The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 14, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 20, 1934 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
' ■
pM,000,000
Scieitf* CM*.
foWlNG h*rd of .congrea*-
L wending hometor* «t-
exprssaas aitia/ac-
«ork warn piloted- To
|t ipp*>»r» to how pUy-
of an gutorooton, •
I jwnalativ* ‘‘robot*’, carry-
tM order from the White
Xb«t it what g m Jority
rcfpi wgnted done, and
what thi voter*
r^gn it know* whgt thit !*.
Kooievelt in g letter
West Virfinig, expreigei
with the achievement
hgve ipre'd employment,
raised per, end w* BP»
rl
. , noUble record of recov-
fhhM led the <egy tor other
md he* produced wlde-
t md I beliete, permanent
Certainly we have a right
, thi* record. *r.
THE
’
-
OF GOOSE CREEK, PELLY, BA
Volume is~no. m
ijj, ft. A. executive*, with
' show these rtflilts <*
‘$H-4
ng production up 50
store* sale* up 46
store sale* up 86 per
country store sale* up
HP.'
i most important i* ». test of
C j recovery spending power
* in March, 1988, the
public bought 118,000
ja, and in March, 1984,
ht 836,013 automobile*, an
leant »d newspaper advert s-
'hsesge 86.7 per cent.
, April United State* exports
Five-Year Suspended
Term Is Given Norris
In. Slaying Of Swan
Pleading guilty to a charge of murder, Cart Norris, 28-year-o'd
garage mechanic, today waa given a five-year «us pended aentene* in
connection with the death May 18 of Ralph E. Swan, Baytown re-
finery clerk shot to death at the Norria home in Highland*.
Norria pleaded guilty when arraigned before Criminal District
Judge Langston G. King at Houaton this morning, whan Ida trial was
called.
Swan died a few aecond* after he received three bulieta in.hi* body,
one of which penetrated hi* hearty
ENROLLMENT OF
145 EXPECTED IN
JUNIOR COLLEGE
v 't > . • *
Students Living Out
of District Ask
About Work
Lse junior tcollege 4whlch will
be inaugurated here thi* fall i*
expected to have an enrollment of
about 125 freabmen and at leaat
20 aecond year atudants, W. R.
Smith, president, said today,
“We have had inquiries from
freshmen student* In Barbers Hill,
the Tri-Cities, La Port*, and other
aa he stood on the porch of the
home at Highlands, owned by
Norris, but in which Norris’ dL
voiced wife was residing.
As an anti-climax to the trial,
Norria and his former wife were
married for the second time late
yesterday, it was revealed today
at hi* trial.
At the time of the shooting,
Norria summoned officers and an
ambulance, and waited at the
scene of the shooting until offic-
ers arrived. He was brought to the
Goose Creek jail, where he was
held until released under bond of
$7600. (
Norris, a few hours after the
shooting, admitted firing the shots
that felled Swan, saying that he
found Swan in his house after
he had given the other several
warnings to remain away. f fl
d 200 per «|||Bitumin- m ^ forcicog* r*cord "umber of yeM
j 02.:, per cent. Electric oul and frfrgH
production, 14.9 per cent
? increasea t>o.» . ^ a,ith.
out and leave through the front
door, he fired five shots, three
retarded the agreed verdict with-
out leaving the box, Judge King-
said that the state had inveai
ed th. ce Mid hwd mch*
wss th® proper
■nment “interference”
OP ^ivlty in what
j, it gnant business and In-
. “lining provisi.
... ft. A. which has poW
ithe president power to force
|m industries or. *
comply
, or go out of
HE never o
r to issue ..r refuse a “presi-
Hcense" to any buainess-
*
BABY
(HE)—The
£1 statement made by Paul U.
Lee, the undertaker who examto-
girl1
ed Swan’a
jurors
u.rneyjackaon.
*'ine character witnesses toclud-
Deputy A. T. Hamilton who
lived at Goose Creek and
County Commissioner J. T.
i at Brighton, while Sir Ber
- ‘ y, f mous police
was
ithe body of
trying to recin-
>f a woman whose
a mbeting of the East Har-
.....rehabilitation commit-
tee to be held at 7:3® p. m. toctoy
* l,„d tto. 3Md.,__ >t th> ^ Ctrak dl> „
- E. «.'*►
Hare of Croaby were called by the
defen** pi M Morris
1 reputation as a peace-
HATTON
fill-Be
denU," Mr. Smith .aid.
“Early to the campaign for th*
junior college, tf* school board
frit a doubt that enough second
year student* could be obtained, so
we offered the bargain rate# of
f26 tuition to sophomore atudents
living outside the district. District
residents pay no tuition. Freah-
taitfon u llOO.
'' "Thine were about 16 or 10 stu-
dent* Who questioned about the
sophomore daaa. The board felt
that students would be alow to en-
roll if the board w*rq doubtful
whethar or not th* second year
work was to bo offered. Be the
board went ahead and announced
plana for second year work. "
“Pee* for the school for thoao
who reside in the district will bo
$6 for matriculation, $10 labora-
tory fees for science students, and
*4 for library, Th# library fee, of
course, is returnable. These feet
must also be paid bp thorn living
outside the district, who also must
pay tuition.”
Mr. Smith said freshmen atu
dents would probably be enrolled
sometime late to July, although no
iSEr^
t^lfl
)UND TOWN
|!> The Tri-Citiee: Seth O’- carty out ^ *^ment, propo*|
1 honkily cheering for a al to lease vacant farm lands on
that barely missed whfch to place families now on
into the causeway
R. C. Stephenson
tending to bustoess....
Witt taking off for a
trip to Houston...
Broussard urging
friends” .... Mrs.
Hill chewing gum....
• “ri Mrs. John Hollaway
V tr|pov#r th* wav«*
Morgan’s Point.... Mrs.
Judice looking trim as
•••."Chili” Graig being
***>« ih greeting a
Alice Burkhalter
« like an auto wheel
■SiSSfcm
heat wave is no laueh-
McKhmey, chairman, the commit-
tee will organixe for the purpose
of first contacting owners of un-
tenanted farm lands willing to
lease the land to the government 1
In return for machme-tilled farm-
repairs to buildings.
J. H. Anderson, in charge of
the- local statin of the Harris
county board of welfare and
(Continued on Page Six)
ein-
STOCKS CLOSE
•girl ,
H^btoon
Gulf OH --------“J !‘2
on —.......—105*!
oa ____1914*
08 177*8
________317-8
ai-2
:;:z::i6i-8
oboe* CREEK. TKXAS. WBDSSaDAY. JUNK M. 1M4
•I U 11 • ■ .......
—i—
DUly THtw ud Th,
THE SHOW GOES ON’
word had baM
sat, of Now York,
atr Unsr.
k, had boon
fiance, Harry Pina’oy, in-
crash of a Newaih Chicago
...........i 1 .........
WORK FORI
I*
if Urn right man corn
chosen
—
STANLEY TO
TAKE OVER
PARKER JOB
♦V .-''ff'-j
Commi88ion Says Oil
Chief Fired While
Friends Claim That
He Resigned Post
AUSTIN, Juno 20 4).
Parker, who served for 23 year*
■* an employe of the Texas rail-
road commlaaion and who of late
bed fcm». to charge of proration
enforcement to the East Texes
oil field, was no longer associated
with the commlaaion today.
By what mean* Parker’s ser-
vice* were terminated was a sub-
j«t to controversy.
The Texas railroad commlaaion
said Parker waa discharged be-
cause he failed to curb the flow
of “hot”, or illegally produced, oil.
Parker said he resigned because
of the “utter failure of all three
number* of the commission to co-
operate with roe in any form."
The dismissal order, made public
here, was effective “at once”. It
fefSi of Commia-
-s C. V. Tamil and Ernest
’ O. Thompson, but did not contain
that of Commisaion Chairman Lon
i A. Smith, a candidate for re-elec
tion. ..
Capt. E. N. Stanley, who Parker
succeeded aa chief Eaat Texas en- Finance New
NEW HIGH MARK
SET IN SALE OF
NEW DEAL BUCKS
Over 1000 Persons Bid Grand Jury Continues
Probe of Houston
later.
’
He said a quota of 40 first year
student*, and 80 aecond year ata-
dea||§oul(i be required to offer
a full-fledged course at the college.
He said he was confidant that both
will be fiHed.
Mr. Smith, si
schools for the Goo*# Creek Inde-
pendent district school*, has been
with the district eight years. He
wjll be president of the college. R.
B. Sparks, principal of Lee school,
will be .dean, S. B. Bed will be as-
sistant dean and head of the matbe-
Trial of Preacher
U1 — ... — In Deaths Continued
tog, supervised propagation, ana -........
repairs to buildings. • PAMPA. June 20 rtTJT)—Trial of
Rev. Louis H. Hockley, itinerant
preacher charged with murder of.
four alleged poison deaths, enters
*d the second day here today.
The deaths, three years ago,
the victims were ail member* of
a Pampa family. Th# d*f#nd«it
waa arrested several months ago at
Springfield, Mo. t
Among the early witnesses for
win, was one of those whose death
waa attributed to p\iton. t ^
EertT.
B«
Si's**
In On Auction At
Baytown
Mote than half a million New
Deal Buck* were exchanged at the
second auetten held opposite the
Baytown poetofflce last eight,
which attrartpd ever 1880 persons.-
The hal**4illi«n mark of New
Deal Back* hid in on the first auc-
tion waa surpassed by several
thousand Bucks at the auction tost
night. *-
The highest price paid for mer-
wa* 64,500 Bucka
from Culpepper’s, the lowest bid*
were fer 8 and 10 Bucks hid on
staple grocery products. ,
Clown Kelley Swim, former Earl
Carroll Vanities comedian, set the
(Continued on Page S|x) j
RIG BUILDERS ftF
bfSTRICT STRIKE
I FOR HIGHER PAY
- as?.
Dock Strike
; HOUSTON. June W <UB-Aj>-
peiitoiately 150 oil field rig build-
er* went on strike to Houaton ter-
ristory today. They demanded 12
to day more for their
The rig builders walkout follow-
ad that of 160 union worker# era*
played at the ArmourMmd com-
pany and Swift and company
parking firms. Packing
forcement officer, waa restord to
tht M
D. Parker, with a fw*
unhampered by anyone,’
order signed by the two
pBunissioncrs, "ha* had complete
control of enforcing the oil tows
to East Texas for the last two
and a half months. J
“The production of excess oil
steadily has increased to an esti-
mated amount of around 100,000
barrels a day since he has had
the sole direction of the enforce-
ment of the tow and our orders
pertaining to that field.
"This is » condition which the
of statistics
M’CRAW RALLY TO
BE HERE TONIGHT
...........
Midi# to Attorney
it
80 cento to *1.25 a day.
Hoth walkouU occurred whil*
the county grand jury was toveatl-
gattog Shootings and other die r-
der. arising from the strike
1 of approximately 1800
of the International
men’# Association on
waterfront.
P, A. Seed,
W:
.
»
didate for one
cea of the aUte when William
McCraw, candidate tor attar-
Trio of Pruonor,B - - ----------
Escape at Cleburn«
' -- waterfront. P*4toe <
CLEBURNE, June 80 0JJB- P K ^cwtary-treasurer was arranged
S'srrri.-r: - “* * %£ zl zz i
jail here'iate ths' ttnion Ben f*
yesterday after slugging the jailer «■ «lTOPathy *lth th*
The fugitives were;
Carl Oldham, 22, sentenced to
two year* for burglary.
Pete Rodeh, 24, serving two
year* for forgery.
Louis Bribble, 19, of Waco, who
waa being h*ld for Waco officer*.
The three men overpowered
Jailer Ed England when he
to remove their dinner dishes.
They beat him on the head until
he waa
The men, he said, are receiving
$10 to *12 a day now and are mk-
In* *12 to ffC
w*s:a. “X.
at
streets,
Goose Creek
workers union was
mak* arrangement
to have Mc-
Crew deliver an address at their
regular meeting tonight.
McCraw will come here from
Houston where he has been today
Texas campaign
supporters in inferences «held
■'»4**." w
PT>-
Z’ lJnton, mid thi workere will A* *000 nj
cu t of Hie companies agree to “Us
luncheon to hla honor at toe
State Hotel to Houston.
.......... --—ivB-fr-
The et
touched 100 in the shade
bettered that mark
area say need
crops
bUHLOII ,
ttat are apt
|n*vi
L ■ itu '«li MW*
;
mmm j
•
■
Sk. P < t , •'
HOUSING PROGRAM
ORGANIZATION
BEING PREPARED
Hopkina Heads Drive
Home Building
(Copyright, 1*34, United Preea)
W WABHINGTOH, June BB «»-
The organisation which will:ad-
minister toe *1,000,600,000 hous-
ing program to revive the con
stratton industry was taking
form to advance of President
Roosevelt’s signature of tola latest
emergency meaapre.
llmm L- Hopkins, federal emer-
gency relief administrator, la to be
named director of the program,
the United Press was informal
SiSlIf
Architects are
prospective
housing P-frgfg**
The hooping j
volt’s concept of th* “more' ahun-
ant life”, _ i
The bill seta uM WOO ta-1
of the major «,rance fund for building and
loan Mseeiatto#. stoBw
■iiHisii
financing
at least *1,000,000,000 worth
•home repair*.
The second section of the
sure permits federal loan, to
to stimutota private construction
oflow cost homes. ,
It is designated to insure *2,-
000,000,000 worth of
half on
half on
ed.
it -——-
Tubal
He
alias Lae Mi
Fret* Perry,
der chargw of
(Lwxgg (
I gr
W.. ktf|,k|awrf Ky Kn, ]
. yji |
Wf IMl mm J
r 'jS'
request of
the fa
iwuirg
whVoCro
that led to 1
the Harris county
day received a to*
chief of police «t'
feet that McCall®
there for Porter, I
• i
Accompanied by
Columbus, who fa
iy, of c
The car that was
rrr« ft..
robbery, However, *
was Gordon Grlner, of 1
Okie., husband of the
of the woman held
.i « 'll. InuagtlBgHfm |
„ I ‘ -
rOiwj •mlu Wm* ™ •
thftt WOfTTHfl
left the child
Rob)«« ome. in
* j sjtgOmt* tig
•appeared.
The kidnaping and
/fiflBUmilfat on Pawn
!i'; f
Special Prc
Prkt
. ■
resent
ro j-sTE^-
today were entartal!
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 14, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 20, 1934, newspaper, June 20, 1934; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1023694/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.