The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 65, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1941 Page: 1 of 16
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
• -y
W
Values
BOYS’
DRES!
SHIR'
ith cuff? and i
t rollers
-
. r
• -
Phone 520 or 521
The next time you need some printed
form* or Office supplies! We also handle
engraved Invitations and announcement*,!
r—
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS, THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER
-
4. Hfr
Delivered Doily — 50cM®«t*i
,urchin Asks Full U. S. Aid
H-Out Effort of Democracies Sought
Sept. 4. <GJ9 - Prime
Ljrfer Winston Churchill tor
-ffasns:
of the United State*
i
Jn the
at Mansion House following Cana*
da’s prime minister William Mac-
Kenzie King, who pleaded for
greater American aid to "win this
war for world freedom.”
Churchill paid tribute to Cana-
da as a link between the United
and the British empire.
rota '•
■J
which have come to existence in
the new world." 7 N. ■ '
MacKenzie King appealed for
leadership by the British com-
monwealth of nations and the
United States to achieve a new
world order based on freedom.
He said that Churchill's declar-
ation that, in the Far Bast, Bri-
tain stands at the side of the
United States, on the one hand, interdependence of
and with her unswerving fliMS "tha free world. »
to the British commonwealth and "A similar declaration bn the
(/. 1 Tanker Readies Russian
Pert In Dash Across Pacific
- ••
"Canada,” Churchill said, “with
those relations of friendly and
affectionate intimacy with the
■sffsat'ws
ties which confront Bri-
!Ctnd the whole world can be
u-j without such a fuM rnea-
i which as yet lie outside the jhe motherian(j on the other, Is part of the United States, as re-- I
, of the conqueror s power. the |)nk which joini together specie • Nasi Germany," he said, 1
■ burned that the "free men gjj|r' -• - *-■-----
' world must stand together
i line if humanity is to be
[ T deepening, darkening
I widening tr^dy wbteh ^n
■'uSias^isa
a.-
these great branches of the hu-
man family, the link' which, in
spanning the oceans, brings the
continents into their true rela-
tion and will prevent In future
generations the divisions between
the proud and happy -
Europe and the great
i
happy nations bf
countries
"would. T believe ,*erve to shorten
this perilous- conflict ‘ -
"Unless the whole resources and
total energy of. the free world are
Biro# jnto the struggle the war
may drag on for years carrying
in its train fanilne, uestilence and
horrors still undreataed of.”
Nazis Claim
Leningrad
Fail Near
,,;va j,™*--- : ■ 9 ■ .
ritish Army Expanded Jor Land Attack
jntinental Counterblow Planned for Spring
service.
Sept 4. Ot—Expert- British Isles. Arrival of another
*thc British army to the large contingent of, Canadians,
limits of Britain’s man- bringing the third Canadian divW
red in prospect today sion. close to war strength, was
of forcing Germany announced yesterday. „
n two fronts next Prospects of an actual spring
continent? 1 offensive. It was
Herald said thatrthc thought here, depend largely
nand had determined
..million* of men up for
because of strategic de- |
resulting from the Rod*
JSL- mm .*..»■ Fund Request To La'unch' Probe
T device because frftitegpeat
—, _ , . „„ Miudden counterattack
Smash
»By Lake
BERLIN, jtot. .4. Ol—German J.h« TSSSit tidSlafor
zzz,“ijaj?.*< ~&,sS.2sb
upon United Statci and British L.bta defense system. **«"* ^rM^s- ot *
arms production in the next three Thgjr repeated a claim that the
months. • Gormans had pushed a spearhead
Orders have been Issued for the to Dctskoje Selo, 0 miles douth
cMling up of 50,000 women to of Leningrad,
essential industries. That would wa> to be lnform-
releasc as man? men for military ,„u added, that the German
Reds Recapture Ukraine Village Two Others
Nearing End
Of Journey
. f5,000German Prisoners Are Claimed
/ : ,• v■: ■>....."
'•'\iSkamxm, dept, .4. r.pi _ The
Russian army of the Ukraine, in
; - srj T~> - a sudden counterattack in the
Kiev, area of the .southern front,
Bnse Ring is • ' .has retaken a village and killod
■“ _ |e(j ■ or wounded G5.000 Germans, the
along tjjb. entiie eastern front. GCl-nriaiii soidiert “Enemy artillery
But press .dispatches told of furi- has been strafing; us. The Rug-
ous activity for defense to the , sians also are sending planes that
last man of the llrrcatened cities our antiaircraft" cannot see,"
ft . Official CbnSqiuuist
srlin say* Ffavda said today.
local nature but on a big scale
had been reported gaining more
than 32 miles on the central front
<<p03S!biv in the Smolensk-Vyi
ttKyia t>y css*'
Lease-Lend Inquiry Looms
main forces farther away Were
still "smashing against the
ond ring and possibly at some
places even against the first?”
- Informants said frankly that
the Germans attacking Irniingrgfl
from the south and west, and the
Germans and Finns attacking
sma area and battling to seize
the initiative from the ^Germans
in the Gomel and lower Dnieper
Regions. ,
-(Russian counterattacks, aided
by heavy rains, appeared to h?
t^fowing or halting the genera!
Gerniaii - advance on the eastern
■ from and to have pinched off
some Nazi spearheads such as
that pointed from Smolensk to
of-Leningrad, now menaced from
—the south, west and north, and
newspaper ’Kiev, which has been fighting
off enemy •encirclement.
In . the battle for the unidenti-
fied village near Kiev, the Ger-
mans had seized the sector by a
surprise shelling that eauked
many casualties- among civilians,
including women and children,
the newspaper ffravda said. But
the Germans coijtid not advance.
"For 14 days we nave been
lying on the route to Kiev,” the
newspaper -quoted from,the diary
of Private Bernard Schmidt, a
Them .the newspaper .reported .Ship'Carrying OH to
the Red army suddenly* coiinbr-' VladivOFfolt Sails Jap
attacked and recaptured the vil- ^ W;+hout |nc;denf.
The dispatch said a people’s WASHINGTON, Sept. 4. <09 —
guard was working day and night y xhe state department Was advised
Uoris”UrouXKmv Insife the toi^ thkV the first American
city, it said, life was normal and tanker carrying, gbsolinf. to Rus-’
streets were teeming with trams sia arrived safely , in the Soviet
and 'automobiles. Pacific port of Vladivostok bn
1
I
agency
militan
said, a six-man supreme
At Leningrad, the official news
laid,
tary Soviet formed to mobi-
lize for a last-ditch fight gave
fRP-’S.OOO.OOO population new con-
fidence.
Nazis Claim Sea Victories
British Losses Soar, Berlin Says
BERLIN, Sept. 4. CP> The Oor-
S tore appeared no doubt
fteus*
conditions are favorable
s« vea^wd-'T j, * ’
, sources believe the Brlt-
takc Uiv* initiative in
||||ijjj^H * «, s C"
available manpower, ih-
*t men registered for service
lie48 years of age, is estimat-
16250,000. m called into
j jwi«gt from i
, Aions- of rrjNTi posts
t Rh be replaced, by i
present British araiy hi
’ 1 *t about t.OOO.pdO men,
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4. C.P> -
Members of the* house appropria-
from the north still, had #. ”tre- Vyazma, about half way along
quests would receive careful study n.-ndoua” task ahead of them. the road to Mhseow.
■ light of actual guns, tanks Th sai(J th
aii_ high command said trelay
lat (hp navy and air force saiik
537.200\ tons of British shipping
tME&jssss: ~
*raro*‘ ■ , . out” the defense and lead-lease
tlttod ear^next ween, ! several members of congress
anrf ernflonon. said they would request full in-
rfrcwiJ"ffls. ays* j?-"? gaffin ^
that |hp navy and air force sank
537.200 tons ol
in* »e,iwwu,uuo-—♦ ,uw rBppjng even the air force, did /southwejt .of Moscow, but failed
stroyed the landing field by bomb
hits and set fire to living quar-
ter^ and munitions dumps
British planes. ,did.
ips
nbt .
xpZgZSES atafegsis
Nevertheless the view
taken that tha Germans
steadily building new air. Bekt*
closer ‘And cl?*scr to Le
for eas:cr aerial attack.
An official dews agency dis-
(See Leningrad Real, Page ‘D
air, fields and ai
Leningard, Aqrted
L- • % Zai
lucenUy to report progress in the
Ukraine, where one column from
Gomel had sought to flank the
Jgtd army on the” lower Dnieper
d another was unofficially re-
to have crossed the river
Zaporozhe ! -
The Russian communique said
merely that fighting continued
• toghNcommand communique
that German plantg sank
freighters. Totaling
Inh4f‘ ■ Mht*vlr%4 h0r
The
said that
two British
loroeo tons last' night. Oti
bombers attacked', harbor works
on the east coast of England.
The communique said German
bombers "in a particularly suc-
cessful raid” on the Abusupit
airfield on the Suez canal, der
raid
Reich territory yesterday and last
night, the high command said.
Yesterday British Air Minister
Sir Archibald Sinclair said ship-
ping losses during Jq)>; were low-
er than any month in a ye*r
Last week first Lord of the Ad-
miralty Albert V. Alexander said
the British had made encourag-
ing. progress in the battle of the
Atlantic and there was a regular
flow of convoys to British ports.
CUfton A. Wood rum, D„
member of the
has
fighlin
•«i
R<tp.
appropriations'c o*nt
Vn in the awropriltiw" »id“tto new
■* -t ■■■> V ' ,
*lso,tovfred,.rt
the effects of the transfers on
tite preparedness and morale of 1
the United State* armed forees, if
Imore funto are requested. They|
•m
Defense Housing How Do You Do, Governor, How're You?
Prfority Looms Stevenson and Phillips To Meet at River
clarify its aid-to-Rus*ia policy.
i CITY, Sept. 4;' <C.E>—
• p railway WorheriP'
—V— , arms” strike today a, a protest
within a few , day* vacation demands.
. workers said they would
not have their jobs but would
•'■far remain idle at their posts;
Joseph H. Neimann
Funeral Services To -
Re HeW Here Saturday
~ Jmpi Henry .Neimann, M. of teVtais aticli f *»
118 r " ■* ----- ----- ““
today
g|jng
WASHINGTON, Sept 4. fl’.Ri -
The Office .of Production Man-
agement’s n’cwiy-rrorgUflllgW,
orities divtsicn will announce
soon a priorify plan for providing
building supplies for defense
housing projects.
A ftottoet bating covering va*
Xtwl, window
AUSTIN. Sept 4. d’B® The gov- compact- commission,
enror* of Texas and Oklahoma PhiHips of Oklahoma is chalrrdan
will meet late tomorrow at the
Red river, shake hands and go
"of the compact commission.
Governor Stevenson expects to
tb Oklahoma City for oil compact remain in Oklahoma City all of
conferences to He held Saturday: Saturday and return -to, Austin
Governor Coke Stevenson of Sunday. He will go to Houston
Governor building -dedication and return to
Austin for the opening of a spe
with Rev.
L J
church, Baytown,
Dennis -certified defense areas.’ The areas
Kennedy of St. Joseph’s Catholic would to recommended for certi-
- 1, officiating. fication by Defense Housing Co-
TOWN
ik WHOM
Senator Opens Drive
To Raise Army Pay
WABHmOlOS. fcp*.. i ’ce- -
Sen; Edwin C. Johnson, D„ Colo.,
■' today started a campaign to raise
mm
distance
a toe pay of !jjmerican soldlera. Ht Mfe. W. A. Cook, aiao of
" introduced *a b.ll that would Creek ^ ^ by
m juarantoe them a minimum of grandchildren, W.,lk Batin
&»« tfdsrc .SSSJSiS3£S4y“
Fianl Dobias officiating. -------»
Mr. Neimann is surttotol by two
•OMriWaiter and Frank Neimann,
both of Goose Creek;.two daugh-
ters. Mrs. E. F. Bawmback and
‘ ' Qook
IHiD
M -Some £ ^ohlSScaHod thata simiisr
JSnimimn S Proposal, whith’be sought to at-
•Pets on a wetTeet ’. tach to the conscription extension
|«W>erry making an early bill, was defeated by only one
^OtdSSS V°^my W now U * ‘ '“JJJ
I many miles between her-, for selectee* during the first
Tri-Cities,.. “Coach” three months; ISO a month for
iRwhingof REL attending to the second nine montoi, and >H|
“ ■’""'Mown details ... Who fo, service b«9-ond a year, with
» Plscesrttice^1 jTp
°nC*^ *Ma*
!“ .!TS«5
» rcseart-h
, . .. four
BaumBack,
(Hee fptiess Fatal.. Page t)
:Me*PP'"n' ’—'—
' ' ' ‘> ..... ' •: ' v
YOI TH IS Hl’RT
■5 Vincent Roach,' W-gear-old aon
of Joe Roach, suffered a fracture
of a small bone above the ankle
of his right leg Uto morning.
The ycuth Was prancing foot*
SAi,sssri'sra
RANGER CAPTAIN NAMED
AUSTIN. Sept. 4, It’s now
ranger Captain Ernest Bek. The
former sergeant who has cani)
manded Ranger headquarters at
Austin for toe past two yeara-has
been promoted. He will remain in
charge of the Central Texas dis-
trict.
Than Was - notified today that
Governor Leon C. Phillips of Ok-
lahoma will meet him at the
state boundary.
.Stevenson wifi keep an engage-
ment at the Hallettsvilie fair Fri-
day morning, return to Austin
and go by automobile to Oklaho-
ma City by way of Denison He
will be accompanied by J. C. Hun-
ter of Abilene, governor's repre-
sentative on the oil states com-
—- — • • "•------ railroad
oil
be uft-
abie :to accompany Stevenson.
Commission Chairman Ernest O.
Thompson is engaged in army
manotototo in Louisiana. Commr.
Oita’ ~GS#B>erson is out of the city
and Commr, Sadler has business
that will keep him in Austin.
No topics other than the oper-
ation bf’the oii compact commis-
sion are planned for the gover-
nors' meeting, Stevenson said. The
Texas legislature has approorfat-
Texas'
Monday night for. d Y. M. C. A.
eial session of the Texas legisla-
ture on Tuesday.
During Stevenson’s absence
from the state" Senator Rudolph,
Weinert -of Seguin wdi be aefing ”
governor of Texas,
Sale of Oil to Spain Bared
Port Arthur Shipments Approved
WASHINGTON," Sept. 4. JVM which It tried, but now 1ms aban-
Tbe Uuitod, gtotos'h IsWiut Sphin toned temporarily; - with Japan,
hato large quantities of jfetro- The extort control administra-
leum nroducts 84 part qf an ef- tion. has investigated and ateu’r-
fort to prevent SpainV entrance- ed itself that none of .tt*- o 1
into the w.at on the side of the shipments to Spam has been di-
’------*'*-*— ' verted to Germany.
Wednesday.
The tanker was the L P. St.
Clair of the Union Oil Co. It
sailed on August 15 from Los An-
geles.
No Interference
To make the trip it had to pass
through the narrow. straits be-
tween the northern Japanese is-
lands, Japan has indicated reluc-
tance to acquiesce in' passage off
ships carrying supplies to an en-
emy of its Axis partner, but there
was no indication that any effort
had been made to interfere with
the ship.
This government had indicated
that it expected free passage
through Pacific waters for its
ships, and the Soviet Union had
told Jaoan that any interference
with Soviet-American ttade would
be regarded as an unfriendly act.
Warning Given
Officials here were agreed that
an incident involving any of the
tankers would precipitate a ser-
(Sre American Tanker Page 2)
Convict Slain
In Prison Break
Guard Wounded in Fight
After Blue Ridge Dash
HOUSTON, Sept- *■ «’!■>—Apol-
ogia ,G#me*j*. -28} San Atttonto
murderer, was killed. Prison -
Guard Roland Malone was shot
and a convict escaped last night
in a break by five convicts from
Blue ‘Ridge prison farm at" Hqb-
"fey. near here,
J Guards searched for’ Geronimo
' Mol nar, 26, Ei Paso robber who
< fled with three -other members .
of a 32-man plow squad during
a gun battle 8 p.m. with Ma*
lane jgnd ^Guard L. O. Musick.
Two com-icts, .apparently using
pistols cached in the field, shot
Malo’r..- in the hip. The .guard
1
I
I
Axis, it was learned" today.
A steady stream of Spanish
tankers has been calling at Port
Arthur, Texas, picking- up large
oil and . gasoline cargoes for
transport to Bilbao, Santander,
Barcelona and Malaga,
These oii shipments have been
sanctioned by the state depart-
mer.t. <
State dojp’srt m e ti t; officials
Oil shipments to Spain in Am-
erican vessels hav? not b-Sn'Ter-
mitted for some time, necessitat-
ing the use of Spanish tankers.
The Spanish ml traffic from
Port - Arthur.......was particularly
heavy in late August. The Span-
ish’“tanker Campiii put ~~
(See'Sale Of Oil, Page , 2)
force at Blue, Ridge caught Moli-
nar’s companions two hours af-
ter the fereuto, Other convict* of-
the work’ squad had been pre-
vented from fleeing by Mustek.
Wilson Turner, another guard,
reported that be had engaged toe
four'convicts in a fight an hour
after the break and ho believed
on , he worinded Motinar. Three of”
(See Convict Stain, Page 21
BRIEFS
. m ........11 n
=,\
Mi
Girth .Control Waste Hit
AJjt _ government is . following with
^ jpk ■ m Spain a course similar' to that
Barbecue for
„ .....i-,-----a.......~m si * r, . ?- CHIOA®fe-«ept 4. r.R)^-Weil-fed pin and those with wooden han-
Thomas Planned Texas Barters Study
J
Doctor Scores Patent Machines
i See-
vesled toe extent tne German Unro today? forcing the
enemy to abandon "one position
000,000 a ytear (in waistline wea-
pon* for “girth control," Dr Fred
W.,Norris of Washington, said to-
day."
to abandon “one position
..
VICHY, Sept 4. — Reports from
Pari* said today that a German
—---- , . non-commissioned o f f i c e r had
srz- - r5—=; s sS=™?
■ Copper -••-.W* P*ck*rf, " -
" —•■-•—roieum • 4SH tvAjaiINGTQN. Sept L-Presi-
...........i . tout Roosevelt lottay Mthortaed.
. U Mo-
new a little
Tri-Cities friends ct Congress- 'Stiff fOOtf ^FOdUCtWfl
man Albert Thomas’ of Harris, AUSTIN ~Beto 4 irPi-Food nrn-
bSt^to^br4dgtore Sat* d'itU™ pcjsibilities in. Texas Ld
h-nnrrrl-n &««« «<»ded today to the special
wtoMt uftwwwan Th® eougreas- Judies, of 258 Texto bankers at-
-1—u^,.^ ^.fir • . itan and H^utataiy comtactrons.
"Over- storaf counters and
through new companies engaging
in mail f.rder and other interstate
■SM-g 1= * <H •* ’ &£***
I*tlK .......SV j?*0"
anrwunefdtater today, bat it will
be in the Tri-Cities. r '
A finance committee, was, *p-
to plan the
..y are J, H
R, Higginbotham.
outing. In tn» group nit J. J1.
Sne? f’
Tnm Driscoll,
Chrysler Motors 1
Commercial Solvent
nuto* Motor*
Tom Driscoll. W.'fC. Swain' and
*:s £StE=ii XSSSm. “--aid
and Mr. Drisioil
The serving eommlt-
» loTtone *
«n some of oar army
Vsl Y. m. Lannoa of
visitiny hU n ” mm
igee Polish government. Machine .
esi=H| ssTcr-S ........-
SSS2SL1Saanr^oa..............•’..... brertoum-
Power end Light
Texas
i T-p ana i
tom— and Jack Jacobs was named pub-
W , iiuiy chairman. Serving will start
“ ‘p”
I. ■ ■. . .. I
•V -IlllllfSIVar inlllpfvjv..
, 4,.«k*
"If each of Texas’ 148.000 farms
produced an extra dozen eggs a
day, Jt would provide every per-
son -in'Britain with, an,egg each
merning” R’ ,L Mullins of Wolfe
City told the bankers "
J. O McCaskill of San Antonio
urged the Winkers to be co-opera-
tive in loans to men in military
.service. “A patriot .is a good risk,” -
kill said. ■
HH
Lad Is -Injured When
Hif By Automobile
dies having-on one end a act of
rubber whepls or bail to be rolled
or rubbed Wer the Skin arc widely
. Norris said the devices were
supposed to massage excess fit ’§§
■ Writing In toe magazine Hy- ^between skin and muscles, causing
geia, Norris said, the inefficiency it “to be’oxidizcd or burned up". \
taf devices to destroy-fatty tissue He added witorers Of massage belts-■ ’ j
■ were told they could continue
wearing them after the excess fat
had been removed.
"It would require ait intelligent
girdle to decide jtwt when to stop
reducing excess fat so that it
could thereafter be worn without
causing further losses of normal ,
desirable fat,” be said
Moore WW Cal! Early Ceity Is Rated on
Hearing on Bond Bill Southern Pine Prices
HOUSTON. Septf 4.Vjh - Bern WASHINGTON. Sept. 4. <TI$..
linistrator LaOR«
traffic;” be said, "thousands, are
uselessly .'expending’ their money
■ idisvlces shaped like a rolling
Weaver Moore of Houston. chalr-
- Sen- WAS]
t chair- Price
mm i
at ton into
lore than the i
pstient*. the *
M
‘.man.of th® stare affrrrs commit- Henderson
toe, said today that he wiB ttA - m increai
fa hearing.on rread ' f
the specisl legislative i
vZSBSBS
ront ,of D.J,
-tm*^
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 65, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1941, newspaper, September 4, 1941; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027214/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.