The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 73, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 8, 1936 Page: 6 of 6
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- *
THE DAILY I
BP
TO AFFLICTED BOY
ISSROOMWORK
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m Page 1) |
assignments for the first
work tomorrow. Initial en-
figures will not be avail-
able until later, the principals said.
In connection with Lee college
I
registration, Dean S. B. Red asked
students to bring their record
of work to order to expedite regis- *
tration. He also warned that fees
are payable in advance. They to-j
m* jwiyauie m auvauttf. liity in-1
elude $5 for registration, $2,50 for:
laboratory and a $4 library depos- j
it. Hutton for students ouside the'
district is $10 for each three se-
mester hours per subject. A full
course of five .subjects will cost
$100 a year, he said.
1500 MEN WORK
ON BATTLEGROUND
GREEN SEEKS TO
REPLACE UNIONS
I to aid counties in equalising values
t of property of oil and sulphur com-
panies, utilities and other large ui-
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER g, j
(Continued from Page 1)
dustries.
Budgetary control
funds. ‘:.’f
Cooperation
of ’all state
with the federal
that Green has stated officially that, government in farm relief.
the central labor bodies and state
federations are not expel from their
groups the members of the sus-
pended unions. They will continue
to have votes—in many vicinities
controlling the policy of the labor
bodies.
C. I. O. unionists minimize the
importance of Green’s threat -o or-
Encouragement of rural electrifi-
cation. ■* <
Cont$nttance of state agricultural
experiment stations, further devel-
opment of coperatives, and exten-
sion of credit to crop producers. ■
Continued liberal support of
schools and colleges.
Reduction of public utility rates,
RESERVES CALLED
TO DEFEND SPA®
Se^inriuding'the8 ^ laws nuking it practical for
single A. F. of L. organizer has
been active in their jurisdictions.
(Continued from Page 1)
ed leading from the eastern en-
and I blrod pbi!liP Levitt, seven-year-old Chicago "boy suffering from
they said.
Meanwhile both Lewis and Green
tore following the strategy of charg-
ing that the other side forced lie
split between the 1,125,000 indus-
trial unionists and the 2,000,000
others to the A. F. of L.
For the two months between nw
jand the Tampa convention, how-
ever, Lewis expects to aim his men
more concentratedly upon the fight
to organize steel and seek higher
wages and contracts.
The biggest test of his educa-
many more are being built. A new
much of the swamp land near the
bay is being reclaimed by ter-
racing and fills.
Flowers are being planted, and
all statues are being remounted
- and cleaned to add attractiveness
to one of Texas’ most noted
shrines.
The ship channel Frontage is
being repaired. All of the docks
will be tom away and new one
built after a bulkhead has been
thrown up at the edge of deep
water.
5,’ ’ While this work is in progress,
construction will also being going
the rare viridans strepticoccus infection. Maurice, who recovered
thousands of volunteers throughout the United States. Despite the
transfusion, physicians still were doubtful whether they could save
’ Phillip’s life. ‘T
~Cl-
onal shaft, a $1,000,000 PWA pro-
ject. This work is being done_ by
PWA labor by the Bellows Con-
struction company, an eastern
Extensive sub-
PLEA FOR SCHOOL
GRANT ADVANCED
(Continued from Page 1)
FARMS PROJECT
SCHOOLS SOUGHT
(Continued from Page 1)
acres lying in the local district,
between the time Lowman wrote
the letter, Saturday morning, and ^solved.
n-. mw*|„ £? *?£%&££
forward on the San Jacinto Mem- ton, ami in addition had askedj ^ t& C0.0p€rate wjtb ra officials
*“■’ **■"“ " *’ nnA'uw' mx,x — Jesse Jones, chairman of the Re- and guaranteed that children liv-
construction Finance Corporation
to use his influence. Jones’ office
has indicated it will aid the Goose
Creek plea, McKinney said.
The letter stated the application
“has to pass through many l ands”,
but that it is „beirig rushed as
rapidly as possible.
In a trip to Washington prior
to filing the application with the
building company,
soil tests are being made at this
time, and they will be studied be-
fore actual construction will start.
When completed the shaft will be
slightly larger than the Washing-
ton monument in Washington City.
SLASH IS MADE IN
steel, three months old, comes to-
morrow when representatives of
company unions of. the Carnegie
Illinois company, huge United Steel
Corporation subsidiary, meet in
Pittsburgh with the company presi-
dent, Benjamin Fairless.
According to Philip Murray, mine
union vice-president and chairman
i of. the C. I. O.’s steel workers or-
ganizing committee, these company
union men, representing 8^000 of
the 111,000-worsen Of that com-
pany will demand recognition”*)! the
C. L O. steel union, the'Amalgamat-
ed Association ol Iron, Steel and
Tin Workers. This is unusual pro-
cedure, since the company uniohs,
set up by the management on a
plant-by-piant basis, are not yet of-
ficially in the Amalgamated.
ing in their sector would receive
education. • - .
Allen was here today to make
final arrangements for that pur-
pose.
G. L. Bennett, Cedar,(Bayou sup-
erintendent, said that his district
has a $30,000 leeway in bonds that
can lie voted.
“We can", he said “put up
cd, Lowman was given much en- .,di mfficient to care for the
! couragement, and the progress -
his secom
emu HwngHSS Si
-' (Continued from Page 1}
atol 186.3 pounds in 1935. The
1923-32 average is 169,9 pounds.
. The census report showed 1,373,-
868 running bales ginned from the
1936 crqp prior to Sept. 1 .
NEW YORK, Sept. 8.
Cotten futures advanced $1.45 to
$2.25 a bate today on a forecast
by the government for a 1936 cot-
ton crop of 11,121,000 bales, or
more than 1,300,000 bales below
the Aug.'1 indications.
TODAY
Lowman reported in his letter.
The trustees are contemplating
erecting buildings at Robert E. Lee
senior high and Horace Mann and
Baytown junior high schools and
at several of the elementary
schools, if the money becomes
available.
Through, petitions and a mass
meeting held on the bond issue
subject, the board feels that it
has ample support for the propos-
al, McKinney said.
WEDDING PARTY
IN AUTO WRECK
ent high school."
Allen arid Rees were contacting
members of the Cedar Bayou
memqers m ™ Opposition to the law legalizing
board today in order to obtain a tTack
definite decision
REFINERY PARLEY
IS AT STALEMATE
Progressive development
cial security program in
(Continued From Page 1.)
-;:T
- (Continued from Page_1)
women that carried the bricks up
the steep hill* j
- /read the nuptial vows.
intelligent J After the wedding, Mrs. Scr»p-
"'"’“-'ling was brought to the Goose
farther treat-
was made by
funeral home ambu-
Negotiations between the Hum-
ble Oil and Refintyg company and
Local 333 of the on workers union
over demands of the union foT a
wage increase and union recog-
nition, were at '* stalemate today,
pending a decision on resumption
of the conference started Igst, week
Some of our most
American professors have some
thing of the same
United States,
their effort to get away from
production and efficient machih- ,’iance
ery. They haven’t exactly suggest-1 Mr. and Mrs. Kilgore returned
ed, yet, that American women Goo>e Creek. Tbe groom }s
ahould carry cement uphili on their employed at' the Culpeppe, ?umi-
- shoulders or on their heads, but turc store and the bride a
nothing is impossible. They might ber of the facalty of the Goose
intelligence has constructed.
To study wanderings of white
rayon were manufactured in Jap- cacb spring, Russian scientists
«b^mg natUm for raw siik pUn to capture a number, paint
production, in the first quarter of tbem with black stripe9 and affix
this year, a record amount for a tags to their tails and release
similar period. 'them. C'
Don’t
Take
Chances
On The
k
it
WfKt M/t-
"r: ’
r£
You’ll
„„................
|
J. L. Finley, general superin-
tendent of refineries for the com-
pany, said at Baytown today that
so far as he knows, no time or date
has been set for resuming the con-
ference.
Bob Olivet.^resMfeffP of thre Lo-
cal 333, likewise said he nau re-
ceived no information as to wheth-
er or when the conference would
be resumed.
The union is demanding a blan-
ket increase of 10 cents an hour,
recognitiort of the union through a gjon
working agreement, and applies
tion of the principle of seniority
in advancement or discharge of em-
ployes.
Company officials and a nego-
tiating committee of the union met
in the company’s offce at Baytown
Friday afternoon, but without
teaching any agreement.
Representatives of the company
were D. H. Harris, of the industrial
relations department of the com-
pany at Houston, M. L. Snyder, as-
sistant superintendent of the Bay-
town refinery, and Thomas W.
Moore, head of the Baytown indus-
trial relations office.
Union representatives were Oliv-
er, Frank Helmer, R. C. Brown, E.
J. Shumway, C. M. Floyd, O. J.
Hazelwood and C. C. Fogarty.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Mrs. H. A, Atoierson of 121 Sec-
ond Jones street, Pelly, Sunday aft-
ernoon was removed to her home
from the Baytown hospital. T-w
transfer was made by a Paul U, Lee
Miss Claudine Punaway, of GXy
town, yesterday was brought to
the Lillie hospital by a Paul U,
were transferred from the
any city or tewn to acquire fte own ti
utilities. Development of state
water poWer in the public interest.
Ratification of the federal druid
labor amendment.
Reduced hours of labor without
reduction of individual earnings
_ Recognition of the right of labor
to organize and outlawing public
contracts abridging such rights.
Opposition to issuance <St labor
injunctions.
Separation of boxing and wrest-
ling supervision from the labor de-
partment.
Revision and simplification of
election laws. ,
Endorsement of interstate com-
pacts in preference to surrender of
state power; extension of the "oil
states compact” and opposition to
federal oil control.
Commendation for the governor's
establishment of volunteer parole
boards and request of legislation to
make the system official.
In order that these planks may
be carried out, the platform draft
said it is essential for the legisla-
ture to cooperate with the gover-
nor.
PLATFORM VOICES
ALLRED PROGRAM
(Continued from Page 1)
tion of small, home-owned business
and industry.
Jealous guardianship of state-
owned oil lands.
Strengthening arid broadening of
the graduated chain store tax.
Simplification of court proce-
dure. -
Stronger anti-lobbying laws.
Opposition to a state sales tax.
ent of a sh-
in coppera
vemment.
age assistance act.
State participation in the federal
unemployment insurance plan.
Opposition to any increase in wh side had its arguments.
revenues to finance social security
on a permanent basis.
Lighter tax burdens for real es-
tate to be made possible by reclas-
sification of property for tax pur-
poses. health now escaping taxes
is named as the object of the re- ,5
classification, • *
Reasonable increase in taxes on
natural resources, including oil, gas,
and sulphur.
Reasonable franchise taxes on
gross assets of oil and gas pipe line
companies.
Revision of the franchise tax
lavra.
Reasonable increases in inheri-
tance taxes and additional taxes on
luxuries.
Tax law revision to prevent eva-
Authority for the state tax hoard
DELUXE
Dick POWELL
Ruby KEELER -In-
‘COLLEEN’
PORT THEATRE
-La Porte, Texas— 25c I
(Continued from Page 1)
the beach at Hendaye, France,
scattering sightseers. Rebel anti-
aircraft-guns replied to the planes.
Leaders of the Basque national-
ists met at Bilbao and decided to
oppose bitterly the control of San
Sebastian by the anarchists. They
favored teaching an agreement
with the rebels to avoid the city’s
destruction.
(Copyright 1936 by U. P.)
GIBRMLT^RjKept. 8. —<U.P>—
The Spanish government took ex-
tra-ordinary precautions to guard
its southern approaches today
while rebels closed their grip oh
the San Sebastian area.
Mobilizing the Madrid force as
DEMOCRATS SPLIT
OVER CHILD LABOR
W$tFix Anything!
Dicycles SOLD - Bought,
Repaired and Rented!
A Full Line of Parts.
Lawn Mowers Sharpened
With Factory Machine!
Keys Duplicated ....___ 25c
LARSON’S
CYCLE SHOP
“All Work Guaranteed”
114 N. Ashbel 8t. Goose Creek
a possible shock troop brigade for
the front, the government tacitly
expressed, its belief that the fight-
ing in the Talavera area south-
west of Madrid and west of Toledo
was likely to be the biggest action
of the civil war. , .
The present front is just east of
Talavera and for the present the
government is holding the rebels
under Go}. Juan Yague. A United
Press correspondent at the front
reported all was quiet for the
moment. Pf _ - ■■■
'-V*
Health
width
lit Hu IfMun
Yoar
„ •' ■’ q r'
Appointment
For Health
Can Be
Made By
Calling
Upon
1
J. I. KNIERIM r
CHIROPRACTOR
»w«rti
Aron Bldg.
Hoffwr ~9 to 12 a.Bi.—2 to $ p a.
Baytown, Tex
KILLED IN CRASH
SHAMROCK, Sept. 8. qij,
Willetta Wilson, Altus, 01^1
injured fatally to an aatof
collision four milea west tin
last night. Seven other -
were hurt. "
Bi
Hi
Y(
“BEST!
(Continued from Page 1)
Worth welcomed the delegates. He
dubbed Roosevelt, Garner and All-
red as “the three musketeers of
Democracy”—as applause rever
berated through the hall at the
mention of each name.
James E. Wheat, Woodville,
member of the executive committee,
responded to the welcome.
Chairman Blalock then made his
report of comniittee work for the
past two years. He called atten-
tion to conflicts, ambiguities, and
uncertainties in the state election
laws. The double primary system,
he said, should be abandoned or al-
tered; . That system, he said, en-
courages candidates to make "vio-
lent and demagogic” promises to
an effort to win.
He reported that the executive
mittee studying the election laws.
The preferential primary plan
waa mentioned, but Blalock said
*******W*w***ilriihHt**AA4r*
NOW - NU GULF
Joan Crawford
.Clark Gable
“CHAINED”
PLUS! Comedy - Novelty
NOW-ARCADIA
Two more days! Hurry!
Shirley Temple
“POOR LITTLE
RICH GIRL”
VAW.V.VAVAV.VAVAV
TODAY ONLY
41 very good reasons
for attending this show— ;
Kay Francis
In
“I Found Stella
Pariah”
I
TEXAN
TODAY ONLY!...
WMaiHMxm
i
CHARM!
WEDNl
;Y . THURS.
gambler
in the U.
George Raft
h
j vS FI flM
5KSS: ..‘‘Your, For The
[ Tim and
mnUJm
*
Putting the DOLLAR
PAYROLL!
on the
I
☆
Every dollar you earn
is working or shirking!
☆
You can part with your doUar hurriedly, with-
out thought of real value received. That kind is
a shirket. Keep it off your payroll.
Or you can spend the dollar wisely, shrewd-
ly, making sure each penny returns a fall pen-
ny’s value. That kind of doUar is an honest
laborer—working in your best interest.
How can you put the honest dollar on your
payroll? First, budget. Second, shop with both
eyes open. Third, read the advertisements.
Read the advertisements because they tell
you what’s new, what’s useful, what’s econo-
mical. Read them because they represent the
best values of the best stores and mamtfactur-
ers. Read them because they save you money
by saving you time and trouble. Read them be-
causeitpays!
☆i
-y<r
'",'Z
mm
?$■
THE DAILY
gl........ '
mi:
mwwv-
WStKm-
'odi
c. 8. Pat OU
_nple Sauce For
£ Rush To Aid
Les Made to L«
elief A Century
By Arthur Bris
gy do not serve i
|with roast duck in
ran children comp
rill pardon the "unj
Paris is n°f ®riti
ppple sauce.
■ instance, you mi
I fine plaque comj1
jhis pretty plaque,
Lp by the Franc
Littee on July 4, 191
[the statements of f
[ambassadors.
Lbassadoi Bacon a
11914, "France is
I' meaning pre-suma
Lr assistance. He
fch this way: “La
Ij'accmirs.''
iibassador Herrick
I "Paris belongs to
I appsrtient au moi
IB17 we were “all-
Jnhection with the I
■of going into a war
"«d nothing to do, a
t Sharpe, had thif
hce personifies to 1
!, fo| the other peo]
j that is inapiri
Ice personific au
| pour les autres p
■•i est inspiration.
IALLY, in 1920, w
Iver, and we were oi
Id have been contei
| and figure up our
and finarfca!, A
said, from the
leep heart, “Civilizi
E saved at the Mai
Jch army singing tl
I" La civilization n
sur la Marne {
(raise chantante la .V
jose things were s
sincerity, doubtles
[never sat in the
| djd not help to an
the American c
Limes against his '
rver the edge of a tr
Jirst smell of war j
I American business
scattered over rr
[countries, while al
! tries to pay for
> born every few
i you imagine ai
, England or Gere
ng Ambassador
nt to read: “Aa
[rush?”
! would be very li
i our assisUnce fr
United States w*
i it might possibly
nterestihg aggressi
ding billions of
la war, our Europe
l find it not conveni
| to lend us ten hi
. Americans bee
p! and on '\£*zy,-th
i*y.
p« think it is gol
p Hearst, “you wil
I (Continued on Pag
round T«
I the Tri-Cities: Sar
fr stepping on a
and scanning th<
|ack Heard extendi]
F°n to join him in
«ng that “it’s a hoi
'•> Ray Alien 1
Hu|et of ticket-ag<
1 to the more exci)
lof wheeling a bus
■ •. Bjll Ehrhard
i with a note-boo
nd that . . . E. 1
ai”ing that he ha
just right .. . C
H $lying direction
N someone who a
Wfor f , « - —
Roy Elmi
lCqtt trucking it ar
Yrnett setting out i
| in a hurry ... M
Wd daughter in
f«w days visit
Cuvis
I ^ FwtJ;
•tfure in the new
^ *n .....
t0« .... The
m
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 73, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 8, 1936, newspaper, September 8, 1936; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095712/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.