The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 255, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 10, 1945 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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MONDAY,
instruction*
n of Mr.
«. ssi s.
Fort Sam
t to the
through the ’
the rating'^';
He held
geant
fv_
of tpC? B.
inawa Artillery
X - jy
aduate of
:hool and
liege, was
^graduation
TRY SUN i
PARTS
iricans Hit
Defense
Naha
m
WEATHER
— and
ACCESS
FOR
JOW CAR!
OU NEED
_J JRR ' MOST!
'ERIENCE, WE’VE FOUND
OTORISTS NEED PARTS
NIGHT AND ON sun.
»VHEN YOU CAN’T SET
vhere-soasacon.
I'Siegfried Line'
L u, S. Gains To
[Hundred Yards
II, April 10. —(U.P.)—
j»W today that Amer-
feiopg have landed on
w island controlling
ace to nearly-con-
Nakagusuku bay
snehorage in south-
Itf Okinawa,
VOL. 27 NO. 2S5
1ST AH
■
• * V
;’■? VI
TEXAS TUESDAY, APRIL 10. 1945
y. •*
V r>(1
--—
—
----------------
m NEW A
troop* spearing along the
- (y on Okina
e Station 311
“RUSTY” RUSSELL
W |1B§
■ I
r< the bay on Okinawa ad-
[ more than a mile and a
, Onaha, on the edge of
airfield and a mile and
.half north of the port of
i itself, a Tokyo Dome!
ast said. ,
destroyers and other
ady have entered
the broadcast
„ sources were unable
, the reported cast Coast
nts, bfft said the great-
H duel of the Pacific
t under way in the south-
sector as the 24th
t rorps stormed deeper into
i shielding the capital city
[Hob-to-Hub
0. P. Smith, deputy chief
for the 10th army, said
fbattaiions of artillery were
; the ground forces than
\ before in the Pacific. TO*
■ of guns per yard
equals the maximum
in warfare he said,
emv’s shellbursts became
tat one point" tKiTaBat-
j commander was unable to
[itis foxhole to answer an 1m-
message on a field tele-
e five feet away, A s ignal -
[had to shout the message.
I looks like we finally are
the Japs' main defense
i the island," one officer
said American troops
lonTsukata island some
Indies off the southeast coast
KgjttArtUlery.Fage 2) .
British Break Nazis’ Italian Line
Mew Drive Heads
Toward Northern
Industrial Area
Greaf A^a! Offensive
Paves Way For Attack
can Planes
let Fields
7 v '
0 Bombers Blast
Airf
ROME, April 10. —tUJ?>— A new
British Eighth army offensive
crumpled the Adriatic wing of the
German defenses in Italy, carried =
•over the Senlo river on a broad
front, and today spilled out over
the eastern Po plain between Bo- •
logna and Ravenna. : .
Gen. Mark W.. Clark, comman-
der of allied fordcs in. Italy, an-
-nounced"thut the Eighth army at-~-
tacked yesterday evening after a
pulverizing air assault in the Sen-
io sector by almost ail of the. air
forces in this theater.
The first onrush of Lt. Gen.
Sir Richard McCreery’s forces
broke the Senio river line. His as- '
sault forces swept across the
stream on a broad front around *
Lugo., 27 miles east of Bologna
and 18 miles west of Ravenna.
The eruption in the eastern
coastal sector of Italy set both
end of the long dormant front in
motion. The U, S. Fifth army was
plugging northwestward alohg.thc
Ligurian coast in a close in
(See New Drive, Page 2)
■ > . ■ ■
.r’ii
91
\
four Totes Block
Americans 115 Miles
From Berlin; Bremen
And Hannover “
'Smm
mm• to
Ss*P*to«
* n#T. erful armored
[loll Bill German centr
iswii tnn west of theca
Convention
10. -(U.P.1—The American
front in the push on Berii'tf tt
annored and Infantry drive that rip
German central lines before Nordhausen,
west of the capital. \
Front dispatches said Lt. GcnH
r
Jfcroid O
•atom
For Hmim-Ot _ their new .tuck
Delegate* Dr4NoW
AUSTIN. ^ Agl JO. -W^tlw
proposal of Sen, T. C Chadlck
of Quitman for « conventionto
write an entire new constitution
fbr the state lacked torn of the
required 21 senate votes today,
but wus engrossed by If. ayes to
23 Does, ■. 4 * ‘.-f’V <►><. - .
Opponents offered to waive
rules and tak.o an immediate fin-.
:j$r$t<toTp' tmuiWIck SBr<riie
hills of the Harz mountains early today, on the
18-mile advance yesterday
that shattered the Nazi de-
fenses along the Weser and
Lei no river*.
Budges' men started at day-
break along a 30-mlIe front loop-
ing into jvlthin 183 miles of Ber-
A 'list.4
A harm
mmmm
■tosOM "tot ft oi.t^ ‘
Debate revealed that some of
the opposition was because Chad*
ick iproposed to name delegates to
mmmm.
Germany ffi.P.t—
. £
UU* morning
gj»4„ I Bavaria
SmjUmSmimJZ Itlw,, „d
and Canadian force* had
t°lP7re thM 200'000 '
delegate* at large was tabled,
however, by vote of 15 ayes to 1*
sH
but one of the' land
against only dcwiUory opposition, routes for perhaps!
■At Nordhausen the American* caught in western Holland,
Elbe lng open only a narrow, l
tburg, »pattered causeway along
from a Juncture with . IZn Jm mites from th“ tS
front and an armored co-
waa hboking: northward
nuua. AI i>urAHi«uauu .ww auic
Voice votes amended the pro- be M
^ ^ HHHi
British forces in the north struck along the Dutch-German
22“»-si •
thsn
itv jvcu ami;, ftdiAn
delegates to theproposed convcn- At thesametlma American and- lumn was 'S»*ing
Brunswick, the
miles due west
German
American
armies on the
hid I......
headed for the Nari
a>f Nuernberg.
F«r beh'
DEATH
American
Pvt BUI JHmrner-
nearest camera, Hagerstowu, Md., and Pfe-
an Booher, Trinidad, Colo, shown at left,
warned .'''They ar™lng to wrfte “Sf to/S2nJt A S,. *U»
the State dry," Chadlck replied
—
y,
I
'
r. c
fain Spoils
.caeu . .epares Investigation
r Tri
(R, Kans.) that lack of cars to
grain in the midwest ---
us spoilage.
Blockading Planes Baj |
12 More Enemy "
V
Yar
By MAC B. JOHNSON
ABOARD ADMIRAL T
p NadjMtyera.
' A ^ 1
'»*»■<“ .......
that special interests don’t want
(International) to let U>e people writs a new con-
Ringside Seat
Yama+o Sinking
■battleship with S00
ii
?3?r
Ustn from
’ A '
Two-'
r ■
;\r:
itss than for the m—
in operation. Only the |
be met. Tire care and
R.
ated on shi;
r naval base
i Was hit.
'
w?
* -*• 1
that
m had "acornfullvTreiected
we prayer” of western grain pro
duers for relief. Be also acci
the Interstate commerce comm.*- d
sion.of failure to do anything
Hiirtroducedf rMolurion caU- »*» t)*e11' wlJWt
'V Interstate Commerce
to which the resolution
jd said he would name
subcommittee to look
Yank mot Watches
, JOHNSON ; CT-battlcship With MO' poiiitO
ADMIRAL TURNER'S bombs from 1.40i) feet, but the re-
iLAKSHIP, Okinawa, April 10.~ suiting“explosions- set Ms dive
(I'.Ri- A young navy pilot para- bomber afire,
doited from his burning plane "There was a loud explosion un-
tile middle of jSe doomed der th* fuselage." he told. "Then
H task fores off Kyushu the cockpit filled with smoke and
and watched from the fumes. One win............. nn M
Proposed dale for the conven-
tion was Oct. 7. im,
,
.......... I. from , .... . ............ .
water for four hours while the “I was afraid the plane would
' ......r to ' ' ' ' ‘ ........
mmw
Ap
army forces
Vienna today
eroaslnge of the 1
Missouri's constitution and con-
trasted that with the $150,000 pro- - - - ■
posed by Chadwick for the Texas ; ’** ■■?•} f H
convention ^ LONDON. April 10 ffi.fi Red was fighting in the mint district,
cleared two-thirds of the enemy’s teat foothold west o?
and battled for the Danube canal.
Danube river and The German-controlled
canal to complete
the Austrian cap ..........
Virtually ell that portion of iis spearhead
Vienna wear or the river and ca- Austria with the capture of
MCiHifurwuiiiMAivu Vfcntm
went off the air yesterday.
Third army atso bro.
striking wept
It has prov
Will Aid
Evenf Tonlqhf Will
■ H ~ uiiutjr Lilt; vOVtT Ol BiiiOKv WaiCIlvia Ln“ir piuiicnuivn open. ttiusicsl III StSKlnR ft facUR*
I®
ent^ fleet0 in“p°ted“VTs-shlp from thR burnln* Yamato b'' a Then I
JumpedI"lraChUteS
y said he landed i
area to -
raft,
wildly,
most of
Ilf
- ■ —”■*!
.... M
that you must continue
watch wheel alignment
Another sound piece
•'v '
w <
hard work he's done
of real estate . . . Mr.
. J, E. Seale in a down-
“ecursmn in their hay burn-
« 0. A. Brown plans for ■
^vssez m.......■
&ms&s
■ Joe Ue wonders why his resulted in no
u *o easy to identify over
,3onc wire»s P. Goid-
_»akes sure the front door is
and' it was
RR'end inflated hip H
emy warships circled Mm
stayed out of the RAF
ie time so it .would bn
P0g«*>
all
lost
sys- t0
......|RR| ... tty
adequate numbers of
airdromes0'
no'make vi&^trong su
Faces Di
Says She Has
Suit
■■
t ■
l^gl^OUld sue for divorce from movie
never has talked about
- with the beauty who
make
them to
*,1 ?!
last year
action or
American troops
S-
ern ttoKdi. - » 1
mv* was'aelUng .^garettto- to flip
Pthe “All the love I had for Errol trial t^Trears “go"tor"statotory
is gone eonuteely,” Mis* Eddies-
ton said. “What I want to do no*
« gdt a jOh. Thon I II
' ll
i S
per means of vulcani*
i wheels—has lowereo
re of yours**9l5rti^S
wBm,
»n
tone 75 Goose Creek
: r Sr .
pHHBHIiSI m , Rusty
j admitting he’s iuSst befbre
M lute" op Dr. Hamlet I.
i dow a ?0b I)ial trying
down a dau even )f ,t w.
, 4 !ot. of work . . . Bud
a few. extra
PBs
cultivation . . Ray
writes about life in the
“os of India . . . Major
,J‘Mter Pens a line from a
1 , the western front . . .
mil describes the “tin can"
of Ms naval-minded
L ' ln the Pacific . . . O. T.
[IT* misPlaced Ms car keys
I'^orjc CJarrett was the only
’ m week-end scout out-
r w.S im Reese’s ears should
i to,,, burning these days a*
luting associates are really
«• his outstanding Job
Ll^aS Glenn
Little Holland
will make his
“trance into the Tri-Oties
u|ar task with effi-
Mrs Sylvia Jared pre-
eelebrate » birthday
John “
■ * a
divorce, probably
Ho^H|)od . , . ,
the freight car
siderably eaapd.
rosoy Woman
Homicide Charge *'!!! ,1
Filed Against Han
a :
for Mrs. Rachel
M bo ■
• died at 8 a. m Monday at-rt-HOUi-
D. J. Milum. of Coady, free un- ,on hospital.' '
der bond of $3,000 on four charges • ,, be»hcld at the
isw rse s c i
re-arrested and charged with 1" the family cemetery at Crosby,
negligent homicide upon the death Mrs. .Lynch was born at Huff-
Monday of Mrs. Willie Mae HIM. man. the daughter of Adam tod
one of the victims. -- Emcline Lynch, founders ofjhe
Miltum. was released last Mght town. She had lived in Crosby
under a bond of $800 on the negli- most of her life,
gent homicide charge. Survivors are five daughters,
Reports from the Goose Creek Mrs E. N. Williams of Houston,
hospital where the injured are pa-. ffti’R.- J. Mwrray. Mf*. Bessie
tlents indicated that Mrs Roland Lyn,-h and Miss Helm Lynch, all
Smith Ytftr fe near (ftatff Wbiic '^fi^Ssby: Mrs:TC^. Ray<rf Ma^'
Oscar Hill, husband of Mrs. Wil- acalbo. Venezuela; two sons M. J.
lie Mae Hill, and Mrs. Louis Hill Lynch and M. A. Lynch of Hou»-
are showing gradual improve- ton.
ment. -—
Mrs. Willie Mae Hill’s body will
be taken to Houston by Paul U. T„ MrrT
Lee funeral home and sent to b,,, !,,,. L-RinA
Weatherford for burial. AL.rSf Sut
•Mrs. Hill is survived h" *’»" Th* oul!
husband. Oscar HU1: sop
Carter Hill of Goose Creek
fotoatolfr.
and
Miss Eddington, in her divorce
announcement, didn't answer the
question that has bothered Holly-
. wood for more thus * poor:
Flynn, as usual, had nothing to
mit even that’ much.
Flynn has made no financial
settlement yet, Miss Eddin
said, and she wishes none for
self. However, she added, “I feel
that Mr. Flynn should make ade-
North quate provision for our child,
e'e intersec- The child is Dcidre. the
^nol, liiriw«ny~tjy (MB of ttep-dorf, 21 miles southwest of Vien-
Feodor I. Tolbukhln's Third The Second Ukrainian army un-
Ukrainian army yesterday. der Marshal Rodion Y. Mallnov-
Swept up in the advance were sky pushed a two-pronged off
the parliament building, main po- sive cast and northeast of
lice station, radio staion. central One colum*
postrjfflee;^-state-tww: -g*« hTirfgetiemt serc
work*, the Central European bank er on a 20-mite front,
and several factories. Schoenau, one jni
Still in German hand* was a 10 ns.
square mile pocket east of the Koenigsberg. last
Danube river and canal, mostly stronghold in
factories and the big Prater after a 70-day ‘ _
park Colonel General Lass t
The Germans were resisting surrendered at
stubbornly, a Soviet communique night followln
announced, but Tolbukhln's troops assault that I
cleared block after block In ra-- test defenses a
--------ers In Bust.
Committee Acts On Fair Tr
..«........
WSm
1
M1KI
. to*,
.. «^^||
trail
enj
1 o,ftopgtoto;:iii»l ropractic was
version of
trade" MU 1
Goose Creek and Pelly
ficials will go to Houston
day night to attend <\ 1tm _
the Mayor’s and Coundlmen s
»y dto of-
ten Thurs-
meeting of
St.II to be acted upon both home senate MU on
_ and senate bill* to set up chiro- floor action.
, as- practie licensing boards. The MU A house al
tabled yesterday would have e*- ggy
«t * ^mP‘ed.
Su6toJwA?cfetoami
tion this morning resulted
this morning resulted in mi-
nor injuries to four school cMl-
dren and damage to the four au-
tomoMlcs.
James and Alton Lee, of 823
Park; Jack Rom bit. 206 Francis
Howard Franklin, C09 Francis, all
about 12 years of age, were sent
to a hospital to be treated for
skinned noses, bruised lips and
other minor injuries, when fbe
car in'which they were riding
with G. C Undsay. 101 Homan,,
was struck by another in which
C, F. Gannon, ilf Hines, was rid-
tcr born last January iir
City. ■ ;
Mias Eddington said she had
heon out all day yesterday, look-
ing for a Job, and she has "sev-
(See Errol Flynn, Page 2)
id f"iClose Today
k* ade-—
lild
daugh- Allied Stores .......
Mxeito American Marscailm
American Radiator .
American Telephone
Anaconda Copper ,
to* Mil
»•» P«f sent
gas at the 1
I
Mrs. Macke Dies
At Home Of Son -
evm-^r
. OvCO! >■«1
,Ipftoler Motors
CWea Service ........
Commercial Solvent ,
Mrs. Sarah EUzaheth Macke, 82.
home _
"of Goose
» a. a, today.
■ Macke
uninjured. Milum was slightly in- Mrs. Mscke had lived
jured test Friday in a similar ae- Tri-CStles and in
mmk-.
■ When
collided
Lindsay’s
Idedthey
’* and Gannon's
were thrown
« SS== -BS1
. *UM -l_a »..« tnm.a, PS» l<WWW W*“r"^“
KtM
........„
for 23
years, and formerly lived at Day-
ton. I .; : ,
Survivors include the son, John
Macke, a daughter, Mrs. Emily
Lusto of Ingieslde; four grand-
children, John Henry Macke, Jr.,
San Francisco;
Macke Of Goose
^ ^ iged o» Creek; and Mrs. Richard
at Spence’, home and of Jngleride^ ^
.....
rifa. .
......21%
2%
...... 73%
.......m
...... 18%
......16%
..... 16%
Consolidated Aircraft ...... It
Curtiss-W'rlght ......>5%
Du Pont 1®H
Eatin 53%
Electric Bond and 8hade ... 11
Paso Natural Gas
Genera) Electric r.,,.<1%
General Motor. .............«B5
Graham Paige ....... 7 ,
Greyhound ............ 33%
Gulf Oil ...
Citizen* National Bank it Trust Co.
National Ctolry ..............,29
North Ameripan Aviation ... 10
Ohio Oil ..............18'-
Packard Motors ............ 6%
Premier .....................
Pure (Ml ................... 1
Republic Steal
Shcrpc* and Dohmc
Commercial Solvent-..
i Aircraft
flkerir ........
Southern Piicifi* ...
Corporation
Sperry C
ISS
Oil of
OH ........
y *;
....... t. .
* * ** *......f
a^Uc^hed^nto a1" f* ^
I into nnolher owned
Houston oil
Hudson Motors ...
HUB,b,.en?L«1{hH„
ar*
SH
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 255, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 10, 1945, newspaper, April 10, 1945; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027146/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.