The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 232, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
(Jlje jBailj) J5un Under The Dome At Austin
Published eafh week day afternoon by The Daily Sun Company,’
119 West Pearce Street, Goose' Creek,Texas. •, /'
«FRED HARTMAN. Editor
“ 0 ROBERT MATHERNE. business Manager
SUBSCRIPTION KATES:
Month, 75c ; «'Months, $4:lS; Year, $8 00. "
Special K^e To Men In Service—«r>0c Month’
All Mail Subscriptions Payable In Advance.
.Uered »s sedftnd class matter at Gno<e Creek, Texas, post
By Gordon K. Shearer and Ted Read
similar Casks
AUSTIN Since Henian Marion Swcatt, negro, ap-
plied for admittance to the University of Texas Law
school, frequent question is heard here about how a
a similar situation was handled at the University
of Missouri. -- .
Inquiry‘shows a startling similarity of the two
Ct.a'be answered, that the Missouri
case netfr eariilMn-a--showdown, Lloyd B
who made the application in Missouri, failed to ap-
Labor Crisis Passes
Utopia has not been reached oh the in-
dustrial front, and all is not peace and har-
mony, but there are signs that the situa-
tion has improved since the current siege
of strikes started right here in Texas last
September and since then has swept the
country like a norther earning across the
Lone Star state from the Panhandle.
Estimates say that there are still about
a half million out on strikes in the country,
and although* this is an astounding total
it is better than the January figure which
had 1,750,000 persons away from,their jobs
for reasons of money and grievance.
Oil refinery strikes along the gulf coast
last fall when 80.000 left their jobs, was a
starter. The most lengthy of all walkouts
was the General Motors tie up which went
on and on and on to nearly 120 days be-
fore settlement came.
“pear when ms case wax called for trial On the ques-
tion of whether a state Inw course in a negro col-
lege met constitutional requirements,
‘Nothing mo’re has been heard from Gaines,"
the United Press correspondent at Columbia. Mo.
writes.
One of the similarities in the Missouri and Texas
cases is that in each the Negro, applicant is a for-
if Mi
mer student at the University of Michigan.
Gaines made lus bid to enter the University of
Missouri 10 years ago. The registrar refused to, en-
roll-him. Then Gaines went to the Board of Cura-
tors and was again refused. Next he asked a state
court for a writ of mandamus to compel his ad-
mittance. He said .he was a Missouri taxpayer
and that the Missouri Law school offered oppor-
tunities which could not be obtained outside the
state < Missouri like Texas had a fund for pro-
yidift^ schooling for. Negroes outside the state
vFhcri? Negro schools did not provide courses they
wanted.'
Like Texas, too Missouri had a constitution pro-
vision segregating, the white and negro races in
schools.
The judge decided for the University of Missouri,
and so did the Missouri Supreme Court on appeal.
The Improving picture does not mean
that the strikes are over, either. John L.
lewis’ coal miners—400.000 of them—pose
the biggest problem at the moment. But
the pattern seems to have been set. All this
country ever ask is a pattern to follow.
America in the past has lived, up to or lived
down to any situation that, the era called
for. This one of uncertainty and doubt
will prove no harder than other barriers
that have been hurdled before.
The labor crisis was met iust as nearly
everv other crisis was met in historv. With-
out the word “compromise” in all of. its
ramifications, there probably would be no
America today. Compromise has beeh the
key to the labor solution too. Oil asked
for 30 per cent and got IS. Auto unions
asked the same and took 19 >4. Likewise
steel. Both sides mav hail they won vic-
tories, but in the end it was* compromise
that brought about settlement.
And both sides did not win. Neither side
won. Both sides lost in every strike. Man-
agement lost production, and the laborer
lost his pavcheck. Five years front now
General Motors’" workers who were off.
their jobs for nearly four months will still
the window does not come back. Neither
does that which a worker loses by refusing
to work.
Labor did win this victory. It apparently
passed the crisis without being forced to
engage all other cross-sections of Ameri-
can life-in a pitched battle. The public
never turned against the working man. but
if production had continued to be throttled
much longer to the detriment of the pub-
lic as a whole, labor may have come out
second best in a battle with a foe that
would make big business look like small-
town battlers. We refer, of course, to-those
millions of Americans who are neither un-
ionists or bosses but who, in a pinch, still
run the country. -
ENTRY UPHELD
THEN THE CASE went to the United States Su-
preme Court and on December 12, 1938, the* court
ruled that Gaines must be admitted'to the Uni-
versity of Missouri, until a satisfactory law school
was provided at Lincoln university. Lincoln, uni-
versity occupied the position that Prairie View does
in the Texas controversy, but had university rating.
Two justices of the U. S. Supreme Court dis-
sented from the majority opinion- written by Chief
Justice Hughes. Hughes said in the opinion thsyt
offering a legal education in an out-Of-state school
wofild not meet the constitutional requirement for
“equal” opportunity.
Meantime Missouri had scurried around with a
legislative appropriation and the Lincoln Law
school was set up in St. Louis. Gaines did not en-
roll there but again applied for admittance at the
University of Missouri in Columbia, and he was
again refused.
Then Gaines brought, another maodamds suit on
the contention that the two law schools were not.
.equal. When time came for trial on this application,
Gaines did not appear..
So there it stands apparently with a decision that-
providing advanced courses outside the state is riot
sufficient, but no ruling on whether law- instruction
in one state supported university is better or worse
tnan that of another,
* Almost as numerous as the questions about what
happened in the Missouri case have been inquiries
for what the views of Dr. Homer Price Rainey,
former,-president of the university, were about ad-‘
mittance of Sweatt to the University of Texas LSiw
school.
Four years ago, according to the Daily Texan,
university newspaper, Dr. Rainey, .who then was
university president, ,Dr. T. O. Walton, who then
School Superintendent L. A. Wools all agreed and
advocated that Prairie View Normal School, for
Negroes be equipped to afford educational facilities
for Negroes equal to those for white students.
That’ brings on another interesting phase of the
Missouri case. Maintaining the Lincoln Law school
has been quite costly per student.
The practice there, according to information
here, is to send the Missouri University law school
faculty to St. Louis to conduct .classes for the
negroes. Highest number of negroes to'enroll has
been five,,
In Texas similar procedure would call for trips
for the University of Texas- law faculty from Aus-
tin to Prairie View which is near Hempstead.
Bears, according to a nature item, actually (fo not
hug humans. However, those who have been.
caught in.a bruin’s embrace will insist it's an un
reasonable fai
ac3imile thereof.
My home in Brookfield is not very, far from the
Greenwich-Stamford section of Connecticut which
the. United* Nations committee has picked for its
permanent site. ,
You ha$c all heard about the different reasons
why the people of Connecticut don't want the
UNO, They don’t want to be thrown out of their
"And just look at ’em-over in Londpn, Here they
ard
homes. Toy don’t want to lose taxes. They think it,
will hurt business. They are afraid it will hurt
property values. And there are many other reasons
Wei
ell, up where we livc-there are no’ big estates
and. there Isn’t much business to speak of. But
there is a lot of. good, common norse sense. The
people in our part of the country-are mostly farm-
ers whose farnrfs have been owned by the. same
families for generations.
Many are of Polish extraction, quite a fow are
Irish, some Italians, some just, plain Yankees. But
all arc New Englanders' and A’evy Englanders are
Americans. •
Every one of the folks in our section of the coun-
try to whom I talked is against having the UNO
around. But it isn’t just because of taxes arid prop-,
ertv’ values and sentimentality.
•‘We are a peaceful people arouhd here,” said
one of my neighbors-to me, ‘‘and we mind our own
business.” t
. -yve don’t want asyiSl nationalities come among
us and set up a foreign country and bring thfcir
turbans amf their camels and thyir strange ways
with them.
with 'Cffrtr dth*?F iirfcT spSalT'a rorrqnon language of
nc.ighhdrliiicss that all of us can understand with-
out’any interpreters.
"Why, if the UNO were anywhere near my house
Id feel that I'd have to keep a loaded revolver
next’to my bed every night.”
This fellow who told, me all that is no economist.
But he is a substantial -farmer and so was his'fa-
ther before him arid likewise his grandfather. Awl.-
God willing,* his children will be farmers and their
children after them. ’ ■ V *
■ The UNO is a wonderful idea and a. wonderful
dream. But before they build their-marble palaces
njar my doorstep I’d like to see the lelcgatcs go to -
a little "ted schoolhouse first to learn something
about, the Golden Rule.
GRAB BAG
Ohe-Mlnute Test
1. Who was elected president
of the United Nations General
^Assembly r
2. Who succeeded Gen. Charles
de Gaulle as the interim president
of France?
3. Plans are being made for a
world championship fight in be
hold in Yankee- stadium, New
York, in June. Who will the fight-
ers he?
Eas^ Knowledge
fidence of yhur friends and associ-
ates, and your love is wholeheart-
ed and sincere. In the early morn*
ing hours of your birthday a
Wooster Church Plans
Ordination Service
heavy argument may ensure from
the expression of vyour opinion,
Words of Wisdom
I never knew a man of letters
ashamed of his profession. Tha-
ckeray.
Bargain hunting is favored by the
rays emanating from Jupiter a
little later. Later still this morn-
ing don’t expect to avoid any re-
sponsibilities. Carry out all tasks
you have assigned to you. The
moon enters Virgo at 12:35 p.m.
This afternoon, take precautions
which arc concerned vith fire,
such as safety and insurance.
Hints on Etiquette
If you have a quarter of a head
of lettuce on your plate, whether
voti are eating at home or in a
illc place, it Is permissible to
cut It With ft knife rather tfuiif
to wrestle conspicuously, with a
fork. As a general thing,
are eaten.only -With a fork.
One-Mimile Test Answers
1. Faul-Henri Speak, Belgium
foreign minister.
2. Felix Gouln.
3. Chapmlon Joe Ixruis
challenger Billy Conn, ■.
and
Electronic Suicide-
modest and unassum-
ortheless you have a
llty that enables
* a leading-part in all
re the entire
SHORT-LIVED PURCHASE
CREYBULL, Dyo.tliPl Shortly
after a Greybull man purchased a
used truck, drove It up to a curb
and parked It, the vehicle burst
into flames. Firemen were called
and quickly doused the blaze. They
attributed It to a careless smoker
tossing a mptch away.
THE DAILY SUN, GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
howume. I
YOU/MV t«Ut(
'd4
"LIP SERVICE TO DEMOCRACY"
Five Years Ago
Looking M Life--......... ......>Erichm
DALLAS, March 15. H-.P> Park-
Innd • hospital attendants are ac-
quainted with many forms of at-
tempted suicide, bur they told
about a new one today. •
A 47-year-old Dallas man sma-
shed a radio tube and drank, the
mercury inside. They reported he
will
From Daily Sun Files
. Today’s Headlines:
British Troops Mass in Greece,
Ready to Accept Nazi Challenge
Pelly To Have Long Ballot; 11
Candidates seeking office.
The Imperial army of the Nile
has been strengthened beyond
comparison it was revealed to-
day and,-now is prepared to meet;
Adolf Hitler’s . Wermacht “on
whatever field of battle the fueh-
rer. may choose in these parts.”
Eleven candidates have filed as
candidates to fiH the offices of
mayor, two aldermen, city mar-
shal and city judge.
Joe Dunham has been elected
president of the. La Porte Gun
club.
Mrs. George W. Bruce and Mrs.
Thomas-W. Moore were announc-
ed as chairman and assistant
chairman, respectively, of the
style slww sponsored by the Par-
ish Guild of Trinity Episcopal
church.
Florida has a true-to-name
guaranty taw providing heavy,
penalties if, within seven years
from purchase, of citrus or other
nursey stock, it can be proved
the trees were "not of the vari-
ety claimed.
Barclay On Bridge
By Shephard Barclay
DO IT LIKE A PUZZLE
IT WELL-pay a declarer...to fig-
ure out the various alternatives in
the suit led against his No Trump
game contract. He should treat it
like a puzzle. Let him say to him-
-stflfrin effect: “Nowrif I play this
card, the situation will be such-
andsuch. and the defenders can
do thus-and-so; if. however. I play
that card, then the situation will
be so-and-so and-the defenders can
only do so-and-so.” Often 'that
kind of calculation in the impor-
tant first suit can decide the en-
tire fate of the eontraet, —-
4 J 6
. . V Q 10 6 ,
♦'A Q J 8 6
+ A 4 3
♦ A K 10 4
*92
♦ K 5 3
+ KQ85
48 3 2
* A J 8 5,3
*9 4 2
*7 8
4 Q 9 7 5
*K 7 4
4 10 7 ..
* J 10 9 2 ’
(Dealer; North. North-South
have hardly started, and already they are fighting
about something else at every session
"if that organization comes over here, all those
fights will be right In our neighborhoods. Our chil-
dren will read about the scraps and pretty soon '
tncy will be fighting among themselves.
"Why doesn't the UNO stay over there where
they have- been fighting for centuries?. Wo don't
want any part of Iran or Greece or China or
Indonesia.' •
"We want to milk our cows and raise our grain
and sell our eggs and our chickens, and wc want
our factories to produce and our people to get along'"
vulnerable.)
North
East
South
West
!♦
Pass
1 NT
Pacs
2*
Pass
24
Pass
3 NT
Pass
2 NT
Pass
because then East would have
“Been in position to run the wjiole
suit when West' got in the lead
again and played through the Q-8.
So South played low. East then
switched to the spade 8. West
“ used Tils K and led his last heart,
East playing the A and firing back
the spade 3. The A got that, for
the defenders' fourth trick, and
West rel urned the club K.
South scored the club A, heart
K spade Q and five diamonds
when the finesse worked, for a to-
tal of eight tricks But he had to
give up the last, to-theclub Q.
If South had studied the heart
suit, he-would have seen that the
Q was the right play on the first
trick. It would have assured him
two tricks if East played low. or
if he took the A and led the suit
back No matter what East did, it
w-ould have limited the defense to
one trick in hearts, giving South
time to develop two tricks in
clubs, plus five in diamonds and
one each in the majors.
Tomorrow’s Problem
4 K 7 5 2
*8 7 ■
4 A K 9 7 5 2
4Q.J9 3
Pretty brave bidding, that by
South, when he reopened It with
his 2-No Trumps, and also fairly
bold by North In taking it to
game. South got his chance to
make it, but didn’t, because of one
incorrect play, his very first at
•that.-'
. West led the 9 of his partner's
heart suit. After a cursory glance,
South put on the TO from dummy,
and East was smart enough to
play the J instead of the A. South
. did not dare take that with his K,
DAILY CROSSWORD
FRIDAY, MARCH 15, „
A JOB FOR JENNY
Faith Ba/chOih
OrrrrtiM. m4.iMt.ie roo, Bddwfc bnhr.ll
V brantrsuTED by kino features syndicate
CODE)
saMF. n>'
IN'DI /VN a f 1
. of tin
pline
extra
I
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE I Justice Said, "No doubt he was
JENNY DID not go to, the door getting gas for his personaLusc
with Steve. She,hea^d him stop and from the black market. He isn t
s ay
■She
heard
gS-qfcjTnght to Gram and Ede.
heard the screen door close
and, faintly, the motor of the car
start. She sat quite still. If he
wanted to be that way, she thought
helplessly, angered because she was
helpiess, because she couldn’t be of
service, because she couldn’t get
him interested in something not
only obviously his duty, but which
would release his grief and self-
reproach in action. She wandered
into the kitchen, a little later, and
stood watching Gram replace her
best glasses on a shelf and Ede
take off her apron and pick up the
bottle of hand lotion. She said, as
Gram looked at her inquiringly,
“You. just can't reach him, some-
how. Two, three years ago he
wpuidn’t have been like this; he'd
be out and tearing the roof off the
town.”
Ede said, "It’s shock, Jennjfc” and
Gram said, "You must give him
time."
But, Jenny thought, the time Is
NOW. She said as much to Justice
Hathaway later. He had been very
considerate since Bert Barton's
death. They had worked together
amiably, impersonally, and she was
abstractedly grateful to him. And
so, at the close of a busy, difficult
day, when he proposed that he take
her for a drive and then home, she
consented wearily.
They drove out by the sea road
and no wind blew, the air was still
and unstirring, and the gulls cried
plaintively. Jenny sat beside Jus-
tice, hep bright hair curling around
her small face. But when he took
the turn that would bring them
past wlmt wa*s left of the Barna-
cle she said, “Let's not go this way,
Justice,” and he nodded, and took
the other road, the, one which led
back away from the shore line and
through the mall outlying fishing
town, filled; even in wartime, with
summer visitors ... a road set
with salt-box houses, old trees,
picket fences, covered with late
roses or morning-glories, and filled
with the smell of salt and sea even’
at this distance, a winding country
road, dipping in arid out of villages,
She said. "What bn earth is hap-
pening to the investigation ?’’
Justice said easily, "Why do you
distress yourself so, Jenny?”
She said, "Are you crazy? It has
to be put through at once.”
"t don't think so. It won't hap-
pen again. The authorities have
been all through the othpr places, I
understand. Fir.e-tooth comb. They
have found nothing. What hap-
pened at the Barnacle was—an ac-
cident It won’t; be repeated. The
Tnqn is being held. No doubt he'll
get a sentence.
Jenny said, "You can’t dismiss It
so easily. What about the gasoline?
What was it doing in—a bucket, in
the drums on the place? And-the
liquor.” ' .
thC'’bnly dbe;T dare say. And. as for
tneiiquor,^there's no proof that it
was sold on the premises.”
"Two of the boys in Northam
hospital have made statements.’’
said Jenny, "that it was sold to
them ...”
Justice shrugged. He said, "Well,
that’s on the manager's plate-
lip*"
what’s his name—Leslie
"It’s on the plate of whoever
owns these places,” she said.
"The real estate company?" said
Justice. "Jenny, you are taking .this
too hard. I realize, of course, that
it’s because of Dr. Barton ...”
She said slowly, “Not entirely. I
was there, Justice. I saw ...” She
shuddered and stopped. After a
while she said, “All those kids.”
He took his hand from the wheel
and i«t it over hers. He said, "I’d
like to hear you laugh again. Do
you realize that there are a great
many things we-have still to say
to each other? Unfinished busi-
ness," he reminded per.
She moved her hand, and he put
his back on the wheel. He said, ’’I
laughed, shortly. "\VhPn , ,
LIT- ’ she added re,necti\'eiv
always making up .S|nri:.
myself, in which 1 re^ *
from runaway horses bfV*
HAH
He. was silent. Then he a,,,j
courteously, "Whom have
rescuing lately ?"
"Ede,” she said. “Oh
needn’t have 'bothered^ WhaS
there was between you it’s ^
and bps been for a long' time 9
tainiy, on vmir nn»t. ‘V®
TFJEE'l
1 J 8
hers. I wouldn't know. Buff*’
barge in, full of zeal ami
to prove to her that once"?*
always a wolf. Little Red tti*1
ViAftri » ...... . ..
-Sii
hood," said Jenny bitterly.
He said, "I'm trying to
yo^rbuTnkg^tting^^
Jenny said, after a moment <
sounds so 'utterly fantuS
thought if I could prove to k
that you could be interested inj
too ...”
"Say no more,’ said Junic, „
laughed with astonishment;
..... Just a red-headed herrit
Portrait!
lasting
Rapid
I m a singularly pa- S&TS !
"It’s late. Let's get
can wait. -, .
tient man.”
Shp said,
back to town
The past days had almost erased
her xomplicated relationship .with
her employer from her mind. Driv-
ing back In pilence, she thought
that it had almost erased her trou-
ble over Ede as well. Her own ab-
surd little plotting seemed remote
and theatrical. Little sister gallant-
ly sacrifices self for misguided older
sister, she thought. And that’s
stupid. "
Ede was a grown woman. She
had to mrke her own decisions,
commit her own sins and suffer her
own penalties. All Jenny had suc-
ceeded in doing was to frighten her
. , . and fright is scarcely a firm
basis for morality. Well, a basis,
perhaps, sometimes, but it had to
go beyond that, thought, Jenny. Be-
sides, she knew—and had known
as long ago as the Country club
dance—that Ede’s affair with Jus-
tice-was cm the way out before she,
Jenny, had known of its existence.
He said, at this juncture, ”A pen-
ny for your thoughts ... the’good
old-fashioned kind, which doesn’t
look like a dime.” .
She said, "I -was thinking how
dumb I’ve been !’*
His heart quickened. He asked
cautiously, ’’Not about,mt, by any
chance?”
“Yes,” said Jenny. She was so
tired she didn’t care w hat she said.
She thought. I may as well set him
straight, once and for all. and if it
costs me my Job, well, I'll get an-
other.
He asked, “Are you thinking of
n*”
fore.’
6L
the other night,, m the garden
The other night ?. A ydar, a world
away.
She said, ’’Not ipeciScallv." 3he
She said thoughtfully, "Fv
thing, but I was a little in love »<|
you . . . oh, In an adolescent, pi^
ant sort of way . . . like haviu
crusn on a screen hero or even m
high school teacher. . . . Thai!
before the night at the Co^
club." . -
"And then?” he Inquired.'
fell but.”
. “I fell out.”
"Well," said Justice,
teresting."
She said, "I don't think to, j
any mod. You and Ede . .
it was never up to me I could g
ister disapproval, djsgust. all l
things I felt, but . . Hertj
trailed off. She said. "I'm a dope
Ede wanted to mess up her t>q
life for something that traa
worth a darn to begin with-*
that’a her business. The people 9
cemed in it are herself anti you.1:
husband snd. I suppose,' she*#
"your wife, although as shtiM
been awfully real to me, I nippi
she was even less real to Ede. i
her sister, all I could do about
was hate the whole busmen fa
my heart and he .sorry
stand by, If site had needed
wanted my help she would la
asked for it. But no, I had I
myself in the angel-from-hai
role. ... I don't any more"
Justice said after a meal
“You’re making a mistake, Jeng
“Oh,” she said, "I suppose
It s habit forming, isn't it?",
He said, "You've said the 1
thing which, being honest snde
calculated, ia enough to
me tliat I am r..ally falling ini
with you . .
” (To Be Continued!
Pelly
News Behind The News
By Paul Mdl
WASHINGTON Now let me explain the latest
Truman-Bowles wage price policy issued Mondays
Bars to wage increases are to be removed ail’d
patterns established with ifs, ands, and buts. One
of the ifs provides and 1814 cents an hour in-
crease if the local pattern permits, but not neces-
sarily, In case this provision- doe* not apply, tpe
cost-of-jlving pattern will become a but, although
not automatically. Th*e cost-of-living pattern will
become a But, although not automatically. The
cost-of-living pattern is changed from and here I
quote the 'official explanation "an increase ’in
doualy, but not too much, greatly, a Uttifc i
and maybe not,' but the price formula is ntti I
liberalized one inch in the struggle to holt
bulge against inflation; that is, not ‘for any!
and by this I mean not anything.,**) far a
steel, building materials, fuel, clothing,
dresses, sugar, butter and other foods and 1
material*.
This Is the way they tell it—officially. Vet 1
wonder why there is confusion.’
4 A 10 6 4
»AKH
♦ 8
* A 10 4*2 -
(Dealer: South. Both aides vul-
nerable.)
Why might a bidder with under-
standing and intuition in- the
South fear a 6-Spades contract on
thil deal and not fear 6-No
Trumps?- '
straight-time hourly earnings in. the appropriate
unit to the extent” that. Increases had fallen short
of a 33 per cent increase since January 1. 1941.
That is the old, old pattern since February 14. It
is to be changes to—’ quote again—"increases in
basic wages if hourly wages of the appropriate unit
have,not risen 33 per cent since January l, 1941.”
This is th«- different wage policy as the official
handout present it. Different, isn’t It?
Controls Being Lessened In
Hope For Extension Of Power
Admjniftration Explains One
Way And Acts Quite Another
ACROSS
DOWN
14 Large roof-
1. Craze
1. Metal rings
-Jng slate
4. Bounder
about
16. Plead
7. State flower
a cane
19 Vex
•* (Utah),
2. Grown old
20 Mischief
8. Sleeveless
3. Female deer
(Colloq)
garments
4. Caverns
21. Gymnasts
10. Woody
5. Tiicltd
23. Beam
perennial
6. Long click
24. Slice
11. Waistcoat
(Teleg-
25. Plant insect
12. Poet
raphy)
26. Distress
13. Lower
7. Not fresh
signal
n:4r4 awa
HK3K rauaH
ynauu anagw
Yesterday
? tl
■ Answer
An ordination service will be
held at Wooster Baptist church
at 7 p.m. today to ordain eight
men Of the church as deacons.
Rev. L. C. Chapman, pastor of
the Wooster church, Rev. Bert
Mattingly, of Channelview, ROv.
Tructt Parker of Stpwart Heights
Baptist church, Rev. J. I. F.
Tharp, First Baptist church of
Pelly, Rev. E; U Burns, Cedar
Bayou Baptist church and pas-
tors of other Trl-Citics churches
wtil purticipnte- In the ceremonies.
Rev. Mattingly will preach the
sermon. *
Members to be ordained are J.
E. Starling, J. F. LaVoice,, J. F,
Hickersqn, S. L. Sarver, M. E.
Walsh, H. E. Clcr, J. S. Johnson
and R. A. Wolfe.
15. Eskimo
tool
16. God of
pleasure
17. Radium,
(sym.)
18. Easement
20. Suspend
22. Unit of
work
23. Fabulous
bird
24. Hogshead
26 Cavalry
swprds
29. Aloft
30, Young >
man
31. Fetish
(W. Ind.)
32, One of the
12 apostles
35. Wild goat
36 -Sacred
image
If, Sandarat
tree
38. Plunge Into
water
39. Hand
covering
40. Boy’s
nickname
tl. Donkpy
9. Severe
12: Prickly
envelop of
a fruit
13. Medieval
vessel
27. President of
Germany
(1919-25)
18. Number
30. Made Into
a bundle
33 Norse war
gpd
34 To.stir
35. Flower
37 Wine re-
ceptacle
THE PRICE POLICY is explained with equal sim-
plicity. The new policy--! quote again "will not
mean u new higher level of prices."' There arc
no ifs, and, or buts about this. Upon this Bowles
is firm. H<3 QPA, however, simultaneously provided
a but, if not'a ijutt -or buttj. At the very moment
of the Bowles announcement, it made public a gen-
eral increase in the prices of Then’s and boys’
clothing in- order to induce manufacturers to re-
lease their stores jo the public. Twenty-four hours
‘earlier OPA authorized what It called ’’substan-
, tial rises in cotton textile prices" to spur produc-
tion of shirts and dresses. Just before that, a.gen-
eral rise of 10 cents a barrel in,the price of oil had
been authorized by the same official agency tinder
Bowles, Steel had been sent up-by the government
12 to $12 a Ton Building material increases, had
been directed by OPA on lumber specifically and
an announcement was issued bragging about the
tremendous Increases, which, the government said,
do longer justified the weftk production of such
materials. Too numerous for this terse column were
other additional price buts, butts- or buttes. .
Now do you understand? If not I will put it in a
nutshell’; where it seems to be anyhow. The recent
wage increase formula Is to be liberalized, tremen
SERIOUSLY I do not think they arc as confull
they say. I think I Can detect a ray of light bd
the flimsy curtain of words; namely this;
The government tried to increase, wages ■nd
increasing prices and found this could not bed
Good;, were backed up in some lines because!
could hot bo sold at a profit., These were b
kept m storage Production waa- diacoursiid
other line* because it could not be attempted F
ably, A readjustment was necessary in orderJ*
distribution as well as production. This wash
er advisable as a discouragement to black m*rl
Indeed some black markets had become bigger >
the white. iFor further explanation look hack!
my columns of the past two weeks. 1 From » X
cftl standpoint also- the relaxations wert
visnble In order to encourage congress to n
presidential authority over economics in th«
powers acts expiring June 30. , •
This maneuver is being covered by as f0l!
ing d curtain of "explanations" as ever omsa
from a government mimeograph machine, »»“
is saying something as those machines
dom been geared for frankness.
Styled f
ME
su
Now the state of Ohio wants an atom
It’s getting so nowadays that almost unvhodf
has a spare atom or two on hand has an irr("
sible urged/to bust it.
The government has dropped TOO of its
naires. This Just about turns the quiz bus®®
most exclusively over to radio.
Horse and buggy days are gone forever, “f*
editorial. How about the county fair harn«s*
meeting?
Gsnllsman—
iaq lor 81.
inq lor labile
oit top tailor
*h* suits ior
n
n
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r
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For Classified Ad* Phone 520-521
CONCRETE
PIPE
Delivered to You, and
Spotted In Place
Size 12" to 60" Diameter
• TONGUE-GROOVE
Concrete Septic Tanks
CEDAR BAYOU
CONCRETE CO.
JOHN VOPARIL
East .Tames Road Next to
^Midway Garage.
Phone 522-M
Plano Tuner
For the Goose Creek Ind.
School District. „
Free Estimates on Repairs
F. M. WORDEN
P.O. Box 1273—Baytown, Texas
WILLIAMS
CHIROPRACTIC ClJNK>
Dr. A. C. William*
Dr. Rosa Williams
Lincoln Graduates
107 N. Commerce LhoSi
Goose Creek, Texas
★ HATS
iCREEN WIRE
Both Copper and Galvanized
POULTRY WIRE
One and two Inch mesh
CEDAR POSTS 50c EACH
- 800 ftood V pout* *
Phon# Highland* 2641 or apply.
Highland Farms Corporation
Highlands, Texas
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 232, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1946, newspaper, March 15, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100960/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.