The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 74, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 9, 1936 Page: 1 of 6
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'
KILLED IN CRasj
IfAMROCK, Sept. 8. (ftt,
Wilson; Altug, Okljl
fatally m an aut< ’*
lion four miles t
I night. Seven other
hurt.
1
lam
mg!
ly, wilh-
lat kind is
shrewd-
full pen-
|an honest
irest.
-
.
on your
with both
intents.
they tel!
it’s econo-
isent the
lufactur-
fou money
them be-
■'Bel 8. * —
.sole Sauce For Paris.
Rush To Aid U. S. |
byes Made to Look,
elief A Century Ago.
By Arthur Brisbane
EY do not serve apple sauce
[with roast duck in Paris, and
M children complain, but, if
rill pardon the “unpardonable”
Paris is not entirely devoid
jipple sauce.
instance, you may read a
I {i„e plaque commemorative,
his pretty plaque, which was
L,p by the Franco-American
jnittee on July 4, 1924 you may
[the statements of four Ameri,
nbassadors.
fbassadot Bacon said in Au-
1914, "France is at war, I
* meaning presumably, I rush
br assistance. He sand it in
jeh this way: "La France, se
Ij’accours."
hbassador Herrick wrote, in
[“Paris belongs to the world.”
i appartient au monde.
[ 1917 wb were "all wound up"’
,injection with the big foolish-
lof going into a war with which
I nothing to do, and Ambas-
■ Sharpe, had this to say:
i personifies to the highest
, fo? the other peoples, every-
that is inspiration,” La
i personifie au plus haut
; pour les autres peuples tout
est inspiration.
|aLLY, in 1920, when it was
iver, and we were out of it, and
Id have been content to keep
[ and figure up our losses, per-
and finar^al, Ambassador
ice said, from the bottom of
leep heart, "Civilization itse|/
I saved at the Marne uy me
eh army singing the Marseil-
” La civilization meme a ete
sur la Marne par l'armee
Staise chantante la Marseillaise.
things were said, all in
! sincerity, doubtless, by men
[never sat in the finches.
| djd not help to any great ex-
the American conscripted,
times against his will, cftawl-
iver the edge of a trench to get
first smell of war gas, or the
I American business man of bad
scattered over many Euro-
[ countries, while at the same
he tries to pay for all the new
! born every few minutes,
you imagine anybody in
*, England or Germany, para-
iag Ambassador Bacon's
nt to read: “America is at
Iresh?”
would be very little “rush-
i our assistance from Europe
United States were at war,
i it might possibly be to help
hteresting aggressor, and as
ending billions of dollars, in
la war, our European friends
THE DAIL
'yjv
■
Telephone 520 ■
For ‘Better* Work
In Printed Forms
VOLUME 18—NO. 74
.....• ' "—
GOOSE CREEK, PEIXY, BAYTOWN, LA PORTE AND SURROUNDING AREA.
-—
-.
WEDNESDAY-, SEPTEMBER 9, 19
GERMANY TO DEMAND RETURN OF COLONIES
HIRER SAYS!
NATION WILL
SEEK RETURN
Spanish Loyalists
Launch Offensive
CHILD LABOR
(Copyright 1936 by U. P.)
GIBRALTAR, Sept. 9.—(UP)—
Spanish loyalists opened a strong
east, and rebels retired to fortified
points in the town in a siege.
Gen. Emilio Moth, commanding
counter attaeje today against rebels | the rebels in person at “San Sebas-
at Talavera, southwest of Madrid, j tian, sent his best men—his for-
as the first step in a national cam-|eign legionnaires—in motor trucks
paign of action adopted by the j to aid the Huesca garrison,
new government.
They asserted the offensive was
£oing well while rebels- repqfted-
its initial thrust had been repelled.
Rebels were ready to take San
Sebastian on the Bay of Biscay
coast. A bombing plane flew over
Rebel spies learned of an order
for loyalists to Attact Oviedo, near,
the north- *; -at' dawn ' today.
They succeeded in taking the news
into the besieged city. When the
loyalists took their posts they were
showered with artillery shells and
the city and bombed the wireless j airplane bombs and it was neces-
station. Terrified townspeople fledj sary to countermand the order for
by sea and'erowded every boat that I attack.
could be inpressed, . . i Refugees ’arriving at Gijon re-
Loyalist troops entered Huesca, |ported the people of Oviedo were
in the Zaragoza area in the north- buffering severely. They said food
was short and water was being ra-
tioned at the rate of a pint every
other day.
MADRID, Sept. 9—(U.E)_Loyal-
ists have opened a strong counter
offensive in the Talavera area
southwest of Madrid as the open-
ing move ;in a new national cam-
paign of action, It war disclosed
today Republican guards, storm
guards, loyal troops And militia-
men supported by an artillery and
airplane barrage opened the at-
tack on the rebel right wing, with
minor supporting attack on the
center and left wing.
In opening the offensive the
government gambled heavily. A
(Continued on Page 6)
SCHOOLS ADD 580
P UPILS ON FIRST
ENROLLMENT DAY
Opening Classes Are
Taught Today For
4073 Students
Classes were begun on full
schedule in schools of the Goose j
£E- LtSTJfS'iiS.1 SALVATION ARMY
POST WE OPEN
cord of first day enrollment regis-
tered, a shuffling of classes to al-
leviate crowded conditions in some
schools will be necessary.
The total enrollment yesterday
in the district was 4073, a gain of
580 over the 3493 registered on
the first day of last year’s term,
an increase of 16.6 per cent.
Of the gain of 580, there were!
252 students at the Highlands ele-
mentary school, annexed into the
Goose Creek Bchool system this
year. The number of Highlands
students in Robert E. Lee senior
high and Baytown junior high has
sot been tabulated.
Oains were reported in Robert
E. Lee senior high school, at both
------— Baytown and Horace Mann junior
find it not convenient or p°s-; high gchool9| and in five of the
,° en us ten hundred six j elementary schools. Decreases
. , were shown in five elementary
figures in those schools included to thc post quarter8 at 5]5 West
State Enjoins Hot
Oil Sales By U. S.
AUSTIN, Sept. 9.—<U.E)—•Attorney General William McCraw to-
day had secured an order restraining federal tax officials front sell-
ing at public auction approximately 543,000 barrels of crude oil and
products to satisfy a tax claim against W. E. Pope, Corpus Christi.
Sale was to have been made at 10 a.m. today in Kilgore.
The restraining order was granted by Judge Hardy Hollers in
98th district court Tuesday. The petition alleges that the oil offered
~<jfcr sale has been produced in vio-
lation of regulations of the Texas
railroad commission and the laws
of the State of Texas. As such,
McCraw claims, the oil is the pro-
perty of the state under the con-
fiscation ruling, effective May XL,
1035.
Scheme Charged
The petition charges a scheme
under which Pope would have dis-
charged the government’s tax claim
against him, and the original own-
A Salvation Army post for the ers of the oil would have been en-
Tri-Cities will be formally opened abled to move it into commerce.
Friday night, it was announced to- this connection the petition
Formal Ceremonies
To Be Held Here
Friday Night
day by Thad Felton, chair pi an of
the local advisory board.
Ceremonies will be held in Bay-
town, Peily and Goose Creek.
At 7 p. m., there will be a 15-
minute street meeting in Baytown,
followed by a similar m’eeting in
Pelty.
At 8 p. ni., the unit, augmented
by the 32-piece Salvation Army
, grades that were later shifted to
- Moose river gold mine where other buildings.
(ure men wet* imprisoned for Enrollment at Robert E. Lee
|ys, reminds us all, young and
•) learn to use our eyes. In
i lumberman blasting rock to
stream noticed yellow
in the rock, and because he registered 438 yesterday compared
bat he looked at, gold has
Ittken out of the Moose river
|for more than 50 years.
<|o not find things, unless
™ for them and you must
[ bow to look,
I*te Senator George Hearst,
ocatrd son>e of the most im-
pt mines in the world, was
by young Harvard college
noxious to find a gold mine:
fw can we tell if we find
[you think it is gold,” replied
|or Hearst, “you will probably
I (Continued on Page 4)
high yekjterday was 726, compared
to 591 last year. Horace Mann
junior Jiigh climbed from 616 last
year to 677. Baytown junior high
found Town
I'he Tri-Cities: Sam Y. Sjo-
pr stepping on a pair of
and scanning the "results,
lack Heard extending an in-
Pon to join him in a drink,
that “it’a a hot proposi-
■ Y Ray Allen forsaking
pu'et of ticket-agenting to
1 to the more exciting busi-
lof ""heeling a bus over the
FI’... Bjll Ehrhardt running
1 with a note-book full oif
that . . . E. D. Fisher
‘"ting that he hadn’t been
* just right .. . C. I. For-
.'y giving directions on how
M someone who was being
4 tor ... Roy Elms and Vic
,cutt trucking it around. ..
Yfett getting out for aome-
' fa a hurry ,.. Mrs. Neva
and daughter in Anahukc
few days visit with the
JlLPortr: Covis Carey,
y Thornton, Fred Lampkln,
y Kirkland, George Blair,
■ Womack, Lennie Knighton
•gure in the news of the
I'ew days .... and Jess
r°n too .... The business
^undergoing many chang-
' » draws
§glfcl&
to 308 a year ago.
Anson Jones enrolled 411 yes-
terday, a decline from the 431
enrolled last year. Baytown ele-
mentary also showed a drop, from
313 a year ago to-306 yesterday.
Ashbel Smith, one of the schools
from which a grade was transfer
red last .year, registered 241 yes-
terday compared to 295 a year ago.
Mirabeau B. Lamar elementary
climbed from 126 last year to 169.
San Jacinto registered 93 yester-
day and 91 a year ago. Alamo
dropped from 101 to 94. Sam
Houston jumped from 179 to 201;
the Mexican school increased from
(Continued on Page 6)
Stocks Close
Courtesy Citizens State Baak
and Trust Company
Anaconda Copper ................ 39 3-8
Cities Service........................ *
Commercial Solvent ........... • 16
Consolidated Gas ................ 43 3-4
Consolidated Oil —13 5-8
Curtis Wright .............-....... fi 5-8
General Motors ........... 67 7-8
Gulf ........ 90
Humble .................................. 65 1'2
Lambert ................................ 18
National Dairy .................... 26 7-8
National Power.......*—..... 12 M»
Ohio Oil .....................;.......... 12 7-8
Packard • -............................. 12 7-8
Phillips ..................................<2 1-8
Pure Oit ................................ 18
Reed Roller ..............4......— 8-4
Skelly :........... 26 g*
Socony Vacuum.................... 18 5-8
Standard, N. J.'................... 62 3-4
Texas ...........
Tidewater ■
T X L
T P C O
U. Gas .........
U. Corp.
U, S. Steel -
La. Land.....
Kirby Pet. -
. Rearis......
m
38 1-4
....... 16 7-8
...... 10
....... 11 5-8
....... 6 5-8
...... 7 5-8
...... 71 3-4
...... 12 1-2
4 1-2
.........I
Texas. 7 ...
The pdvisory board will formally
present the hall to Dr. N. A.
Tharp, commander of the post, and
the unit will have been establish-
ed. ‘ ' -
Feltonqtoday called upon all Tri-
Citians to join in the ceremonies
and “to continue with their sup-
port. The Salvation Army is doing
a wonderful work, and they need
the help of every , person.”
Tharp said that in addition to
the open air meetings there will
be Sunday school and other ser-
vices held regularly at the hall. He
said that a survey made recently
(Continued on Page 6)
charged the defendant, W. E. Pope,
made some character of contract
with the other defendants named
to move the oil into commerce -and
use the proceeds to pay Pope’s de-
linquent income tax. It is al-
leged by the petition that “defend-
) ants sellers,” named in the peti-
tion, would receive the balance of
the proceeds.
“The plaintiff (the State of Tex-
as, docs not seek u, •Tfrgmict ftef
United States government in the
collection of its debt from W. E.
Pope o9t of any property Pope may
own,” the petition said. “In this
connection it is alleged that the
property is not the property of
Pope, but is the property of the
(Continued on Page 6)
News Censorship At
University Upheld;
Aid to Insane, Hike
In Beer Fees Asked
FORT WORTH,-Sept. 9. (Uil)
Weary Texas Democrats looked
over the work of their hectic state
convention today and found that
the main victory was endorsement
of the child labor amendment to
the federal constitution.
Four times that issue had been
defeated in the state senate. When
plaform builders gave notice that
the Democratic party would en-
dorse the ratification, opponents
rallied to defend their views.
Leader of the opposition was an
anti-New Dealer, Senator T. J. Hol-
brook of Galveston.
Approved Vote
Holbrook fought the amendment
through most of a five and a half
hours session in thc platform and
resolutions committee, He lost by
20 to 8 vote, and the battle moved
onto the convention floor. In the
name of “state sovereignty,” Hol-
brook asked delegates not to en-
dorse the amendment. He was
supported by several state legisla-
tors, as was Everett Loonev, Au.-
tin, advisor to Gov. James V. All-
red, who led the fight for endorse-
ment,
Opponents lost again on a roll
call vote—792 to 260.
Censorship Uncensored
The second subject on which
delegates tangled verbally was a
resolution condemning faculty cen-
sorship of the Daily Texan, Univer-
sity of Texas student newspaper.
Myron Blalock of Marshall, chair-
man of the executive committee,
threw his support to those favoring
leaving the matter alone. He was
understood to be expressing the
view of Governor Allred in asking
(Continued On Page 2.)
National Campaign
PLANK IS PUT Hits High Gear As
fplAtFORIi
Primaries Add Fuel
BRIEFS
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.
(U.R)—More than 500,000 jobs
in private industry may bo
opened up. as a result of
President Roosevelt’s allocation
of $2,500,000 to the Federal
Employment (Service was
estimated today.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.
(U.R)—The social security board
announced today it will open
field offices within a month in
five Texas cities, Dallas, Hous-
tati, San Antonio Austin and
El Paso.
DALLAS, Sc#d. 9. (U.R) —
Texas Centennial exposition of-
ficials and police moved today
to clean up “strip shows.” Two
spiders from one concession
were arrested on charges of in-
decent conduct dn orders of
Police Chief R. L Jones, after
the men failed to comply with
an edict by Mayor Georeg Ser-
geant.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.
(U.RU- Charges that regulation
of utilities by public service
commissioners has been inef-
fective and that the only way
to reduce electric rates is
through the threat of municipal
ownership were laid before the
third world power conference
today by Maurice P. Davidson,
r York City delegate.
.......
BACK COUNTY TAX
SUITS ME FILED
20 Defendants Listed
As Court Action
Is Started
Twenty tax suits had been filed
today in District Clerk Mills' of-
fice against delinquent property
owners of Harris county.
The suits, first since 1933, were
fil'd by Assistant District Attor-
ney Anderson. Like the 45 suits
filed last week by the city of
Houston, the county positions are
printed forms with the names of
thc defendants and the amount of
taxes owed filled in.
They seek to collect $10,848.33.
The filing of tax suits has been
urged by County Auditor H. L.
Washburn for several months. At
his request the commissioners court
(Continued on Page 6)
Sale of Tickets To
FRANCHISE ON BUS
SERVICE STUDIED
City Attorney to Rule
On Legality Of
Proposals
The city commission today had
before it an outline of the fran-
chise being asked by Webb Greer,
owner of the Bayshor* Bus Lines,
for an interurban bus service.
City Attorney Ervin Flowers,
who is examining the franchise on
its legal aspects, informed the
commission at its meeting -last
night, that he would have his. op-
inion ready for the meeting next
Tuesday night. ' “
Greer wants a franchise for op-
erating the buses on Pruett street
from Peily to Texas avenue, up
Texas avenue to North Second
(Continued on Page 6)
By United Press
The political fires blazed bright-
ly today on the fuel of a Georgia
primary testing the strength of the
last defensive New Deal opposition
in the pld south, and the decision
ef the Republican presidential
noiiunjee, Alf M. Landon, to parti-
cipate In the closing momenta of
his party’s campaign in the “baro-
meter” /state of Maine.
The/Georgia primary today pit-
ted Gov. Eugene Talmadge, con-
servative anti-New Deal Democrat,
against Sen. Richard D. Russell,
Jr., for the Democratic senatorial
nomination.
Gov. Landon’s decision to make
a major speech in Portland, Me.,
Saturday night, preceding next;
‘Monday’s “as Maine goes, so goes !
the nation” election, threw the Re-j
publican national campaign into,
high gear. -----
When he leaves Thursday on his j
eastward journey, President Roose-1
velt will be makings major speech j
before a political * rally in Char- j
lotto, S. C.
Meanwhile, results of five states
and one territorial, primaries held
yesterday, developed no national
political significance.
ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 9.—<UR>
—Charges that Gov. Eugene Tal-
madge had mobilized national
guardsmen for election duty in
T/laih clothes and that adherents of
President Roosevelt had hired
thugs to intimidate voters opened
the Democratic primary today.
The issue was clear—Talmadge
vs. President Roosevelt. '
A riot occurred last night at
Gov, Talmadge’s last rally at Dal-
ton. Unsympathetic members of
his audience heckled him. A Tal-
madge follower knocked down one
heckler and in a second fists and
clubs were flying. An unidentified
elderly man was knocked uncon-
conscious.
Deputy sheriffs arrested five
men who, Sheriff J. T. Bryant
charged, were members of the na-
tional guard and Talmadge sup-
porters.
MONTPELIER, Vt., Sept, 9.—
(U.R)—. Virtually complete primary
returns indicated today that Lieut.
Cow George D. Aiken wijLhe .the
next Vermont governor.
Return from all but three of the
248 communities gave Aiken a
lead of more than 3,000 votes over
his nearest'rival, Colonel Nelson
Jackson, Burlington banker and
(Continued ort Page J!)
NEMESIS
Twelve members of the Black
Legion, on trial in Detroit for
the slaying of Charles A. Poole,
WPA worker, fear the testimony
of Mrs. Marcia Rushing. She is
a sister-in-law of Lowell Rush-
ing, one of the defendants, and
is a sister of Mrs. Poole, slain
man’s widow.
SCHOOL PARLEY IS
INCOME TO FARMS
CONTINUES RISE
Cotton Price Spurts
After Estimate
Is Reduced -
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9-<KR>—
The American farmers’ incomes
from drouth-curtailed crops contin-
ued to rise today and officials pre-
dicted it would surpass 1935 earn-
ings. ' "Y , . »
Latest to spirt in value was the
cotton crop a«- the government
crop reporting, board estimated
drouth in the western section of
CALLED AT BAYOU Y W1 b“n'”‘up ““
Colonial Rights to Be
Defended; Four-Year
Industrial Plan For
Country Revealed
(Cepyright 1936 by U. Pi)
NEUREMBERG, Sept. 9.—«l»
—Fuehrer Adolf Hitler told the
Nazi party today t|at Germany’
could not1 yield in its demand for
colonies, .- . — . . — .. --
Having rearmed and scrapped
a large part of the punitive Ver-
sailles treaty, Germany will de-
mand its “colonial rights,” Hitler
indicated. Extensive possessions
were taken from the Reich after
the World war.
In a proclamation, Hitler an-
nounced a new four-year plan de-
signed to make Germany indepen-
dent of foreign nations both as re-
gards foodstuffs and raw mater-
ials. Hitler added:
“Entirely independent of this,
Germany cannot yield regarding
the question on obtaining its col-
onial rights.”
The proclamation indicated the
state would fully supervise and
control industrial production under
the projected plan. It declared:
“Not the freedom of a few in-
dustrialists is the point at issue,
but the life of the entire nation.”
The proclamation announced Her
Fuehrer had ordered the carrying
cut of a second four-year plan
aiming to increase industrial pro-
duction and make the Reich inde-
pendent of foreign raw materials
‘-‘wherever German soil is able to
produce them.” _
It was indicated further efforts
would he made to increase indus-
trial exports in order to make
possible imports of agricultural
products if that were still neces-
sary.
Hitler, following Deputy Party
Leader Rudolf Hess, who inveighed
against the “menace” of Bolshe-
vism r- Tin ” Europe, detailed Ger-
many’s progress under Nazi rule,
His proclamation was read to
the congress by the Bavarian dis-
trict leader, Adolf Wagner. His
words were cheered repeatedly, es-
pecially those dealing with Ger-
equality.”. ;
Germany’s Nazis are meeting
in annual convention to warn the
world against bolshevism and to
establish Germany as a great ene-
my of communism.
Referring repeatedly to Spain
and, alleging terrible atrocities by
loyalists, he said:
“In Spain bolshevism shows it-
self in its true nakedness.”
1
Grid Game« Mounting ToBeClimaxed By Gree n Pastu res Ra lly
All but 10 of the 120 boxes at
Elms Field have been sold for the
year and the sale of season tickets
to home Gander football games is
steadily mounting, John Hill Mc-
Kinney, president of the board of
trustees, said today.
“If persons wanting a box will
call by,” McKinney said, “HI be
glad to make their reservation.”
McKinney Said he has accounted
for more than 100 season tickets
sold, but that he has not yet had a
report from Milton Lawless, who is
in charge of the sale by the G-As-
sociation.
Boxes are $6 and the season
tickets for all eight home games
Six French Aviators
Killed In Air Crash
COMMERCY, France, Sept. 9.—
(IJ.E>—,, A French , army bombing
plane crashed at Boucourt today,
killing Capt. Sabier and five other
fliers. , .
The plane, which had been man-
euvering at a high altitude, plung-
ed to earth as the chief pilot,
Sergt. Chaunies, vainly struggled
to get it under control.
Trustees Will Meet
With Officials Of
Farm Project
Members of the Cedar Bayou
school board and officials of flie
rural division of the Resettlement
Administration will confer tomor-
row night on plans for educating
children of families to be placed
on that part of Highlands Farms
lying in the Cedar Bayou district.
Marvin K. Allen, ofithe archi-
tectural and engineering section of
the rural resettlement division, and
M. L. Rees,acting superintendent
of the $1,140,000 project between
Highlands and Goose Creek, will
meet with the board, at the Cedar
Bayou school at 8 p. m.
during Au'gust.
Most traders did not anticipate
such great damage. The' market
jumped about $3, a bale to give a
present market value of approxi-
mately $680,000,000 to .the 11,120,-
IOOO-bales estimated crop for 1936.
(Continued on Page 6)
Death Claims Mother
Of Albert Thomas
NACOGDOCHES, Sept. 9.—(tSP)
—Mrs. J. N. Thomas, mother of
Albert Thomas, Houston, Demo-
cratic nominee for congressman,
died at her home here today.
She had been in ill health and.
was a semi-invalid for several
years, but her death was unex-
pected, the family said.
Survivors are her husband; a
daughter, Mrs. Elanor Gee, Nacog
Sam Y. Sjolander, board presi-! doches, and-two sons, Albert and
(Continued on Page 6) I Eugene Thomas, both of Houston*.
Roosevelt Speeds Southward On Jaunt
ABOARD ROOSEVELT SPEC
IAL, Sept 9. —(RE)— President
Roosevelt ..sped southward today
toward Knoxville, Tenn., for a re-
ception and tour of the mountains
of Tennessee and North Carolina
as a prelude to the delivery of a
major address tomorrow before the
“Seven States Green Pastures Ral-
ly” at ehariottev N. C. -------
Accompanied by hi$ son, John,
and White House Secretary Mar-
vin H. McIntyre, Mr. Roosevelt left
Washington after a round of con-
ferences with government officials
and discussions relating to his re-
rectn 6,000-mile tour of the drouth
stricken midwest. ,
After attending a reception at
Knoxville, Mr, Roosevelt will mo-1 Roosevelt to be back in Washing-
tor 180 miles through the scenic Friday In time to address the
Smoky Mountain national park to
Asheville, N. C., where he will
spend the night before proceeding
to Charlotte.
The “Green Pastures Rally,” a
movement designed to promote the
president’s rejection campaign, is
to attreet between £0.-4^’
000 and 100,000 spectators. White
House attaches insisted that Mr.
Roosevelt’s speech would be of
non-political character, but ob-
servers believed that several cam-
paign issues would be injected.
He is scheduled to begin delivery
about 6 p. m., EDT Thursday.
world power conference. He will
remain in the capital six days, then
proceed to Cambridge, .Mass., for
a speech in connection with the
Harvard University Tercentenary
celebration, afterward going to
ydc'PariC^/Y,, for a fewldiys-
On Sept. 29 the president will,
be the guest of honor at . the state
Democratic convention at Syra-
cuse, N. Y. He will deliver a major
political spe«h there, then will en- tonight.
train for Washington for a brief
rest before starting an Intensive
The schedule calls for Mr. October campaign swing.
<9'
Houston Bet Clerk
Indicted In Perjury
HOUSTON, Sept. 9.- ‘<UR>. —
William Goldapper, 40, betting
shop employee, was under federal
indictment here today on a charge
of perjury.
He was accused of giving per-
jured testimony at, the trial of Joe
Luke, Houston bookie, and Roecoe
Celli, Galveston liquor dealer, who
were convicted of selling narcotics.
Gcldapper was the third defense
witness charged with perjury.
$>seph Diaz was fined $500 and
assessed a four-year prison sent-
ence and Thomas C. Conn was
fined $100 and given a similar sub-k
pended sentence.
Strikers Blamed As
Vandals Raid Plant
SAN ANTONIO, Sept. 9.-tKR(
—Striking garment workers were
blamed by investigators today for
$40,000 damage caused by vandals
who poured tar and acid over ma-
terials and machines in the fac-
tory of the Dorothy Frocks com-
pany last night.
The company manufactures wom-
en’s dresses. --—--Y - --
Strikers denied knowledge «f
the affair or complicity In it'
Although Mrs. Charles G.
Schwartz, owner of the plant, was
out of the city, officials said she
was understood to be planning re-
moval of the factory to Dallas
because-bf-
WEAT1
EAST HARRIS—Pari
EAST AND
Partly cloudy tonight;
day-
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 74, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 9, 1936, newspaper, September 9, 1936; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095353/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.