The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, November 14, 1938 Page: 2 of 6
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i
fii;
NATIONAL UNITY
(Continued from Rage I)
British
Reach*
THE DAILY SUN ftOOBE CREEK, TEIAg
MONDAY, NOVEMBER u
the supreme court of Puerto Ri-
co; Green k. Hackworth, legal ad-
viser of the state department; the
WELCOME
‘SINCERE’ PEACE
Charge Filed Against
Elton Tuck
LONDON, Nov. }4. <M»-King
George and Queen Elisabeth will
arrive in Quebec for a stato visit
to Canada and the United States I (0>nUmJ(H, fT(tm Vugt> „
isuyr?" *** -■
After visiting in Washington big union" among the unorganiz-
Dropped
Charges of driving while intoxi-
cated against Elton Puck were
dismissed by Justice^ of the Peace
R. R. Zierlain
SOCIETY MATRON
HELD AS BODY OF
MOTHER IS FOUND
The charge was filed following Rock Garden Combed
i ^ PWOther Victims
their majesties will leave from
R«v. John J. O’Hara, president of Halifax about June 10.
Notre Dame University; Charles —---------—-
■ PELLY BOND ISSUE
HEARING IS ENDED
G. Fenwick, professor of interna-
tional law, Bryn Mawr Coliege;
Mrs. Elist* F; Muser, who was a
membei of the United States dele-
gation to the 1036 Inter-American
peace conference at Buenos Aires-
Other Developments
Presidential appointment of a JNHHjPMHHBHHHHH
defeated opponent to a diplomatic ered as the official newspaper of
(Continued from Page 1)
the plaintiff. He contended that
the • Daily Sun had been- cor.siil
mission was believed to be unpre- j the city of Felly and had been
'jm ^ ------
Appointment of thr
followed severed week-end develop-
ments affecting the administra-
t ion s foreign policy, especislly it®
, relation to Latin .American coun-
tries. They included settlement by
ed, unskilled workers. The nuc-
leus of the movement was 1,000,
' 000 workers.
, Today, Lewis claimed a mem.
bersbip of 4,037.877, an increase
of 320,000 Since the organization
held its first “war council” in
Atlantic City, N.J., a year ago.
This figure included the 2,50,000
members of the International La-
dies Garment Workers who se-
ceded from the C. I. O. last week
''■WtM ....... ft#*
Communist Grab Of
Auto Union Revealec
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 <#*-
Zygmund Lobrzynski, Detroit.
United Automobile Workers or-
ganizer, told the house ' commit-
tee investlging un-American ac-
tivittes today that the communist
party once sought control of auto
MRS. J. H. JONES
TAKEN BY DEATH
unions believing that te event of tin.
war they could paralyse
mament# Industry
highway accident in Baytown
the night of November 1 in which
Tuck and Mrs. C. C. Harrington, UP Slayer
iarss >xv' £ r »>*-*». ■< •»
plaint was filed by the woman’s This community was horri
husband. - tied today as police began a
Justice Zlerlem dismissed the search for additional bodies la a jg? b Wi„iam Weinstone, at
charge for lack of evidence. rock garden owned by Mrs. Sum- that time state secretary of the
rvvTmr nniftA.i mia ner Kn<*, SO, once prominent as a communist party in Michigan,
DOCK SEASON TO a<#WHto and dry crusader. They f President Homer Martin et the
(Continued from Page 1)
of Sweetwater, and J, F, Bar-
nett of Fort Worth.
Active pallbearers will be Her-
bert Frazier, Dr. O. O. Emberton,
W. M. Knowles, MiUard Carter,
O. E. Funderburk and Hugh Mar-
Popeye, Mickey
And Donald Banns
For Italians *
the ar- Honorary pallbearers will be
Mark M. Carter, J. B. Tyree, C,
These tactics, Dobraynski said, c Burgess, Harry W, Marable,
ROME, Nov. 14 .,rp._
has been branded a
He, Mickey Mou* J?
child favorites of C(mJ
and juvenile story ^ .
barred- from Italy jn
est of the totalitarian^
of children. mfl
were outlined to him in May, ^ Bhrhardt, N. B, Ballard,
Ray Spear, Buford L. McKewin,
A. C. Coker, Cecil Ellis, Cecil
Stewart and E. Aron.
already had found the body of her 31110 WM 10 *“*
OPEN TOMORROW SHF m Ww „w. ^
HOUSTON, ' Nov; It spiritual formation of
Financial; leaders of the nation We must follow II Du#*
a shallow grave, ■■■■■■■I
airolane H”’ Kn(>X fM held ln Protec’ I
H tlv* custody at Plymouth county
! Coe Speaks ■
He said that the Daily Sun was
published in Felly1 within the
meaning of the law which defines
unpaid up membership ot 5,000,-
life;
000 at Houston.
Pungent Criticism
■ .............. ..... I The battle with the A, V, t.
the state department of the Mexi- “to publish” as simply “to make dominated all other topics before
111111 m Mj j! ’ H|Uw C. I Q.’» Rot fiMMMiMP
convention. Lewis devoted only
16 paragraphs to the subject but
they were pungently worded. He
agrarian land dispute, assur-
ances, to Argentina that its wheat
markets would not be invaded by
this country and entertainment of
Col. Fulgendo Batista, chief of
the Cuban army and that island
republic's' “strong man.” ■
P He 'showed that Felly and
Goose Cieek use identical school
systems. He pointed out that
AUSTIN, Novr 14
, automobile, train and
hunters were heading for. the
Texas coast today ready for to- hospital, pending completion of
morrow’s opening of the duck the search and investigation of HENDAYE,
hunting season. stories told Sheriff Frank Soho- Frontier, Nov. 14. Oifi'-Spanish
Rockport and other gulf coast ler by her nelghb01.S( Her raen. nationalist forces launched’a new
areas reported heavy reservations, tal cor)ditiDn ,8 such( Sch0,er said, offensive today designed to drive
while recent rains in the Interior that 8he cannot be quelUoned de- the loyalists out of a narrow poc-
Pfomised shooting at hpttw for the taUed]y at present ket on the west bank of Che Ebro
inland hunters. Clashes Pension Checks river.
The season opens at 7 l;m. to-j He g&id ah9 had cash. TM nstiomdist headquarters ft
Begin
New Drive On Ebro
French-Spanish
(HR)—Spanish
drafted policies today for presen
tation during the American Bank
era Association’s four-day conven
tion.
In eight affiliated meetings,
they directed executive committee
attacks on the New peal’s bank
ing and financial policies and Disney’s Mickey
the corporate limits of Pelly and accused A. F. L. “craft bureau- morrow and ends on Dec. 29. Its ing 8eVeraI $90 monthly cheekg Gandesa claimed their force* cap- waraed iabor organizers to stay
JEWS SEEK WAYS
TO MEET DEGREES
cracy’’ leaders of being “jittery”
is logical and of seeking to destroy, not
He de-
(Continued from Page 1)
Vnt.Rath, third secretary of the
. - German embassy in Paris, he said
was “to effect ^bad relations be-
■ • ? ' tween Germany and the Euro-
pean powers.” '
Desire of People
Goose Creek coincide.
He added that "it _ ______ „
that one newspaper should be the united, with the C, I. O.
common paper to. all the people +*,» n-,„. o»
of both towns.”
Rely On Daily Sun
"The citizens of Polly have
come to rely upon the Daily Sun
as their official paper,” he said
in reviewing statements of wit-
nesses who had previously testi-
fied that they did not know of
the contemplated issuance of the
creed the "scurrilous abuse and
bald-faced misrepresentation” in
attacks on the C. I. O. at the A.
F\ h. convention in Houston,
nd start Wednesday and continue un- tbat ghe j,ad brought another wo-
in til Dec. 31, exeept that west of raan into her home to impersonate
opening begins as the dove hunt- her mother had receiV£d from the tured Fatarella, which protects
that she had brought another wo- *nile® #» •#•»■ th« riverj
the Pecos, black-tailed deer can- Planes, the nationalist infantry
out of state banks.
General sessions of U# sixty-
fourth convention of the- ABA
opens tomorrow. ■
^oV^NovTTeinl :ri^Srs0qUietthe8U8PlCi°n8 "W*
JAPANREFUSESTO
He said there was a close con-
nection between the government
and the German people. The Jew
regulations were issued, ■
t • :
■
i v- -fe
- •
I ^
„ .he said,
because in the conception of na-
* tkmal socialism the government's
action must always accord with
the people.
‘The Jewish problem will lie
solved shortly in accordance with
the German people’s will. The
people want it thus and we are
- only carrying ,out the people’s
will.”
Jews awaited with dread the
announcement of further decrees.
Many were already under arrest.
Their shops throughout the nation
ed... They
wers wrecked. ,. They had been
fined collectively $4 0 0,000,000.
They feared that next they would
be segregated in ghettos.
Their immediate problem Was
how to raise the fine in the face
of new Nazi wrath as the price
of failure. Although Jewish pro-
perty previously had. been valued
struction would cut this figure
seriously.
The present phase of shop
I
IIP
smashing was now at an end ex-
cept for isolated instances.
One ironic effect of the decrees
was to force Jews to pay for the"
privilege of a ceasing to be the
bonds until they had read about
it in The Sun.
Coe also attacked the manner
in whleh the notice was posted-
Hi the city hall. He said the law
providing 14 days of.notice gave
notice solely of the Intention to
make contract purchases from
competitive bids. He recited a law
which provided for publication for
three successive weekl, the first
least 30 days before the date
Issuance of funding bonds
This law, he pointed out, should
have been followed instead Of the
statute providing 14 days of no-
tice. .
Coates doses
In closing, Coe pleaded for a
common sense interpretation
whether the notice was properly
posted,
Frank G. Coates, Houston at-
torney, closed for the citizens
committee., He pointed out that
189 qualified property tax pay
ing voters of Pelly had signed
(Continued from Page 1)
hassles. It was indicated that it
was writen in polite terms. But it
was also believed to contain ref-
erence to the fact that the .powers
did not complain when Generalis-
simo Chiang Kai-Shek closed the
river.
For many months American and
British commercial interests in
Shanghai have complained against
the alleged resumption of Japan-
ese trade in zones along the Yang-
tse. in which businessmen of other
powers were forbidden to enter.
Guard Own Trade
Foreign businessmen charged
that Japanese commerce wa's be-
ing carried into the interior of
of China under the protection of the
'lu Japanese military in the guise of
military operations.
Repeated;,efforts were made by
the United States, Great Britain
and France to reopen the river.
After the fall of Hankow and
Canton the three powers decided
Nov. 30.
Quail shooting Will Mart _ _
1 and continue until Jan. 16. started investigation of rumors M two .bridgeheads at Fl.X and
Not only has the open season wbjcb bad spread through the R'barroja.
on ducks and geese been length- community concerning "bodies in
ened from SO to 45 days, but the the Knox rock garden.” They
possession limits have been dou- fotmd the body in a coffin which
,, .. , , Had been crudely fashioned from
The bag limit on ducks, except parts of a kitchen cabinet. u -
the wood duck, is 10 in the ag- was in a a foot deep ta a Drought home from Memorial h«-
gregate of all kinds, the same Cernor of the gardeh< The gar. pital, Houston, by a Tri-Cities
as last season, but toe possession den ia a lar„e (,ne and tbe search Funeral Home ambulance,
limit has been doubled to 20 in wm take some tim Scholer said. Mrs. George LaneaMar and la-
the aggregate. Skull Fractured fant son, Barry Hampton, were
This season hunters may take Dr A> c gt state pathol. from toe Lillie-Duke hospi-
three canvasbacks, redheads, buf- i9t saW hft had found a crack tal to their home at Wooster
fle-heads or ruddy ducks in their ing ^ Trow.s ,ku]1 but was faturtay TTie transfer was made
daily bag. or an aggregate of able t0 say wbethe(. it had been by a Trl-Cities Funeral Home am-
O. S.,J„ mTw. J B K„„«k »a in.
completely l«.t nut Mnt
VFW TO MEET
Regular meeting of the Robert AUSTIN, Nov. 14
Scholer’s denuties unearthed divisions in the Fatarella moun- — ...... „ -
Dec, the lrlolher,a body after th0y had tains in an effort to destroy the R. Tuck post of the Veterans of
petitions asking for a chance to,bpon>a coneerted effort to have
be heard prior to issuance of the
bonds.
He said this figure represented
90 per cent of the voters qualified
to cast ballots Ili a bond election
nominal owners of
closed shops.
destroyer or
Many Jews must pay emigre
tion taxes amounting to 25 per
cent of-theirproperty^
The property of many others al-
ready has been mortgaged by the
state as security fer an emigra-
tion tax.
Only a few Jews have liquid as-
sets. They do not know how they
will be able to pay the special con-
tribution and what, they will live
on after the contribution has been
paid.
The only source of income now
visible is income from securities
and real estate. But it was doubt-
ful if any appreciable part of that
would remain in Jewish hands
after the fme-has been paid.
PORT THEATRE
I l*f-Abt»r*-zs« ll
TIm JMw—
Diet Powell In “Hard To Get”
•luesdaTOniy--
To kwe hor ou th-
front Sop,
hrr la Mil!...
• JACK OAKIE
• LUCILLE BALL
“The Affair* Of
Aimabelle”
in Pelly.
Attacks Definitton
Ewing Werlein, Houston attor-
ney associated with City Attor-
ney Shannon Morris in the case,
opened -for- the defense.
He attacked Coe’s arguments
and definition of “publish.”
He said the weight of the de-
ciswns gave tbe meaning of "pub-
lish” to mean “where the paper
is printed.”
"The legislature's intention was
to encourage home industry -in
this case a home paper for each
community." ‘ h J
Raps Company
Werlein attacked the right of
the plaintiffs to maintain, the suit
on the ground that they could
show no special damages.
He told, the court, the Houston
lifting and Power company was
behind the fight, and that “in all
probability if the company had
not gotten into tbe fight, the
suit probably would have not bean
instituted.”
In a side bar remark, he said,
“of course, they have the right
to do this.”
Disputes Point
At this point Coates broke into
the arguments to bring out that
gf;-
ALAMO THEATRE
ft PKI.I.V. TEXAS «
—Tintt. — who — THias —
MABTHA RAVK
HI K\- ;.r«l U.I.RN
• am Hor«
“COLLEGE
—J
... .0 J'ES.SJSSe? "ZSISL K,w.
river traffic thrown open to their
merchant ships.
Business Blockade
It was this request to Tokyo
three birds of the different spe-
cies. The possession limit for
these ducks is six of any single
species, dr six in the .aggregate.
The daily bag limit on geese
and brant is five in the aggre-
gate of all kinds, and the posses-
sion limit has
10 in the aggregate.
The daily bag limit on rails
and gallinules, except sora and
coot, is continued at 13 In the
aggregate of all kinds. The pos-
session limit is the same;-
Bag limits for some of flie ptti-
migratory game birds- ire:
Sora, 15, coot 25; Wilson's shlpe
from
after, Mrs. Knox, unaware that . the^h™
Goose Creek hospital
“ *■* “ - *-* “ - SJTwT
him:
Foreign Wars will be held at tbe
Community house at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow, Elmer Gregory, post
commander; today asked ail mem-
bers to attend.
STOCKS IRTEGULAR
NEW YORK, Nov. 14. O)-
Stocks and bonds opened irregular
in moderate trading today.
“Gur aim is to
dren in the flrm
spirit of t*. Fascist ^’
said Dr, Gherardo Cas^„
ministry of popular culh,
making the announcem*
national -conference on
ture^for children at
sleep with our hen, ]
ou.dier's knapsack ®, |
decided to revive in a totid
ian manner the prj
denying present juv«
erature.”
American artists and.
* among them
and ______ „
Walt Disney, win be
been an outstanding"
along with the
Donald Duck.
Warning
Fire-I
Issued l
acked
Fire Insurance Comtr
vin Hall today warned *
warehousemen that
baies cause 90 per cent-1
A "fire-packed” bale k|
which the cotton baa recti
spark at the gin and it *
The spark smoulders andl
stances has not bmkea
a fire until three dayj lajjl
Thi. Laura Wheeler Doll b Sure IT!
Be In Spot-Light At Xmai ]
acksnipe, 15. Ifl C&36 twiarini* atnFa AAtu TfAW him)
the possession limit may not cx- mlSSln* ^ die<1
ceed the daily bag limit. A new
which met with refusal based on federal-regulation added this year
the previously reiterated Japan-
ese contention that the river was
not safe for commercial naviga-
tion.
Foreign business interests claim
■ -that the Japanese have establish-
ed a virtual blockade behind
which they hope to capture a ma-
jor part of the rich business in the
Y-angtse -valley before- reopenii
the interior to other foreigners.
forbids the rallying of coot for
hunting.
As was the case last year, wa-
terfowl and coot may be hunted
in season from 7 a.rn. to 4 p.m
Not more than two days’ bag
limit of lawfully taken and law-
fully possessed ducks and geese
ay be transported in one calen-
vas limited
the four decisions Werlein had
listed were not applicable to the
case in point-
“In the Bartlett and Cooper
cases (decisions of which Werlein
had quoted), the, vote had already
been held, the bonds issued and the
plant built,” Coates said. “The
only questions, in these eases were
whether the contracts had been
properly let."
Eloquent Address •
Werlein waved aside the objec-
tion by arguing that time of the
aetiomwaa of no significance, but
IkfftYne significant point was that
;;he plaintiffs could show no pecu-
liar damages. ”
Morris closed the argument for
the defense with an eloquent ad-
He told the court at the'outset
that this was his first appearance
in any case in any court, and he
then pointed'out its importance.
Two Questions
“In my mind,” he said, “there
are but two questions—whether
-—
the law required the notices to be
published in a newspaper and
whether the notice given was suf-
ficient under tbe law.”
He s«d the sole purpose and
end of the e.ty council was to get
a grant from the PWA for $75,-
to be
Jon of a mun-
that the
spec-
to them-
out of
federal- regulations that
been continued from last
are:
Baiting -of waterfowl and the
use of live duck and geese decoys
in hunting waterfowl are not au-
thorized regardless of the dis-
tance between the bait or decoys
and the shooter.
The three-shell limit on repeat-
ing or automatic shotguns, In ef-
fect the last three seasons, is
continued.. Hunters ma" “hoot
waterfowl with shotguns only,
hot larger than No. 10 gauge.
whom neighbors had seen at the the Pasadena ho*Pital wher* ihe
Knox home, that he and his depu-
ties were searching.
Scholar said he was concerned
over the whereabouts , of Mrs.
Knox’s husband, a former Le
Mars mail carrier, who has been
BRITISH-GERMAN
SPLIT WIDENED
(Continued front Page 1)
government would not intervene
openly in the German anti-Jewiah
campaign. The government was
expected to maintain a firm stand
with regards to the interests of
Chief restrictions in this year’s al J protest
Ross’ geese, wood ducks and ment was expected to be signed
swans are still protected.
EDUCATOR DIES
BROWNWOOD, Nov. 14. <UPJ-
Funeral services were planned
here today for Dr. Paul G. Rags-
dale, 85, pioneer Texas educator
who died yesterday from automo-
bile accident injuries.
the article in the German news-
paper,-Der Angjiff, alleging that
Churchill, Eden and Duff Cooper
helped instigate the assassination
of Ernst von Rath, secretary of
the German embassy in Paris, by
a Polish Jew. This protest may
be made “privately” to spare
“German pride,” it was said.
Chamberlain, however, starts
his peace prtgram in another di-
rection this week by putting into
effect the new British-Italisn
agreement, agreed upon last April
hut never implemented. The agree-
bas been a patient for injuries re-
ceived in a fall from a tree.
Lacy Lusk of 4l7 West De Fee
avenue, was taken to the Bay-
town hospital yesterday by a Paul
U. Lae Funeral Home ambulance.
VETERANS END PARLEY
FOR WORTH, Nov. 14. «»-
Veterans of the U- S. Army’s 90th
Division, noted for their World
war record, scattered , to their
Texas and Oklahoma homes today
after voting to meet in Oklahoma
City next year.
TO SIGN TRADE PACT
LONDON, Nov. 14. (0.E»-Usual-
ly authoritative sources reported
today that the trade agreement
between the United
Great Britain would be signed
Thursday in Washington.
Core Wm, MtceucsAFT (trees, we.:
OLD FASHIONED DOLL
PATTERN
Yen'll have plenty of time before Christmas to mtke
lonial dolly—she’s just 2 pieces joined by a straight wnd ftr"
curls (yarn), lace pantalettes and quaint dimity dress M
captivate a little girl.
Pattern 1919 contains a pattern sail
S S ATO«ES» "3
0. , ;
;
Rome on W’ednesday. At the
same time Lotii Perth, British
ambassador to Italy, was expected
to present new credentials to the
Italian government addressed to
King Victor Emanuel, emperor of
Ethiopia, which will acknowledge
British recognition of the Italian
conquest. .
px*
Legal Means To Promote
Hospital Lottery Sought
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.. Nov.
Directors of ttie Harti-
Professor Smartt's Questions
Wffl Be From The Daily Sun
*■ ■
14 (p»
man Instttute for Social Research
tried to arrange today a hospital
benefit drawing that would not
be blocked by the national guard.
Mrs. Oliver Harrlman, “
York socialite and
sought to sponsor a .
drawing, patterned after
■25^'
to satisfy the court’s ruling.”
They promised to “stay within
fkl jaW,M V-:
TJjey had planned the drawing
on what they beljered was. a
loophole in the 1889 territorial
law that exempted lotteries and
gambling held at fairs by schools
and churches—if funds went to
these institutions. The supreme
court on Oct. 17 held that the
law didn’t apply since tickets
be sold throughout the na-
,delating national anti-lot-
toe
toe
If you expect to answer Professor Smart!*
questions at the Arcadia Theater on Wednesday
or Thursday, you must read The Daily Sun on
those days very carefully. , fe
!■
Professor Smartt’s questions will come fro*
news Stories or advertisements in those issues.
FIFTY PASSES will be given away each
Sun.
tioa violating national
«S3
after the gover-
ITS
y-it ml
.
have
liber*
OTA
.
ill
I : .....
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, November 14, 1938, newspaper, November 14, 1938; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095873/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.