvey Fremming, of Washing-
ton, D. C., international president,
and Robert Oliver, president of
Locgl 338, were the principal speak-
ers at an open meeting of the local.
Their predictions were made,
they aaid, on the basis of a con-
ference held at Houston among
Humble officials, themselves and
Charles H. Logan, fifteenth re-
gional board chairman, from New
Orleans.
“We Jhave reached agreements
on practically every point of con-
tention", Oliver said, "and I believe
Goodfellows Seeking
Names Of Children
To Send Gifts
Previously reported ... $15.00
Anonymous donors ------- 2.25
Total' today .....\ 17.25
It’s going to be a Merry Civrisj-
hias for every needy Child in this
recognition of the'union by the
company, whereby the union will
be thp bargaining agency repre-
senting the employes, will be ex-
tended soon.” , •
Fremming, in his address*, at-
tacked company unions end detail-*
ed the benefits over a long uajjaWI
[of time, of the advantages that f
[have been obtained through the ef-
forts of organized labor.
He traced the origin of thl’ com- m
feasibility of exjperimental Brit-
kkbtaping, possession of a revolver ish, American and possible German
and statutory assault.__commercial line experimental
S" “tl “SE. ~2%£'*Sir*
been “mortally afraid of Wilroy for waa for regular service by July,||
months”. 1937. .
Wflroy was reported to be a Experts forecast around - the-
member of a prominenrMississippi world ait mail and paasenger ser-
a prominentxMissisaippi
^ vice within two years. On the ba-
' sis of a 40 hour Trans-Atlantic
crossing via Newfoundland, com-
mercial spanning of the world in
two weeks was foreseen. This1 was
on the basis of the present five
day schedule between the
coast and Manila, seven days ....
ila to London, two days London to
(Continued on Page 6)
family were burned to death in
a fire fhich destroyed their
farm home today. The dead are
Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Jkcohson
and their adopted son, Waiter,
about 25. «
LONDON Dec. 5.-W.R>-A
report of the assassination of
Yin Ju-Keng, head of the
autonomous regime established
in Hopei and Northeastern
Chahar, was officially denied
today, according to the Peip-
ig correspondent of the Ex-
hahge TelegVaph.
tan Somaliland’ to' give Italy a
great area in southeastern Ethio-
8th parallel of latitude. If the
statesmen al! agree, the remainder
#Nthlopis* might remain thBepen-
dent without any mandate in fee-
half of the League^ of Nations.
Texas Relief Plans %
Are Still Unsettled!
AUSTIN, Dec. 6—(UE)-PIans
to care for Texas’ needy were un-
settled today while state relief of-
in almost every day, to see wheth-
er the Chief Goodfellow-JhW flftir
.name on the list to turn over to
Santa Claus this year.
Any needy^child under 12 years
of age, in this area who fears
Santa Claus’w»l miss him, or her,
should immediately turn .in his
name with correct address, to
either his school teachef, the
head of the Parent-Teacher Asso-
ciation, or to the Chief Goodfel-
low,
If you know of any family who
will depend on the Goodfellows to
show Santa the way to their home;
turn in the names of children in
that family immediately.
_________, . Let’s all get together on this,
Payments to both employable and and for the fifth successive year
con-
unemployable indigents will|
tinue until Dec. 15, State Director
Adam Johnson said; After that
date only unemployables will be
assisted. WPA jobs are available
for all eligible relief clients, John-
son added
SCHOOLS GET FUNDS .............. „„ VI.
AUSTIN, Dec. 5—<ILP>—Payment it to any P.T.A. But think it
of $704,461 to needy school dis-
tricts in rural areas was announced
today by the state department of
education. .
know that every needy child has
received a bag of toys, fruits,
candy and nuts when he awakens
Christmas morning.
Drop your extxa change at tbese
cans in Hiimble stations, or in the
milk bottles Phenix Dairy has
placed around town. Send in your
contribution to The Sun, or give
it to any P.T.A. But think it over
seriously—and give something.
Work of preparing the bags in
which to place toys will be under
(Continued on Page 6)
.The Rockefeller interestB,he^d,
many years ago brought-Mackenzie ,
King, former premier of Canada, t«>
the United States, to form company
unions, and- the, joint •; conference
was the result. - , M
I “However," Ffemmiif^ said, “in
[fairness to MacKenzie King, who
(Continued on Page 6) .
Search For Escaped
Outlaws Is' Shifted I
PHOENIX, Ariz., Dec. 5.——
Arizona peace officers today block-
ed roads through the state follow-
ing reports that four members of
the Irish O’Malley gang who broke
jail at Muskogee, Okla, were head-'
tog west. • '• : 9
Department of justice agents
asked Arizona officers to watch
for the men, believed to be some-
where between El Paso, and I'hoe-
laix, _• H
Slayer Wfll £)ie In
Electric Chair Tonight
Pierson
sil, scheduled to che^
AUSTIN, Dec. 5.—«JJ»—Gov,
kWY. Allred today refused to
‘StftaSl
aged Wood county
Cantrell was convicted in Wood
murder S^TnrtJuneJT938The
The board of pardons and paroles
clemency
av
take its
CAMBRIDGE,
Dec. 5. — I Roosevelt’s co-defendant, stood
late President Theodore Roosevelt
was ordered held for the Middle-
sex county grand jury as an al-
leged air pistol sniper today after
OUU IU VUO
Theodore Roosevelt of New York,
was on trial with Peter De Flores,
21, of Pomfret, Conn.,
snipers. The youths,'both students
at Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology, were arrested Nov. 21 at
Delta Psi fraternity house, where
police seized two foreign-made air
******* pellet about
iff
3&f£ •
assault witte-a dangerous weapon,
dKrttfagtAjoMjMi maximum pea-
chief around his left hand, ami, alty of 2% years’ imprisonment, '1
Judge Wolcott said: . ■
holding the hand close to the muz-
% /M- one th* Pistols, pulled “The court does not; appreciate
the trigger. He caught the pellet, the playfulness that might have
Flores was holding the handker-
chief virtually over the pistol’s
alleged muzzle. Seibolt took the gun and
fired at De Flores’ outstretched
hand. Again De Flores caught the
pellet.
A third shot, fired by Seibolt at
close range, bounced harmlessly off
De Fiores’ chest.
Both were bound over to the
gfted jury in continued bail of
young $200 each, on a specific charge of I noise,’
»v.
he said.
officers.”
The court apparently was unim-
pressed by the courtroom demon-
stration.
Both youths admitted firing the
shots at passing motorists.
The slender, dark-haired
bespectacled Roosevelt spoke
such a Whispery Voice that it
inaudible to m&at spectators.
['•We fired at the car to make a
'
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 150, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 5, 1935, newspaper, December 5, 1935; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1023424/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.