The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 246, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1939 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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, .irtov * * , . ; : ■
ATHER
barb1® - P,rtIy c,Tdy'
if Weather clears tonight,
'ptly cloudy, rising tompera-
f #■
*1»0 ftCM cw/
‘ ‘n ,F«1W^
to* local crtai*
20—NO. 246
GOOSE CREEK. PELLY, BAYTOWN. LA I*ORTE AND SURROUNDING AREA
legislature Clears
[Calendar For Final
linh^t Fight On Sales Tax
I UUv'"< I
wwM * ,‘<®f
ty"T7 • fX “ v
I Tih?rT?^*f
Ji’r. * -t 4.U • * %,
T¥f.’AT-9
THI RSDA
UFB*Y THREAD
King Of Bottle
And €aa Be,,
H^^Aprir a pP We'TeIas^logiSt^relSdaTpYi^S'
w iwav some, its pending legislation to make way for another
S en tte social security tax problem next week.
Sjhj believed that senate advocates might attempt to bring up
f,)» sales-natural resource tax program once_beaten, then.
¥ %„1
BLOC
SES aviNc
5IDENTP0M
^ermine Needs
js Defended
IfASHINGTON, April 6. «*—
advocates of strict neu-
vigorously opposed today
which they contended
take away from congress
I pve to the president the pow-
(declare war.
to declarations against pro-
| delegation to* the President
y on » vote to reconsider.
ffrmi copstitutionil«mej_..................—
, is waived temporarily r bill to allow barbers to set prices for
their services by agreement is at
the top of the calendar.
The barbers bill as passed by the
! house authorises 90 per cent of the
barbers within a county- to set
prices, not to exceed JO cents for a !
haircut.
Lawyer Bill Amended
The senate passed jand returned
housefor concurrence- in
amendments a bill to allow law-
yers to set up a iise|f-governing
bar." The senate passed and aent
to the house a bill changing terms
of the national guard
board
ed in a minority opinion
state supreme court.: " '
The house continued to work on
ITALY RUSHES WARSHI
vim
_■■ nfliwi
I gulping records to new record] Britain Reaffirms
'iLil
r
;, m
9
m
SLASH IN OIL
FtDWUFTED
IN NEW ORDER
1 _L
I M i p
...l.iL......I........^iv.'
m
imm
-:.S 9
jlri# $M#
Allowables Restored
After Protests Of
ead To
----- armory I
rd to satisfy an objection rais-\ Agnes
in a minority opinion of the]
ed lye. T
gan to cl
Agnes Gregory, of Kansas
..or nations and applying
nic sanctions preceded ap-
«e before the senate foreign
ions committee of Bernard M.
chairman of the war in-
j board during the World
commission to regulate mutual as-
sessment life, health and accident,
and burial insurance companies.
Proponents of the bill yesterday
defeated several attempts to ex-
jole discretion in designating elude burial associations.
“ -J * -* ' * New Tax Proposal* "
Representative W. 0. Reed of
Dallas said burial associations
provided legitimate competition
that reduced “the high cost of,
dying." He had an Amendment
to exempt societies formed for the
purpose of making insurance con-
tracts pending when the house ad-
journed Wednesday. ,
Representative Alfred Petsch of
Fredericksburg received consent
from the house to have printed
several amendments that will be j P1
offered next Tuesday to a consti-
246.498.24
17L68
25,812.73
5,879.50
2.167.29
2,500.00
2,201.85
895,488.73 “
$1,180,722.04
75,000.00
10.UUO.OO i
27.530,10
1.420.80
547.50
Seven Proposals
Ir. Baruch was a sponsor of the
(h-and-carry” Provisions of the
king neutrality law which” ex-
i May 1. The senate commit-
ln studying seven proposals to
* a! or revise the law.
inry L. Stimson, secretary, of
le. jn President Hoover's cab-
■ proposed yesterday that
i powers l>e given the presi-
Jt to act to preserve this coun-
EgCTtrality in event of a fqr-
Ttar. He contended that that
’1 best be done by cutting off
■isors from our resburces.
Opposeg Sanction
uch, told the committee that
I of economic sanctions against
‘-nation# wnulri lrad the
i States into a military war.,
krach diamissed the theory
ji the only way for this reun-
ite keep out of war is to exert
wiic pressure against aggres-
i is an effort to prevent out-
k of a European conflict. ,
n that theory, if our economic
f fails, we will be in military
r and I think that, if we make
»»ic wart that conclusion ish
iahle,” he said. “I am mot
! that even with the utmost
moprernim-mrcmM^pte-
t European war if it were de-
tad upon by the aggressors.".
r her throat be-
t nd she owes her
life to eating a yard of thread a
day. The thread acts as a guide
for metal beads which force her
throat open to permit eating.
By UNITED PRESS
The northern section of Texas
ayed host to winter again to-
day.
tutional amendment for financing Overcast skies prevailed; In
.......I- • , .......... . ........
social security by means of gross
receipts and natural resource taxes.
The main amendments levy a
Per, cent tax on gross receipts
of newspapers in excess of $100,-
00Q a year and order an election
in November, 1944, to determine
if the public wants the program
continued. ”■
TIN
ACCIDENTS HERE
Two Others Escape In
Crash On Highway
Near Baytown
Two, men were injured and two
escaped unhurt in automobile ac-
cident's here last night and early
today.
Action By Solons
AUSTIN, April 6 <U.R>—Restora-
tion of old oil production allow
s-j, -»..»*•■> abies to most of the field* that
ear-old baby 30 -were reduced in the April oroer
(■tally swallow- of y,e railroad commiMion^,
today had quieted a storm that
followed the issuance of the or-
der. ,
Members of the legislature
were expected to withhold a bill,
already drawn, to create a sep-
arate commission to handle oil
and gas regulation. Commission-
er Jerry Sadler had gone: to
Houston to seek dismissal of re-
straining orders already Issued in
mill mump MIT ^ederal court there. Sadler con-
KAlil WIllUiJ HU tended that the operators in five
iuun, ifliu/j mi flcldg named ta the inJunctlon
ready have been granted the re-
lief sought by commission order,
138,000 Barred Increase
The new order which made ret
roactive to April 1, places the pet
state production at 1,386,000 bar-
rels of oil daily. Saturday oper-
ation, which had been renewed by
TEMPERATURE IN
TEXAS DROPS AS
Hail And Snow Fall
In Panhandle As
Storm Strikes
Readiness ToFight
AsNewPactSigned
m
Reprisals Against
Warsaw, London
Are Hinted
|
;r Vi.
* Wm i
Sl.066.223.61
11,180,722,04
i Save Patients
Hospital Bums
^ATERVILLB, Me., April 6
r-Braving flames and smoke,
]• snd, nurses rescued more
score of patients, including
^newborn babies, when fire
pf Stetcrs' hospital early to.
t mothers and eight expect-
|“tars were among those as-
■ to and transferred
M«j*c«nt hospital building,
* ,ir* started in the base-
Md flames were mushroom-
""’i the ground floor when
by the night super-
Damage was estimated at
F. Morris of 410 East Republic,
were hurt when the truck toi
which they were riding overturn-
ed into a ditch on the Baytown-
Pelly highway about 1:30 a.m.
Echols was brought to the
Goose Creek hospital in a Tri-
Cities Funeral Home htftfcilance
in ah unconscious condition but
today he was" reported somewhat
improved. X-ray examination was
some sections rain, snow or sleet
fell intermittently.
Strong winds and drenching
rains were common late yesterday
and last night.
A possible frost is in store for
East Harris county tonight. The
official weather bureau prediction
was “partly cloudy, colder, frost
if weather clears tonight. Friday
partij-eioudyrTtBirigtemperature;-'
* Little Damage
Preliminary estimates revealed
little damage to wheat and fruit
crops. In the Panhandle rains
and snow were considered bene-
ficial.
The equinoctial storm moved
farther South and East today,
reaching beyond Dallas and into
East Texas, and south to Hous-
thc original order, is continued.
Restorations total more than a
third of the 300,000 barrel# which
the Gulf coast field. Southwest
Texas and West Texas had keen
ordered to reduce to offset the
gain from Saturday operation.
Sadler said the production un-
der the new order is approximate-
ly 166,000 barrels a day below
(See Reduction, Page 2)
Kt Mftie is John Patrick, University of Chicago Student. While
other college lads satisfy their appetites with live goldfish, Patrick
turns gourmet on two and n half phonograph records. His meal was
-■ jplied by Miss Marion Garson, shown waiting with a second
Cgg
Natl circle* charged today that
Poland had joined the anti-Ger-
man front and hinted at reprisals
against both the Warsaw and Loft-
don government*.
"The dice have fallen," one of-
ficial spokesman said to regard
to the new J»oti*h-8riU*h defense
treaty.1 "Poland should not for-
get that the Polish-German anti-
war fraaty rests on mutual co-
operation."
Bpanish Adherence Beta
With Adoif Hitler understood to
have received a personal message
from Italian Premier Benito Mus-
solini regarding plan# to counter-
act encirclement of Rome-Berlln
partnership, official circles indi-
cated tilt the Nasie ne*t move
might involve:
1, Denunciation of the British-
German naval pact limiting the
reicb to 39 per cent of British
naval power.
Nations Hasten To
P rV,, n lmn 1 lea
bam Control in
Diplomacy
(Copyrifht)lM(»,_ftrU^.J
LONDON, April e. ttUh -TGreet
Britain announced a defensive
military alliance with Poland today,
and Italy sent warship* to Al-
bania as the great powers made
their first big moves in a dra-
matic struggle for the dominant
position. , ■ -
Great Britain, leading the dejp-
ocratic nation* in a drive for a
nr" Woe, and Italy, set-
totalitarian "axi»" pow-
er*, were raring for diplomatic
supremacy.
Full Alliance
Prime Minister Neville Cham-
berlain announeed in thehouseof.
commons:
L That an Italian cruiser and.
two smaller warships had arrived
at Durstio, Albania,
2. That Great Britain and Pol-
and had agreed to conclude a tail
Fish Gulpers Eclipsed By
Worm; Magazim Diets
BUENOS AIRES, April 6 W.P>
Albert Muller, leader of Argen-
'tine Nazis, was charged today
a $100,060.fire at an ice company with —1----- . . .. r
At AmariUo lightning started
MM M. »«„!, « M* B: jjf
rams .scmsiMf
four inches had fallen, and rail- »toe PaLoX ^
<*» »-W—W » rilTiStt. raojiss.
of the city were raided. Secret
documents were found purported-
ly containing details of a Nazi
plan for infiltration and coloniza-
tion, of Patagonia, preparatory to
annexing it to Germany.
ceived a fractared skull.
Morris suffered cuts and bruises
. (Set Two Men, Page 2)
Fisher Bound Over
On Assault Charge
Vi B, Fisher of Goose Creek to-
day was bound over to the Cham-
bers county grand jury today un- demonstrators stoned the buiidingi
found Town
4 Eli
der $1,000 bond on a charge of as-
sault with intent to murder.
The complaint alieges that Fish-
er threatened the life of his
• tii. Trifiiu. me «, brother-in-law, M.* Biffin, on April
.deigning and saris- The preliminary hearing was
held to Justice of the Peace J. N.
Gouriay’s court at Mont Belyieu.
Mexico Bam Fiinu
Of Fascist Nations
MEXICO CITY. April 6.
ie Central Labor Union today an*
. junced opposition to -showing in
Mexico of any motion pictures
employes, to carry but the ban.
The action followed deportation
of several Spanish nationalist
leaders and a demonstration by
about 15U worker* last night to
support of President Lazaro Car-
denas’ policy toward Spain. The
- J
ik
-1
ml
^eir appetites on the
b to*HWindow dwwtion* • •
!»■ Wtihams saying he's sor-
hadtti coffee
" ?mrd tolling Ervin
7?' to*4’* Just too bad,
■,,'on ,h*aring Ervin’s hard-
Jw* about some. residential
. . . ftd O’SaB
into ^ to^it with
vfteel-bairowing transfer of
‘h* houae . . . The
■.isSSSst
hi* new automobile
^ 7- Stridtlar typing out
1 ,0f toe light to change
’enturiirg acros^Sa
i ^ Fnd Rrff and.,
kiibler, two nigged to-
totter rtalito
H» i* her* to stay
, * W1*"* stanca
to»P to TombalL.. .
bAr bill passed
AUSTIN,, April 6. OJPi w- A
“self-governing bar" bill to allow
lawyers to formulate professional
standards under direction of the
Texas supreme court was passed
finally today by the Texas iegis-
-lature and sent to .Goverpor W,
Lee O’Daniel.
aS S1^. W
Lee O’Daniel today signed the
Ull paaaad by the Te^ togtsta-
ture appropriating $1,618,000 to
supplement the previous $11,000.
MO appropriation to aid rural
•chools during thf 1937-39 btoo-
It’s Easy
To Ima;
She
BURIAL GROUPS BANNED
AUSTIN, April 6 (UP — Tem-
porary restraining order* were
granted by District Judge Ralph
Yarborough Jn suit* filed today
by Attorney General Gerald C. ____
Mann staking to hatt tun tariall ftlead: "IterMly ^dim
associations fro® doing
of the Newspaper* El Universal
and Excelsior. Several were ar-
rested. ' ■ ■ ;;
Highlandt Men To
Meet With Decker
The Hi^ilands civic committee
on good raids, waterworks and
jewer construction will meet with
County Commisafamer Thomas L
Deckef at 7 p.m. Friday, it was
announced today by H. A, May,
Ota chairman.
May said the meeting will be
held in the - office of the * Higji-
Tand Farma corporation.
ARGENTINE NAZI
LEADER CHARGED
Pl9t For Seizure Of
Patagonia Laic!
To Muller
plotting against the secure
ity of thg Argentine stato r s
He had been arrested ‘ along
CORVALLIS, "Ore, April 6.
(UK)—Marion Salisbury, Oregon
State college sophomore, inaug-
urated a new “twist’ ’today td
the current "gold fish gulping"
epidemic hy swallowing 139.an-
gle worms.
Young Salisbury downed two
tneothful nf fat^*jdl«Mhed.
garden variety angle warm* ti»'
two gulps .tossed of a chaser of
water and collected a $5 wager.
Spohsora of a college rally
dance barred him from attending
when word of his “accomplish-
ment” gol.around. Faculty mem-
bers described the stunt as “un-
desirable publicity" but indicated
they planned no disciplinary ac-
tion.
Salisbury, exhibiting no out-
ward signs of turmoil, gave this
statement in his defense:
from clean earth, is pure, un-
contaminatod animal protein just
a* edible as any other, protein
known, Samame Masadlte tridt
for tomatoes, which were once
STANFORD University, Cal.,
April 6. (UR)—Tom Kiliefer, 22-
year-old Stanford student from
Henawa Utah. Cal, collected
a $1 wager from" a fellow stu-
dent today. Before a crowd of
cheering students he bit off the
head of a- 12-inch water snake.
Nobody demanded that he swal-
low it.
2. Denunciation of the Polish
German non-«ggreaslon ' treat]
which runs until 1944.
3. Formal adherence of natioa-
aUat Spain to the totalitarian an-
H»commlhit ailtahee.
4. Possible transformation of
the anti-communist pact into a
fledged defensive military slli-
ance. * '; ' ■- - ~^r v4-
"Hia two.countaiea* he t«M,
V “are pnpared to; enter a perman-
ent and reciprocal agreement to
replace the present temporary as-
sttrance* given Poland." r--
Assurd fiy Back
TO* statement was made by
agreement with the Polish govrn- „ _
ment. . ' 1
He said that he had toedved
assurances from Gol. Joasf BedE,
formal military alliance!
■ “It is (iangcrou* to threaten a
fuehrer state if you are not a nsnunuium iwi «««;»,
I fuehrer state yourself," one Nasi Polish foreign minister, that Pol-
(ftee Nazis, Page 2)
(See Italy Sends, P*c» $)
-if-::,-- ----
—-ft
Albanian Nationalists To
'Sm
I
Resist Italian Influe
TIRANA; Albania, April « (UK)
Albanian nationailst* pledged
themselves to fight for indepen-
dence today and asserted that
they would revolt If the govern
ment sgreed to ati ltalisn proteC'
torate.
Italian civilian* began a mass
evacnatlott af Albania and Klag
Zof, m commander In chief of
Asks Lift On
Life’s Road
—Y1 T> T I? U C------ .zog, as commander in chief of agreed to Italian terms w
p H lLf g -----------the*nayT*ae repertad raahing .fringed on _the national
to have been secretary to Ger
man Propaganda Minister Joseph
Goebbels. He has been questioned
several tilnies and was said to
have exposed fltany details the
plot to avMge the Maytag of his
3i."SjirT2r ats Meuijrad« Gn»«P
(See Argentina, Page 2)
Bill For MUk Coda
in Texa. 1, Killed
AUSTIN. April S '(-D A Mil
to »lto. adopuon of "rank codes'
Imagine
' ■___
LOS ANGEI.ES, April A
top—A woman walked Into -
the postoffice today and pro-
sehted a postal money order
far cashing.
The clerk looked at the mon-
ey order and found It hadn’t
bam endorsed; t
“Please go over that da*
and endorse this,” he nhL
The woman AL and return-
ed to to* clerk’s window.
He looked at ttf If* *<4*
mqa*y «d*r.
ttoa.".
in Texas dairying areas was kill-
ed today when Rap. J. E, Winffee1
of Houaton was given unanimous
Can you take a crippled
child to Houston; in. the morn-
ing in order that it might re-
ceive treatment at Memorial
hospital?
If you can, call Mrs, O. K.
Towier at 594 J.
l-jaMicbMi, 'Mkt ,mm6. flLjQjt;
AUSTIN, April 6. <W> — The
Tessa seMte liday gave tha
j constitutional plan of levying *
sates tax enough vole* to sub-
mit it to popular election If the
house agree*. The resolution was
engrossed by vote of 21 aye* to
5 noc*. Three member* were
absent and two Who (wens pres-
ent did not vote.
men and arm* to the Adriatic
coast In fear of an ItaUaa In-
vasion.
Zog and member* of tho cabi-
net were still negotiaUng with
ItaHon diplomatlc representatives
in an effort to find a peaceful
formula to satisfy Italy’s desire
htoeoMiittjr,
PubUcp optnion' was gstong
particularly nationaibWk^^ an^
student societies, began devel-
oping a national determination
to resist.
Leader* said privately tbit they
would resist even if King Zog
agreod to Italian terms which in-
One of them, whose name cam t?
noLbc published, said:
• Any infringement of Albanian
•overagh^y |pgb the, consent of »
the Albanian government will la* . ’1
suitably mean revolution. Th«!:^9
Czecheslovak formula will not
’ tie tot whose parents are un- ^ _________
irsrsf issr
Mr*. Towier will be glad to j —President Roosevelt wHT ld-
for more extensive Influence over work here."'
....................... ... -----
MussolintMakes Aerial
hear from you, if you plan to
go to the . city tomorrow.
-■ ■ ■ ■ ''■ ■■ ■' '■ •.........
drees the. governing board «f
the Pan American Uaton here
•n Pan American dayfApril II,
WASHINGTON. April 6 (13
The senate civil liberties commit-
tee, in a report on. it* Investiga-
tion of “violatipM of free speech
and righu of labor,’,’ charged to-
day ......
Trades Association "create* fi
danger to orderly governmeM.'’.
. .. .. _____ The Association, an organiza-
content by the house to withdraw tioD of em{doyers in the metal
his name as author.. trades industry, maintains head-
“I am convinced it la a bad quartere to Chicago
MH,” Wtofree Mid to asking that’
Ala name be withdrawn. ’*1
would have to vote against it If
It came ap on the floor.”
Wmfree said t ha The had intro-
duced the measure by request, and
b Branded Menace &&££&£
program for coattoentai eolidsr-
ODESSA, April •. tlH?>—Offi-
cer# who questioned a Mexican
------------ ------„....., woman at Veraon In oonaoetton
that tho NittSBM -Metal4 wi,h th* fatal abaatlag of" Ba-
ford Armstrong relumed tore,
today and anouoecd that the wo-
man was not involved to the
nemi-pro baseball player’s death.
BERLIN. April 6. «3-Na*i
officials disclosed today that
Poland had rejected * German
proposal for settlement of east-
ern European controversies, to-
eluding Cession of DMUdc to tho
rekk. .
RpME, April 6. (13—Premier
Benito Mussolini mad* a sudden
airplane visit of Inspection to Jesi
military air field, 19 miles wait of
the Adriatic port of Ancona, today,
a* Europe waitatTfor new* that
TECHNICIAN KILLS SELF
HOUSTON. April 6 (13-Nor-l
man M. Devito, 34, oil laboratory
technician who suffered a nervpu* i
breakdomm strangled Kimseif with
had doctood that It was a “price- a hospital rirngt, Rotate of the
fixing" bOL Peac# Tom Maas rated today.
Says .......—.......
Business Signs Point Up
1. Labor troubles dying out.
2. Political picture better.
3. No war this spring. ,
4. Raw materials cheap.
5. Inventories at rock bottom. ^
6. Profit margins good.
7. “Fear” <mly draw back. *
Read Babeon's Baatneaa AnAiyala On Page .1
Ordering a threo-motored bomb-
ing {dope mad* ready tor him,
BELGRADE, Jugo*tovtt, A«ir ~-
6, (UJh—Reports spread today that
all Jugoslav army commanders had
been ordered to Belgrade for con-
sultation regarding Italy’* demands
on Albania.: ; ' mffMm
to join to * general discoaslMi as
part of which army chief* would
Mussolini took Decontrols him- give-their opinion of the situation
self and flew from the Littoria air- which might arise if Italy occu-
port here to Jesi. V
There he inspected the pilote of
the royal yir force base and bomb
% had pureuit plane* were lined
up awaiting him.
Afterward he viritod the town of
Jeai and, after driving through the
etraeta in an open car. to the en-
thusiaatic cheer* of the people, ha
flew back to Rome and to his offlee
at the Vastica palace.
It was noted that the air field
is northeast of Rome, and not to
to* direction of Albania. Ancona is
99 mile* west of the Jugoslav
..........
DEVELOPMENTS IN EUROPE
HOUSTON, April 6. «J9 -
Jerry Sadler, mafority member
of the Texa* rsilroad commis-
sion, said today he would cat) ter
*’~-h>hamtowtft-agataet suit*-
contesting the commission's
April oil prorstion order cut-
ting Gulf Coast production.
Small Craft Warning
Houted Along Coast
HOUSTON, April e <t'P>-Small
craft Warning* were hoisted on
the Texaa coast today by the V.
f r“r, „ ,*rrr. “
Th, '“*■ -
a high pressure ares moving into
pied Albania., W-
h was added, however, that there
was no official information regard-
ing protectorate, plana and that
Italy had kept the Jugoslav gov-
ernment informed of it* negotia-
tion* with Albania.
The belief was expreeeed that
Italy might make military demon-
strations such as troop
tion* to back up demands :
nomic and financial -----
Italy notified the
was announced, that
take measures “to
tlkania *
u* re sin in aiowiji.
Texas from to* Northwest
bureau said.
- ' -
fight for iadepeadence; i
I.OMHis Britain sad Poland conclude firm mutual
alliance; arrival of Italian warships off Duraaso. Albai
in common*. * ; ~ V ' jfc ■ :
TIRANA—Altodna ready I* ______
iste threaten armed revolt if government bows
BELGARDE—Italy notifies Jugssliris rim
Interest*" to Albania; all Jugoalavtofi anay ear
called to capital for consultation.
HERLIN—MasaoUnl and Hitler
T'-lwawf
; *'
Mi*
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 246, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1939, newspaper, April 6, 1939; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101150/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.