The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 259, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 22, 1939 Page: 1 of 8
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WORSi
MATCH
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BATHER
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THE DAILY SUN
^0^NOT259 • , " . GOOSE CREEK, FELLY, BAYTOWN, LA PORTE AND SURROUNDING AREA_____OA1 t'RU',1' flt
indy Starts U.S. In Air Supremacy Ra
____________ —————----i—--*-*-*-;--
i"
.CST'
L»«w*r
three
£|S
eluded tte*.
latter on th»t
■pnsSSJ-fl
“ Wie printed mj
County Jail, jjj
« became quit,,
[arne spread i
U#ay as (
requested
the sheriff (0^j
™ cheaper
ill
111 — be _
rtising the
of correction.
drilling fei
^eed-
put
is a dahlia.
Ionian Confesses Slaying For Insurance
16 OF
ME
[|S DUE SOON
-ail Day!
For Start Of
organization To
Out Next Week;
roval Is Seen
X - -•— -t> -
|ASHINO|OI# April 22 <U.R) —
(rnment—reorganization, re-
Tot, 6, Sits Four-Bays
BesideMothers Body
I,OS ANGELKS, April 22, _.<L'.R)—Police found s six year old ci
sitting in a chair staring at the bed in which her mother lay dead.
“Mommy is dead,”, she said. “She’s been dead for four days.”
“Then why didn’t you call someone?”
“Mommy was dead. I couldn’t leave mommy."
The child was exhausted from hunger, from not,, having slept for
days, and from fever. She had
SOLONS HAVE TWO
WEEKS LEFT FOR
B'g Feature
I
by years of dispute be-
i Republican and Democratic
ilts and congresses, was
Ho begin today.
first of a series of reor-
ation orders probably Will
i to ,congress next week. It wil!
PENSIONS ACTION
measles. . , . .......1......
She identified herself as Marie,
6. Her mother was Mrs. Lose An-
derson, 38, and apparently She had
died of a natural cause, the nature
of which an autopsy will establish
Other Major Issues
May Be Shelved •
By Legislature
AUSTIN, April 22 (PI!)-. Texas
ie effective* within 80 days | legislators enjoyed, their last ,vi-
majority of each house j cation today. Monday they will
21 Protected
jress specifically protected
[■ore or less independent gov-
»t agencies from presidential j
fling.. These include most
!tte major commissions, admin-
and boards. Cabinet
rtments are protected against
although various, func-
of any may be shifted
hand. .
pi typical Republican comment,
i the government reorganization
It passed at this session was
■u of Ren. Everett Dirksgn, R„
PTis an authorization to re-
ge, the flowers,trf the govern-
] vase, but no flowers shall
| removed, even though a bit
reconvene and attempt to crowd
most of the work of a four month
session into two weeks and two
days. ............................
If the session adjourns on
schedule May 9, the legislators
have only 14 working days in
which to decide finally on an old
age pension policy, appropriations
to run the state government for
two years, and how to
both.
Tn.Be Shelved
Other : topics, that have loomed
big' at various periods of the ses-
sion seemed doomed to he passed
hy in the effort to solve the major
issues.
The final fortnight found house
and senate bill disagreed on how
Poisoning Of Three
h Admitted By
Suspect:,,
PHILADELPHIA, April 22. dfRr 1 O PI d CC AniCIlCd
—Mrs. Carina Favato’s confession Aj Jod Of Pack In
that she poisoped three persons id* ^ F
collect their insurance, convinced
authorities that her syndicate had
committed at least 100 murders.
t*':;Wrwi»ks, 'evidence had been ac*
cumulatiiig of murders on a grand
scale, in which poor and obscure
WASHINGTON, April 2i. ttlfl
*-€oK Charles A. Lindbergh, pilot-
sag.......» new army pursuit plane,
Rut Washington today -to begin
field work on, his assigmuent to
today.
Some women looking for a house
to rent had called at the Ander-
son house for directions. There
was’no response to their knocks
and they glanced in a window.
They saw a child holding her Kidd
in her hands staring at “a woman-
in bed.” They told neighbors--and
the neighbors called police.
*Y At a hospital,' Marie was fed and
treated and fell into a deep sleep.
The Police, though, had had to use
forceful meaiifito take her away
from her mother’s body. The hos-
pital said her condition was good.
Under the mother’s mattress,
police found a roll of currency
wrapped around silver. It totaled
$440.35. She had been separated
finance j from her husband who lives in
Long Beach, Cal. Police were try-
ing to-locate him,
TSe tragedy was discovered yes-
terday afternoon.
slowjy poisoned with arsenic hy
“witeh. doctors” who pretended to
be treating them.
Taught Hy Negress
A principal suspect was Paul Pe»
frilio. 45, a”tailor, whom detective
pensions shall be paid, except that
both have decided that ability of
Much Opposition ! children to help parents alkali not
ere was opposition protest | enter into decisions of eligibility
reorganization would not ob-jfor aj(j
i remaia
be open
n.;
cet
tany Iflghifleant _ economy..
( Dealers were dissatisfied be-
the bill as enacted was
lily more than -a shadow of the
| (See Reorganization, Page 2)
BONUS PAID
HOMAN IN RED’
ter Sage Got Cash
For Her Betrayal
Of Dillinger "
[LOS ANGELES, April 22, <UR)
federal bureau oiMnyesti-
ition was revealed’ today to have
‘ $5,000 to Anna Sage, the
red,” for luring John
Pnger into a death tt dp outside
” go theater on July 22,1034.
* E. ’ P. Dunn, formerly
I# thg FBI office in Los An-
4 said he was assigned to pay
(he money, . .
linger was killed by a blast
, ®-Men’s bullets when he walk;
1 a trap at the theater en-
The story of how he was
1 came out while Dunn was
dug in defense of a $1,000,-
bel suit, Dunn was explain-
' *•>>’ he advanced $200 to a
ker lobbyist as’a means of
«ng the man’s confidence. He
g *5000 Bonus, Page 2)
[Around Town
fc *. Tri-Cities: Don Mc-
Iriover from th< Hill to see
Mnofter baseball game . . . and
[.« Frenchy Kiber also in
|wta for the p.m, and placing a
order , . . a<Ll to coined
I1** vocabulary: bigotistical
L« Sloan recalling Herb
*JP “journ as his guest on the
ky last summer . .. E. A. “Si”
George Smith hold-
«>rth in conversation’. . .
1 Winterhalter parking his
™ the shade of a little
■ Elmer Bentley having
1‘touWaa .. . . P. R. Higgin-
poring seciously over a
* fi*«res . . . Brooks Ba-
and “Baa" Bussey enjoying
HEARING CALLED
ON SCHOOL BILL
Act To Permit Firing
Of Superintendent
v Believed Dead
The house has voted to finance
the aid by a combination of gross
receipts and natural: resource
taxes. Senators still leaned to-
ward submitting a constitutional ......
for a sales tax to which would give the county
East Harris county school men
today believed there is a good
chance the lower house of the leg-
islature-will defeat a special bill
with1 school board authority to discharge
amendment
popular vote, coupling it - . ,
smaller natural resource takes the county superintendent,
than those proposed by the house.
To Meet Tuesday
Gov. W.-Lee O’Daniel was exer.t-
Sgt. Samuel Riccardi said had
“claimed to be constantly in touen
with' spirits and said he co .'d and
did talk with Old Nick himself.’*
■fetrillo is awImBg trial for mur-
der, He was sapr to have token
lessons for a year from a negro
“seeress” at 50 e'ents a lesson.
Petrillo’s cousin. Herman I’e.tril-
|o, 49, a spaghetti salesman, was
the first of the suspects btought
to trial. He was convicted a few
weeks ago and sentenced to death.
Evidence at his trial suggested
that the plot was extensive.
Meads Guilty , ™~—
The suspicions were given new
credence yesterday wiitn Mrs. Fa-
vato interrupted her p.urder trial
in its fourth day and uleaded guil-
ty. She had been charged With
poisoning her, stoPson- Flulip In-
grsft She admitted not only that
but that she also ^poisoned her.
husband, Charles Favato, and a
•friend, Guiseppe Di. Martino..........
Dominic Corigliano,.....assistant
superintendent of the Home Life
Insurance company, a* witness
against Mrs. favato, said Herman
Petriflo had boasted that he couid
get physicians to issue “pneumon-
ia” death certificates, for $5 each.
Refuses Offer
Corigliano said Petrillo had tried
;o get him to join the Plot. ------------
‘Tiniey said they would put mo
the big money and buy me
CAMPAIGNS
MATCH NAZIS
Field Work Is Begun
aerial fighting force ip America’s
history.
The war department refured to
diiclose Ids destination. Announc-
ing that h*.vtook off at 8 a.m. in a
new lighting plane, army officials
Sadd that hb had completed prelim
thary work for his assignment dur
ing conferences with military and
civilian aviaton experts here.
On Actve Duty
!%Lindbefgh was recalled, to active,
army duty to study,American avia-
tion research facilities and make,
reamimepdations’ for mprovihg
them. This was deemed vital in
Connection with the extensive Pro-
gram to build the army ai .corps
up to 6,000 first line figuring j
planes to mMch toe aerial power j
With Demand To Know If Roosevelt
Approached Them On Peace Plea
- EUROPE TODAY W
BERLIN—Germany has msde ihqairies whetber iuitions mentioned by President RaimeVel* hi
his appeal for a German-Italian peace pledge believe themselves to be menaced by Germany. aotho-
rized source discloses; Hitler expected to read replies in speech next Friday.
VENICE—Italy moves to awing Jugoslavia to Berlin-Reme “axea" as foreign minister Om».
starts conference »ith„,Jngp*lav Foreign Minister Cincar-Markoviteh.
BELGRADE—Italian diplomatic activities: m ake big toprss^'HTtMC^^
LONDON—(iovemmmit is reported planning to lake over British broadcasting company as
GIBRALTAR—Three cruisers join French patrol In Strait of Gibraltar,
Mussolini Seeks To Force Jugoslavia Jnto Countries
Alliance To Isolate Rumania And
jggi
VENICE, April 22. itU’i—Italy moved to swing Jugoslavia into
close support of the Beriin-Rome “axis” today, .Count Galeaxeo Ciano
and Alexander Cincar-Markoviteh, the Italian and Jugoslav foreign
ministers, erne, here for a two-day conferepce. ^
^Jugoslav reports (raid ‘that Giano was ‘ preparjql*' to* agree to w*
duce the size of the Italian army
in Albania and to refrain from
fortifying the Albanla-Jugoslav
irontier or ' buildings strategic
roads which might be regarded as
a threat to Jugoslavia.
Further, it was reported that
Ciano, acting for Premier Benito
Mussolini, sought to form a Bal-
important kan bloc, consisting o£ Jugoslavia,
Hungary and Bulgaria as an off-
set to British and French ‘‘peace
front” moves.
• Count Paul Teleki and7 Count*
BRITAIN TO TAKE
0VERC0NTR0L0F
NATIONAL
industry To Be Used
As Chief Weapon
Of Propaganda
LONDON, April 22. *l’K)—The
overnment id preparing to take
was this fact that prompted the
I (Sf« Lindy, Page 2)
DOCTOR ADMITS
^ KILUNG OF WIFE
Edinburg Physician
Gives Up; Salesman
Is Wounded
______ _ . . . , EDINBURG, April 22 (I’Pl—Dr.
car. PstfHlb ftas*t«dl w big; roTUof j l. J. -Montague, prominent Edin*
bills and said he wanted me to
of other major nations.
The famous flyer’s tou:
peeted to include'. ail
aviation centers.
Research .Activities
the department said “Colonel
Lindbergh has had a unique op-
portunity to observe the progress j Stephen Csaky, the Hungarian
of aeronautical developfitent both.j pr«nler and foreign minister, had j
In this ebuhtry and tbRTaJ W91t ] fusV returned ’to'^.Blkiapesr after—-
conferences with Mussolini and! ... . „j
Ciano as Um dtoMSh^ugoslay con-j^y- wh,th a «»“'Con-
ferences started here’; i e«*l. nionopoty in Gwat ^IRituin,
Italy was said to'W ue|bUatlih| j ***** utilise, 'it' •» *
with Jugoslavia and Hungary, Pagamla weapon in its “peace
trying to arrange a non-aggres-1 trout” fght, it was reporUu to*
•slon treaty between them. Dls-: day,
patches from Budapest forecast
that as the result of the Italian
conferences wlh Hungarian and
Jugoslav leaders, Hungary and
Jugoslavia wouki enter Airect ne-
gotlatlona aimed at a general mi-
norities agreement and settlement
(See Italy Beckons, *)-
burg physician charged with mur-
write up insurance prospects they j <ier in connection with the fatal
The bill, introduced by Senator
Weaver Moore and’ passed by the
senate, was returned, to a house
committe Thursday after a group
ing his Influence for the constitn- commute i nur« « ^
tional amendment-sales tax plan ' of trustees and superintendents had
gone to Austin and protested its
passage. • . ' .
A public hearing has been set
for Tuesday afternoon. Several
members of the Harris county leg-
islative delegation told the local
men they will not support it if the
(See Solons, Page 2)
Chances of the gross receipts tax
will be determined when the . sen-
ate committee on state affairs
meets .Tuesday to receive a sub-
committee report. This sub-com-
mittee will recommend elimination
°f fr rtaindbwholf People are opposed to its passage,
under $45,000 a year and whole-1 ^ ^ ^
John M. Kilgore and Sam Y. Sjo-
lander, trustees, _and G, L- Ben-
nett, superintendent of Cedar Bay-
ou schools; Fred Gillette, LaForte
trustee; J. H. Taylor, Seabrook
trustee; and Pat H. Green, super-
intendent of Webster schools. Sev-
eral telegrams protesting the bill
were seiJL from Kera, , . . " ~
The bill would give the board
power to discharge J. B. Oliphant,
who was given a four-year contract
at a salary of $4800 per year soon
after the term of County Superin-
tendent W. G. Smiley expired Jan.
1. Oliphant was elected by a four
(See Hearing Called, Page 2)
SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont.,
April' 22 (UP) — Royal Canadian
mounted podee patrolled the Can-
adian ship canal, the international
bridge, and the Sault power houae
today after the discovery of 50
pounds of dynamite in a little-
used warehouse; ”' •
Mayor W. J. McMeekan said he
feared a .sabotage plot .add con-
sidered a /equest for. a nillitaty
guard at the canal. He said well-
planted explosive charges could
cripple or destroy the powerhouse,
canal, and bridge within 10 min-
utes. ■ ■ ...
Police found the dynamite while
investigating then theft of a quan-
tity of brass. The dynamite cache
was close to the power house.
STABS SELF IN TREE
BRIDGEPORT, Conn., April. 22
<GPJ —Kart KarEwn, 33, Easton
farmhand who climbed a 60-foot
elm tree Wednesday and stabbed
himself In the throat, died of Ms
wound today.
recommended and see .that there
was no trouble .about the pay-
ments,” he said.
He said he refused the offer and
that Mrs. Favato told him they
had been “doing this for ^tver^l
years/’ '
Mrs. Favato’s stepson, it
disclosed, had been insured
$13,500. ......
In addition to the Petrillo ecu-
sins and Mrs. Favato, Mrs. Susie
Di Martino'and Mrs. Stella Alfon*
si have been charged with mur-
ders.
Asked If
They Had Hint Of
Roosevelt Plea
BERLIN, April 22 (CP) — Get-
many has “dlacuiMit the question
broached in President Roosevelt's ;
peace message” wtth 31 nations
mentioned by the prtiident in bis
appeal to Adolf Hitler and Benito
Mussolini for an anti-aggression
pledge, ,-lt Was made known today.
It bras admitted 4hat communi-
cations had been received from
some of tbe nations but R was
-teat—the saml»dfthiffi
Bridsfes Sav* He I?
Ready Fof Hearing
• Cic* 'VV- * '!■ ■
SAN FRANCISCO, April 22 fUB
^-Harty Bridges, Australian born
west coast labor leader, said to-
day he was ready and anxious
emL-aljAie: .hearing <*n.
the latest ’ efforts to have him de-
ported as an undesirable alien.
Informed that Secretary of La-j
shooting of his wife, Mrs. Velma
Montague, 35, today was at lib-
erty on $5,000 bond.
Montague surrendered to the
sheriff^ department Thursday
night and told them where they
could find his ; wife and, P. C.
was Humphrey, a San Aritorfo sales-
f°r naan.
Officers found Mrs, Montague
dead in her automobile on a coun-
try road.. Nearby was Humphrey’s
automobile. The salesman bad
suffered a broken right arm find
a bullet wound In his side.
Humphrey was reported resting
comfortably at tbe,tt county-city
hospital of which Dr. Montague
is superintendent.
Both Mrs. Montague and her
husband were prominent in social
circle# here. Mrs, Montague was
an active business woman, own-
ing two motion picture houses in
Edinburg.
COAL MINERS PIN
HOPE ON U S. AID
Negotiations Locked
As Threat Is Made
‘To Spread Strike
Daniel that Mrs. Montague was
bor Franc«a Pqrldna bad ml»» her automobUe
a prompt hearing on charges he
was a member of the communist
party. Bridges said “maybe sow
we can get this matter cleared
up oacs and for all.” He baa
BRIEFS
taUtlng' to Humphrey four miles
north of town, Hs mads a state-
tnent to District Attorney Tom
HsHqy Jwt Hartley refused to
reveal its details.
Humphrey declined to discuss
the shooting.
NEW YORK, April 22 to —
Direct federal Intervention sp-
iraled to offer the only practical
hope today for settlement of the
Appalachian soft <gial shutdown
which has kept 340,000 miners
idle sinqe April 1, choking the
flow of fuel to railroads and in-
dustries.
Whether it would he forthcom-
ing was not certain, but deadlock-
ed wageritour nsgotiators Indi-
cated that they saw no other al-
ternative to a prolonged
The Daily Mail, asserting that
the government would assume
direct control June 7, said that the
network would become a govern
ment news service and that all
stationg''would constitute a poten-
tial, and to some extent actual,
suspen-
soft-coal 1
erwment,
.Strictly Supervised
It was added'that all broadcast
news bulletins would be strictly
supervised, that talks made on the
lUiC network on important topics
would become official ones, and
that the radio’ facilities would be
used to brondcast recruiting and
similar appeals.
At present the BBC is neither
a commercial company nor a gov-
ernmejit department. It was mat-
ed by royal charter on a similar
basis to that of the Bank pt Eng-
land. Its controlling board of gov-
ernors, chairman and vice chair-
man, are appointed by the crown.
Special Clause
A clause in the charter author-
izes the government to take over
the company and whenever in
the opinion of the postmaster gen-’
(See Britain, Page 2)
Capone is Denied
Plea For Release
iOB ANGELES. Calif., April
source had kacwledfe at the eon* *
tents of the replies.
To Bare Replies ......
It had been reported abroad that
Germany had questioned a number
of powers as to whether: 1. They
feared aggression by Germany and
2s- They had advance knowledge
of the president's appeal or, by
ImpHcation, had Mked him to aid
them.
Adolf Hitler was understood to
be intending to mention the re- “
make to the reichsts* next Fri-
day, replying to the president.
Negati ve Answers ■
Lithuania, Hungary and Jugo-
slavia were reported abroad to
have replied “no” to both ques-
tions. Holland was reported to J
have said that it did not think It
was menaced but oould
sure that its present7eenie'bf'se-
(Bee Hitler Foils, Page I)
i i-coiii lauiuie. —Afluwu, - uub,, npiu
The two sides retom«d^ a»te 22 jl.fii -Al Capone received the
STACKS CLOSE TODAY
. Cewtesy „ * ■ ■ .
CITIZENS STATE BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
HALIFAX, N. a, April tt(UE»,
—(Mlmsweepers still patrolled
toe Nova Scotian coast today
as authorities at Ottawa nought
to establish that the
reportedly won in Halifax har- T
bor early Wednesday morning
wao nothing more ttaa too 50-
foot fishing smack, “Lite G.” ...
.ASHINGTON, April » (R»
Allied Stores’*. -.......—J j^j
Ahwrican Radio
Anaconda Copper ............... «
ass ^22=
ebrysler ----------■
Cities Service -----------
Commercial Solvent
Consolidated Aircraft
Consolidated Gil ~-
Curtiss-Wright —>
CurUss-Wrigbt A. ,..’
Elec. Bond and Share
Glenn Barber
1 a critical eye over
presidential improvements
J. Tapp comparing notes
1 “"’e niece# . . . ■
^ La Porte: The truth is that
^ Hartman couldn’t make
i Lfe^iast niSht . . . He had Bower and Ught ... v i-s
Jv home and take eare^
lZhv %ho *“ frightened by Motor,
- It was a water
to Seahrook anyway
'•George Isensee'i sweet peas
|Hurri9 Corpo(tftiop|
Nash Kelvinator
National Daily—»
North Amer. Aviation
Ohio Oil
Packard Motors
PhilUps Petroleum
Pure (Ml
Socoi
Standard Oil
Standard Oil New Jersey
Salt Dome
Sunrsy Ofl
Texas Corporation ....
Tidewater CorporaUon
T-P Coal * Oil . - , .
United Aircraft ...........
United Corporation ...
United Gas -----------
United States Steel ...
Unio^afe -*
White h
Funeral Rites For
Tonipkim Baby Held
Fuaeni services ..were held at
2 p.m. Friday at the, Paul U.
Lee Funeral Home for John Fred-
erick Tompkins, 4-months-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Tompkins
1« Ash street, P*By, who Mad
in a local hospital at 5:52 a.m.
Thursday.
Rev. W. F. Roark, pastor of the
Morgan's Point Assembly of God
church -officiated. The body was
taken diMrtnd to Dayton for bar
ial to Ltnney cemetery under di-
rection at Paul U. Lee.
Survivors are the parents,
grandmother, Mrs. Nancy Jack-
eon, Peliy; grandfather, Fred Phil-
lips, Wallisville; and two great-
’ Mrs. N, A, Reed.
Dayton, and Mrs. M. E. Phillips.
Wallisville.
discussions today.
.“'The; Appalachian shutdown,
which the United Mine Workers
of-America have threatened to ex-
tend to 21 other statee May 4, if
an Agreement is no^ /cached by
theft, followed the expiration of
(See deal Miners, Page 2)
HEAVY BAIN FALL*
BROWNSVILLE.. April » <U.P)
—Three and a half inches of ratn
fell in this section during the 24
hours ending at 7 a.m., toaay, the
wsathisr bureau reported.
bail niWg-to Teminal island fed-
eral prison today that hl» idea.for |,v^« landlft£.
riBtose on a writ of habeas cor-
pus has been dented and that he
must serve until next November,
at least.
Federal Judge 'Harry Hollxer
ruled that toe time Capone spent
in the Cook county jail at Chicago
awaiting dispoaition of Ms appeal
Rot be allowed as time
served on the sentence for income
tsx evasion $tot hss kept the
racket long behind bars 7 - since
3n. , ' " ■ '
’ " ""
20 DIE IN FRENCH
AIR FORCE WRECKS
Rigid Inquiry Into
: Causes Qf Crash
Series Ordered
PARIS, April «, -Guy I*
Chambre, sir minister, ordered a
rigid inquiry today into liuet. plana
crashes im tbe Frehch Air r’orca,
in’ which 20 men were killed. \
All the planes involved were old
models not included in the types
now being delivered to the air '
toTCB.
m the series of to-
sstete oceurred near Oudja in Al-
berta, where a four-motored bomb-
er crashed, killing the crew of lix.
Five were killed when a bombing
plane, on a practice flight from La
Rourget field here, crashed at
Beauvais. ■ r j.. . j
Nine were killed when two
bombing plstifii ffflllded 300 feet
above Tours flying field ns they
.. - i -/
Lamour Expects To Like
Kay Better After Divorce
GUm To Aid Fight
April 3 tUD—
«.
WASHINGTON,
Republican
mustered only four
house votes to their unsuccessful
Ught to abolish President
velt’s monetary powers,
today on Sen. Carter C
Va., for support to toe.
Glees, as chairman of
HOLLYWOOD, April 22
A slight glimmer of reel lif« came
through the chinks to the arti-
fictaUty which lurrounds a Hol-
lywood star today,
Dorothy Lamour said she had
been “only fooling” a year ago
when she said tost what she want-
ed most in the world was a baby:
what the really wants is a di-
vorce because marriage and a ca-
reer don't mix. >>
Then were tears in the eyes
of toe mov
talked
dent, and a
of the
bad wr
With swimming pool attached who
began life humbly and one# ran
an elevator to a department store.
But she was no less eager
her studio tost her public
stand and sympathise with
reason# why, with her con
to Chicago
yesterday,
rise said. ‘
mid. “Wont you
K
Krtr?:
bill to the measure
house yesterday to <
years toe 1
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 259, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 22, 1939, newspaper, April 22, 1939; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100729/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.