The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 128, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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__1 TEXAS— Mostly cloudy south, part-
f c|oudy north portion this afternoon, to-
Jght and Saturday, Warmer extreme east
Irtion this afternoon and extreme" portion
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OLUME 24 No—12 8
ere T*
GCf&SE CREEK, TEXAS FR ID A Y. N 0 V E M BER 5, 1 9 43
*
— 1.
H j
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By Mail or Carrier -
75c Month
—
MHr ■ Bnm'i
: E. Liter E squad i
% Ettp « |
■fit. today,
e boy* wife Is* ,
mi ttteiftaci
Hwmtec schools,
trownred up
ies 2* to U m e I
»' Field hut
hree Regulars Not To Start Against Orange Ton
_
lee Seeking
Mi Title
• ■
i ...........
■
mmceft today tfcjl
«tef, and Jack r *
twlhach,. *21;
i&e Milky gane ,
of these
to ptay waff
E a#amt Otas.7J
and WiSiana
erattebie for
«t*d to held a , _
:»po*«S of G*«f.
Wenflea VV;«<a *,
Urtia and B«h]
(•cites, Kenottl
i Kirk Btaris
tehi® at canter.«
*r,- teifteick. Jta
J W 9S/»Tt« i
k asd QsthjruMri
fin Of Year
NAZIS FALL BA
[
L
fern Definitely Out;
Junt And Reha1( Will
ot Play At Kickoff
>
#'■
Its
* BLOOD
CD - Still
torch” a mo:
anted- Too?
owned by Tam j
fame, wandered <
tail yesterday
s ‘one-horse" *
iasrjat,-. It took ,
eJJJwks a hell h
e ^S8c**r perfd
TJ 5
>With three regulars slated to
atch the kickofi from the bench,
e Robert E. Lee Ganders engage
e Grange7 Tigers here at 8 ji m.
Iday with the Lee eleven seek-
ig its fourth win of the district
mipaign and its eight straight
ji'l decision. _
Captain Pap Kern had not laid
wn his crutches this morning
a result of the injury received
the South Park game. A badly
[•renched left knee will keep him
it of a game, the second this
ear ift has missed.
Junt and Rehak Status
Halfback Ted Hunt will rest as
ng as he can to give a shoulder
chance to reach the top shelf
ain. He can play, but he can't
sg. A “passless" Hunt is not the
,fpe of Hunt Coach Stallworth
ants in the lineup. . ,
Thomas Rehak twice this sea-
>n has suffered a left ankle
jjury. The injury is'not a wrench
mt seems to be a bruise. He
shun It by getting stepped
IN ITAL Y, RUSSIA
GERMAN PEOPLE WERE very happy when the
luftwaffe was forcing thousands of British people
to spend night after night in uncomfortable shel-
ters to escape bombs, but reports from thp reidh
indicate they are very downhearted now that the
RAF is taking hundredfold vengeance. This pho-
Finns Again
Seek Peace
With Russia
Germans Harried By
Allies In Concerted
Drive Toward Rome
Powerful Red
Army Reaches
Kiev Suburbs
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Algiers, Nov. 5 ‘t:.P>—Allied
armies have reached the mouth of the Garigliano river,
fought their way into the German defense hub and-cap-
tured San Salvo in a concerted advance toward Rome, it
was announced today.
Stockholm, Nov. 5 (u.R)—iiei- Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark’s Fifth army, swarming across fui Rea army, striking out in a
sinki authorities today flatly the Garigliano^plain's and winning controfof the upper Vol- new offensive on the west bAnk
------‘ **-* --•* —*- ---- -------J ‘---*■ ‘------*-J —’—M— -- i-t-- Of the Dnieper river, stormed and
captured two northwestern sub-
urbs Of Kiev, Pusha-Voditza and
to, from a neutral souree, shows the inhabitants
of a northern German city in a bomb shelter.
Navy Sinks Nine More Japanese Ships
Right Took Place Off Beaches At Bougainville
Japanese planes that attacked
them.
kicked in eio.se. line pipy. He - A L L I E D HEADQUARTERS,
laved about two minutes against Southwest Pacific, Nov. 5 0t.—
uth Parkt.He wont .play that Nine Japanese warships we.rc • and-there' were-' casualties in the
,„ f ? ss,,s-n e- ^
.......* ■' -----fWhheaif. fvon \m
.Not an American vesseL was
lost although some were damaged
Three-Man Mission To
Moscow Hopes To Make
Separate War Treaty
New Offensive Launched
As Cossacks Clean Up
Lower Ukraine Area
MOSCOW, Nov. 5 C.Ri-A power-
denied a report that Finland had turrio river, moved ffs front forward seven miles, as the
appointed a three-man ebuunis- Germans retreated to ■ their
StitKSWar * fortified linem: heights
Ix>e becomes.-hprd preseed by guns smashed a,n enemy
e fighting. Oranges, look, for to halt the Bougainville invasion,
e big man to take the field, a communique reported today.
I'-ht'iT is no better defensive line-. Greater Toll Possible
distriet than the The toll ^as based on pre-
Itocky mayor of Busch Terraee. liminary reports of the 90-minute
[Irton Replaces Kern battle, indicating it may turn out
J Skeeter Orton will replace Cap- to be an even greater American
Iain Kern at center. Eugene victory when full deta
I See 'Three Regulars Page 8) closed.
I
miles, off the
Bougainville, .northernmost of the
Solomons, by U, S. Marines only
12 hours before.
* A previous communique had
disclosed the engagement but gave
Japs Claim Victory
T&e'f&n ‘wsnwiQMi A' Teik^p d,s-
pateh ufiieh ’appareiftiy referred
to1 the same engagements, it said;
STOCKHOLM, Nov. 5. OUFir.-
to the north.
Troops tR<«i('h Ve
. , Reach Vepafro >
HSJn.«., v ' .«*, •'
■■ f
: mm
from San
“heavy damage" was inflicted on
the American fleet units but gave
no details and said ‘/‘more than
half" the Bougainville '
rin details tt wW fm.ehi hi l e i‘au u,e oougamyiue landing iThe newspaper reported that
tm^rtV we Jmlll3««din“ off force had beeh wiped out and a J, k. Passikivi, who negotiated eitner end of the trans-Italy-line,
ZSSTtS'SVS arjsr018 “ Si
proofed to
per Soeial-Demokraten said to- f<)rced Germans
day, presumably to attempt to Salvo, above the Trigno river
negotiate a separate peace with on the Adriatic coastV with aid of
Russia. '.naval guns after tank clashes in
Going to Moscow and near the town.
The newspaper reported that Coincident" with the pushes on
Tri-Cities Area
In Chest Drive
Goryanka, today,
<Aij. Exchange
W-Yc. r*,'‘4-
reports that German tocces eva-
cuating the Crimea have begun to
arrive on the Bulgarian Black
Sea'coast.) . ,
Wehring Closes Books 1 Tte'du™ J an break-through
With $60,504.12 Total brought Soviet troops and tanka
within five miles of Kiev proper
The East Harris county War a^d extended the Soviet brldge-
and Coni'm'unity chest campaign head above Kiev eight miles In-
has passed the $60,000 goal and >fd from the west Wank, of the
some small contributions still Dnieper., ... ,
are to be reported, General Sreamtng from the forest
Chairman A. Wehring announc- northwest of the etty, the. Rim-
ed today. slans smashe<i across 0I>en ground
Tptai contributions turned in ^‘ize the two towns, which
t§ rhe chest headquarters up to >ia «»"«» ™tn railway running
last night were $60,S04.12. north from Kiev Only one more
TTie fund will be divided $35,00(1 important suburb — Priorka --
for 17 war - relief and welfare °n ‘he . city line - re-
agencies and $25,000 for eight mamed .between the Soviets and
local organizations. The $35,000 tneir prae. •
war fund will be included in the ^a?as_*'rajn .rents
Harris county war chest. , The successful thrust may be
Wehring Thanks Workers lbt< opening biow of an offen-
Mr. Wehring today expressed Jive to roll back the Germans to
his thanks to captains of. the Bug-^ river- and cafhe
various districts, to the men and ‘
details are dis-
warships brought down 17 of 67
of Venafro, battling to collapse
I. S. Tank Troops Courageous Lou Carries On
Keeps Radio Date After Son Dies
Jap Riot
iO Casualties Reported
i Tule Lake Uprising
JLE LAKE, Cal., Nov. 5 CB-
S. troops, armed with tanka,a
nachine guns and bayonets, for-
bibly took over the troublesome
JPule Lake Japanese segregation
ienter today, and unofficial re-
ia- n
were sunk.)
Twelve Japanese ships, includ- prepared to travel to Moscow the only major pivot left to the
ing four cruisers 'and eight de- -with G. A. Gripenberg, Finnish Germans since the fall of Isernia,
stroyers, took part in the fight, minister to Stockholm. ,md social 13 miles southwest, to British
One crufifer and four destroyers affairs minister Karl August troops yesterday,
were sunk and two cruisers and Fagerholm. " • *-* Cat Nazi Retreat Line
two destroyers damaged, On Tues- (Official circles in London said The Fifth army stormed
day allied planes in u heavy raid they had no knowledge of atiy through Vallecopa, six miles
dealt a strong blow at Rabaul, cNMge In the -Finnish situation northwest-of Prosonzano near
studios was to have been a gala big enemy base on New Britain, but added that Finland unoffi- the western coast, to- out sil the
event. Then CbstCilo’s doctor, Vic- and sunk or damaged three enemy cially long has been attempting &e]
to signalize ,the roly- tor Kovener, phoned him about destroyers and txVo large cruisers,
ie’s emergence from a the baby’s breaking but of its Mono Foe Crushed
ports said* about 20 casualties
Ivere inflicted among the Jap-
anese Internees. ’ «
Col. Verne Austin said s tce 1-
hclmeted array troops moved in
last night after the situation be-
laine ‘ explosive'' at the center,
jvhere internees beid national war
feidcation Director DiHon Meyer
and 100 white persons virtual pri-
soners for four Wurs during a
demonstration Monday.
The soldiers rounded up 500 or
(the most recalcitrant Japanese
Japanese and held them at the
fcamp administration building for
•questioning. The canfp is a Segre-
gation center for 19(000 “disloyal"
I'tfoe U. S. Tank Page 2>
HOLLYWOOD. Nov. 5 CE)- Lou
Costello's party for his son’s first
birthday, to -u
poly comic’s _____ „____ ____
slough of hard luck, turned to- crib, crawling to the edge of the While the Marines, who landed
day into a funeral service. pool and falling in; - about the at Empress Augusta bay on Bou-
The infant, Lou Costello; Jr., firemen diving for the xdiild and gainvilie fought their-way inland
drowned in the family swimming -working in vain for an, hour and expecting counter-attacks, Japan-
pool three hours before his father a half to revive him. esc resistance on Mono island,
brushed the (cars from his eyes Lou slumped in his chair. His largest of the Treasury group 30
and laughed, as loud as he could, cigar went out. Rival comedians, miles south of Bpugainviile was
oh a coast-to-coast radio broad- including Bob Hope, Red Skei- crushed by allied troops who-went
ton, Jimro); Durante and Mickey ashore there Oct. 27 to begin th*
Rooney, heard the news. All of- last phase of the campaign
fered to go on in Lou's place. By through the Solomons on the
now, Dr. Kovener, who once de- southeast approaches to Rabaul.;
spaired of Costello's life, had A Guadalcanal dispatch reveal-
reached the studio. He and Abbot ed that Lieut, Gen. Alexander
decided it would be best for Cos
teiio to make his appearance,
“Better than letting the poor
to get out of the war.)
Mediator Possible
No souree was- given for etie
-report and it could not be con-
firmed here immediately. How-
(See Finn-Russian, Page 2)
ierman escape from Venafro by
cast.
The program, replete with jokes
which took on a Macabre tinge
for those few listeners who knew
of the tragedy at the pool, fea-
tured CCstello and his long-time
partner, Bud Abbott. It was their
first since hard luck Lou became
critically ill with rheumatic fever
Mosquitos Blast
Western Germany
Vandegrift, hero of the conquest
of that island, was in personal
t ism
charge or the Marines on Bou-
gainville. The communique con-
tained no new report of their
progress. ", » '
Air Activity Slight
Dusseldorf Still Ablaze
From Wednesday Raid
slicing a road between that "point
and Cassino.! -
The south bank of the Gari-
gliano was reached by British
forces storming across the f-i a t
coastal plain in a drive apparent-
ly designed to prevent,- is pos-
sible, the Germans from getting
set in their expected defenses in
the ,Aurunci“ mountains just be-
yond.
American forces seized domina-
tion of the uper Volturno, taking
the town of San- Agapito, which
* i
women who assisted each of the
captains and to all those who
contributed tortile fund. Dr. S;
S, Shaffer, who was, chairman,
of the drive in the Baytown re-
last March, guy sit at home, with the little
The broadcast last-might-tf NBE (See Courageous Lou, Page 2)
GOP Fights Housing ’Fund’
House Group Opposes OWI Cash
■
UlOUND TOWN
budget of $104,000,000,000 for the
1944 fiscal year. That didn’t
gw.
BSSA
In the Tri-Cities: Tom Hen-
ninger calls it a day and wanders
homeward . , , Fahy Godfrey can
.be counted on not to forget the
pndigent kids around Shrine cir-
cus time.. . . August Wehring de-
serves a long s'igh of relief what
■with the 60-grand reached in the
"drive . . . Geraldine Swiliey and
Peggy Carroll noted an route to
fo'hool ... Anice Turner falling
a telephone call . . . Jimmie
Smith pauses for explanations ...
Vernon Elliott reports that
vt. Grady is now in New York
Opal Tidmon makes room for
0 Baytown pas*egge(t. .. Mias
eulah Mae Jackson conspicuous
today«by her abaenee . . . And
ptto Miss Marian Walkup who
r'on’t be back . . . Maxine Kuebler
unavoidably detained . . , Norvell
'ocker, the big air force private,
elng featured in a Milwaukee
newspaper . . When a Taylor
rhes a pass, it ceases to be
news hereabouts except when it's
town Jackie and not Gander
■ • . Mrs. Sam Davis way
, /er in Goose Creek . ,. Bob Hat-
ched wanting his afternoon Utera-
[ture right on the iine . ,... He’s
havlr.j to borrow Basil
’■'* . . . Lots or people would
their names here often if
»ey weren’t so hard to spell ...
Morris ducks out the front
or at noontime . . . Dr. G W.
lining up affairs so he
"t be bothered tonight . . .
L*»bee Jack and Rosemary
breeled into the city J ->.
will be at the game tonight
• Mrs. Nettie Laird reports
Lt. Roy’s studying again at
np Hulen and that pvt. Alton
headquartered at 8beppard
eld. t
to U porte: W. K.-Holt ad-
[mitted surprise in Goose, Creek
RfSft-s jJteiWs
^ better these days . Mrs
O. Taylor diked out to
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5. a'Pl—
House Republicans promised to-
day to “go after" a $250,000 ap- lessen the intensity of a partisan
propriation for the labor depart- fight over the OWI which kept
ment and "the. $90(000,600 'national the house iff session until 8:17
housing “racket" .in the most bit- p.m., last night
ter fiscal battle in congress in The bill, which was cut by an
years. ~ unprecedented 85 per cent—from
Rep. John Taber, R„ N. Y, a $1,108,828,749 to ; $167,268,444-be-
ranking member of the appro- fore it reached the floor, be-
nPiafinna * enmm i 1
LONDON, Nov. 5. (i'.R) — Big
fleets of Flying Fortresses and
Liberators lashing out' in the
United States' eighth air force’s
city Slight second: record assault in three outIet on- the GM o[ Qaeta; ftyjng
The latest communique report- days, penetrated. Germany's most vajnjy„ to impede the Fifth’s
-ed only slight and scattered aerial heavily defemh-d area today and progress Inland on the American‘
activity in Gen. Douglas "MacAr- dchvered a smashing blow at an st,etor trodpS rammed across the
thur's command area, A lone important target, twisting Volturno without a pause.
^bl?MrldhrflnvovTThrle LONDON, Nov. 5. .PB-British The new German defense was
iwin-engined Mosquito bombers • beheyed to be;'“very favorable
Phammered Western Germany last of ...........
north end of New Britain Wed-- SJWo 'pW- JaVCeCS CloHieS DNVe
sons were killed. . , ... .
Though jo**™ And Banquet Next Week
overlooks the river. Headquarters finery of the Humble Oil and Re-
repbrts indicated the allies had fining company, the Baytown
moved up in force all through the Ordnance Works and, other
mountainous Appennines in cen- units, joined Mr. Wehribg in ex-
tral Italy. pressing appreciation for the
Germans Hood Area work which made the campaign
The Germans flooded some a success,
coastal areas near the Garigliano F. E. Kelley, president of the
board of directors of the Tri-
Cities Welfare League, which
supervised the combined eam-
while Cossacks to the south were
mopping, up the Nogaisk steppes
in a triumphant ..wimfoup to the ,
liberation of 135,135 square miles
—the entire Ukraine east of the;
Dnieper — in the Soviet summer
offensive, which cost the Germans
2,700,000 men in dead, wounded
and prisoners. ' ■ ,
Field reports said the Germans -
were draining off strength from,
other fronts to rush all avail-
able men and machines into fran-
tic counter-attacks north of Kiev,
where the new assault holds a
of > sfflit'
potential threat of >splitting the
German armies in Russia in two.
Seven Strongholds Fall
tion of the varous local organiza- , The initial thrust yesterday
paign and which fixed participa-
tion of the varous local organiza- , .>■«*<?.. >««.j /.cstsiuay
tions through a series of budget overran Dimer, 22 miles north-
for the Nazis.; at least on 'its
(See Germans Harried, Page 2)
nesdhy.
i aiming iiiciiiucr ui uic aicoumu v«v
priations' committee, said those ..came'the target for Republicans,
agencies would be included in who claim that the admihistra-
the campaign to slash govern- lion’s $10,500,000,000 tax recom-
Oil Industry Will .
Continue Price Fight
bombers
participated in last night's raids,
’ .watchers ~ ——«-*- •—*u
hearings, expressed his thanks to wcst. Kiev, and at least seven
Mr, Wehring for “a Very tine other strongholds. Mote than 1,000
job of leadership" and to all the .'Germans were killed and support-
workers who gave their time to ing Red air force planes destroyed
the drive. " or damaged'20 German tanks and
The Collections - 150 trucks and silenced 2S artll-
Coltections reported by .Mr. Jery batteries. Thirty-two inter,-
Wehring were: eepting German planes were shqt
Humble employes, Dr. Shaffori down.,
chairman, $31,319. Russian,
refugees Who slipped
StCc^tTaidththefnswa?meroufo Tri-Cities Junior Chamber C James Harrop, vhair-a i^cReds Open New'-Page2)
.......................-............... , . - ....... .......
ment expenditures. The drive is mendations can be discounted by TULSA, Okla., Nov. 5 (UD -The lost in the raids and. in siihsid- ai’t-so nm Mondav the entire chjnrhian, $9,133.14,
aimW prim#ily at_ a $5,000,000 $10^000,000. through, govern- government^ wfwal; to lift ia^ WiU st^e aS Baytown, W. C Fe;
ipp in th -
allotment to the offiee of war ment economies.
information's foreign branch Taber
price ceilings on crude' oil neither The German Transoeeam agen-
vL. i. J..n4w»'n oir in n DovTl'n kvnO/Ir>oef ’ coif)
led the , fight against cftange<4-the industry’s contention „cy iff a Berlin broadcast said, „ _ j{mior High school
contained in the $167,268,444 gen- OW^^sterday, assisted by Reps. in.the matter nor ended its two- Allied^nuiaance raMerS^seattered ' And on Saturday Nov. 13, the
Baytown, W.
chairman, $1509.65.
ergu
son,
appropriation
era! defltdency
The economy drive is a "to-
ken” affair since the amounts in-
volved represent fractional per-
centages of the total government
J. WBliam £H$ter, R., a.; Rich- year-old campaign,
ard B. Wigglesworth, D., Mass., That was the consensus among
and Marion T. Bennett, R., Mo,.
They charged the agency
- ■ vith dis-
(See Mosquitos Blast, Page 1)
headed by Elmer Davis wit!
(See House GOP Raps, Page
Foreman Case Hay
Reach Jury Today
Stocks Close Today
Courtesy Citizens National Bank and Trust Company
i.«i. 4 #U1B W*1 * * t
.....1554 Rustless Steel
Barasdall................. 15K Sinclair .....v- - ..... 11
Skelly ...................... 87
Allied Stores ....I......... 14%
American Radiator ......... 9 r-nmips
Anaconda Copper ......v;.. 25(4 Pure Oil
American T. and T.m ***"
i • •••»•«*• ID '1
Chrysler Motors 77%
Cities Service .............. 12‘i
Commercial Solvent —..;., 13%
Consolidated Aircraft ...... 12
Curtiss - Wright ........... 7 -
Electric Bond and Share 7%
Electric Power and Light 4%
Freeport Sulphur 32N
General Electric .......35
General Motors .........51
Glidden Pau\t . *...........18*
Graham Paige ..... 1(4,
Greyhound ...... .18(4
9tiir on ......,............ 46 N
R L and D. Co. ......... «%
Houston OH ..,............. 7*4
Hudain Motors ..... —... 7N
Humble T6
Jones and Laughjin ........ 21H
Kroger Grocery ..a....... 9SH
»%
/
oil operators today after a week
in which the lengthy statement
,of Fred - Vtason, economic stabi-
lization director, came under close
study. . .
Vinson's answer^ “no" to the HOUSTON Nov 5. A jury
industry s demand \for at least 35 ^ DUtrtct Jud Frallk Williford
eente more per barrel for domes- Jr/s C(Jurt must decide Friday
T , . . . ld "fn whether Percy Foreman, former
Industrial sou^ MieVedjthat fissis^nt district attorney, is
^erii?!,H°raCe Pelly, E. J Gray, chairman,
(See Tri-Cities “Atea, Page 2)
organization, with the aid of Boy
.Scouts, will stage the annual’olds; FRENCH PROTESTS
clothes drive throughout the ALGIERS, Nov. 5 tl’.E*
Tri-Cities.
G. R. MeNabb heads a commit-
tee in charge of the clothes eam-
Hoovet, Says War
In Final Winter
Packard Motors
Phillips Petroleum .
. , , ......
..... 45
.....15(4
14(4
they liad refuted the statement 3 uty of Ueeping and exhibiting
.i7* reasoning even • before it was „ was within his
paign, Twn Cook, chairman of
the dinner arrangements , com-
mittee, said that entertainment
will be furnished by two Mexi-
can girl musicians, ’
The
French National Committee of
Liberation announced today that
Franco will not consider herself
.-tooutid by any Anglo-American- J°w fulfillment of that obligation.
Russian decisions affecting Gcr- Hoover called the blockade a
WASHINGTON. Nov. .5.- (10!) -
Former President Herbert Hoover
asserted yesterday the United
States is morally obligated to feed
the hungry in occupied Europe
and that the anti-German sea
blockade should be relaxed to al-
ma ny .unless her representatives
are allowed a voice in deciding
those issues.
issued.
■ U. .
Skelly 87(4
Socony Vacuum ............ 124*
Sperry Corporation ....... . 28‘i
Standard Brands ...........28(4
Standard CHI of Indiana ... 34,
Sharp and Dohme ..........18%
Standard Oil of New Jersey 68(4
Sun CHI ...........'•••...... 60
Sun ray Oil ................
Texas Corporation ......... 47(4
Texas Gulf Sulphur ...... 35%
Tidewater Corporation ..... 18 ^
T*P Land and Trust ...... 8%
T-P COM and Oil • =....... M*
United Aircraft ............8*%
United Corporation —,... 1%
Unieed Gas *%
United States Steel ........ 62'4
Walworth ........7(4
Heart Ailment Fatal
To Film Director
policy game, of was within hjs
rights as a lawyer when he bailed
out of jail and defended count-
less agents of Houston’s numbers
racket.
Attorneys began closing argu-
ment at 9 a. m. and the jury was
expected to begin deliberations
about noon.- *
Tom Harmon Missing Again
Noted Football Star Was In China
secondary strategic factor.'
He said "the forthcoming winter
—“very probably, I hope, the last
winter-of the war"—is likely to
be the grimmest-yet for Germany's
captives
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 5.—0IE>—Mo-
tion Picture Director James P, rJ « -___msiL
Hogan, director of the Ellery £(|£g| tOillCTS Willi
ANN ARBOR, Mich, Nov. 5.
tl'.Pi—‘"hie secretary of war de-
sire# to express regrets at this
time that your son, Lt. Thomas
Queen movies, died last night at
his home from a heart ailment.
Hogan had just finished direc-
tion of a picture called “The
Strange Death of Adolf Hitler."
The same rescue fire depart-
ment squad which vainly attemp-
ted to resuscitate Comedian Lou
Costello's one-year-old baby after
it drowned in the afternoon, failed
tq revive the director.
Turkish Minister
CAIRO, Nov. 5.- O) — Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden arrived
today from Moscow to confer with
Turkish foreign Minister Numan
Menemencioglu and inform him
of the agreements reached in the
umc uiat ,yy|ii
D. Harmon, is missing in action.’
Tiiis was the second time in
seven months that Mr. and Mrs.
Louis A. Harmon Were advised
that thejr AU-American son.
Tommy Harmon, was lost in air
action.
14 that her ^son and his crew
were missing from a crash in
the Caribbean area, again refus-
ed to abandon hope.
“We didn't lose courage dure
ing those days in April when we
heard nothing," she said, “and
we won'J, believe that* he has
not come out op, top this -time.”
Harmon bad* requested a
transfer to a pursuit group be-
Bulletins
By UNITED PRESS
PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 5.
Philip Murray, president of the
a of industrial or
congress of industrial organiza-
tion* was re-elected to hJ» fourth
term as (TO president today. .
He came back the first time . cause he did not wish to be re-
in ApriL-but today the odds sponsible for a crew if anything
were heavy, against1 him. This should happen to him or his
time the former University «of
Western Union ............. 44
White Motors 18% TAKER AIR JOB
Lambert
Lori Hard
fVW-'
a Red
uniform , . . Dianne Cade Murray ^rpqration
the iwrade in a romping Nash Kelvinator ..
• • Jovce Maris Caok de-
to drink a tote.
.. ..
National Dairy
North American Aviation
Ohio Oil .................
It*'
, «%
, U%
u%-
8%
16%
(Radio Moscow announced early
Wilson Company ------ i— 7% DALLAS, Nov. 5 (UK) — Former
Bethlehem ...............XD57’* Texaa Secrets©’ of State William
Dupont ...... I42(s J. Lawson of Austin ha* assumed
Thursday that Eden apd Seen
of State Cordell Hull had
Secretary
had been assigned to the 14th
air force in China piloting a
P-40. pursuit plane against the
plane. The first plane, which
crashed into the jungles of
Dutch Guiana, was called “Little
Butch—Old 98," the numerals
WASHINGTON, Nev. 5. _ Presi-
dent Roosevelt today nominated
Elmo Pearce Lee, Sr, of Louis-
iana to be a judge of the fifth
court' of appsida—the port for
which fonner Texes go valuer
James V. Allred hM to receive
senate confirmation.
Moscow together. There had been Japanese. He hasj>e«n missing
Harmon wore on his football jet- WASHINGTON, Nov, % — Preo-
Thq ship Harmon had been Meat Roosevelt said today that
Eaton
Republic .^
88(4
33%
16%
his duties as special representa-
tive for Braniff airways, airilne
official* said today.
speculation In • London that7 Hull
might join the* Eden-Menemen-
cioglu talks.)
Menemencioglu arrived yester-
day.
since Oct SO. The war depart-
ment said.
Harmon's mother, who “was
sure Tom would come back”
when it was announced April
flying in China was called “Little u i
Butch HT an dalso bore the nura- conferee
ends “88." reached
H. a (Frits) Crisler, Micfai- jotet o|
gan football Coach, was with the art la
(See Lt Tern Harmon, Page » tlneuM
to ho
____________
- vy
...............
__
- ' ’ 1
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 128, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1943, newspaper, November 5, 1943; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027684/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.