The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 153, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 6, 1947 Page: 1 of 8
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GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1947
IfE BE A JS LAMAR TO
GAIN QUARTERFINALS
WEATHER
TRI-CITIES—Mostly cloudy with occasion-
al ruin this afternoon and tonight. Oc-
caHional rain Sunday with mild tempera-
tures. Moderate southeast winds.
Arab-Jew Warfare Explodes Again
»r Redskins last night to pace
to 7 bi-district victory in the
More Deaths Reds lssue
ROME,
6.—tli.E)—The
Com-
of labor challenged the govern-
ment today with a three-day ulti-
matum and scheduled a general
Tuesday
are not
met:
The ultimatum was drafted at a
"“'ll * Rome chamber of
called to plan re-
French Armed 100-Yard Derryberry
With Drastic Run Clinches Victory
Strike Curbs In Hectic Lamar Tilt
matum and scheduled
strike in Rome for next
midnight if its demands
the Ganders to a
state playoffs.
—C. Rogers photo.
New Border Outbreaks
Flame As Riot Toll
Continues To Mount
JERUSALEM, Dec. 6. —(UP)—
Terrific explosions rocked the
twin cities Of Tel Aviv and Jaffa
tonight in a renewal of Jewish-
Arab warfare on a scale JaJestine
has not seed since the Arab re-
volts of 1936-39. ‘
JERUSALEM. Dec. 6 (UP) —
The Jaffa-Tel Aviv border ^ ~
ProposedCharfer
Reservists Pour Into
Camps To Reinforce
Regulars In Rioting
meeting of the
labor,, It was
taliation against the government
for its police measures yesterday
Zt* PARIS’ Dec- 6‘ “(UP)- The
and a score were wounded. vanguard of 80,o00 army,
PARIS, Dee. 0—(TP)—A spokes-
man for Interior Minister Jules
Moch said tonight that the gov-
ernment Jrad the French crisis
"well in hand.”
ItroP*»ftl Will
( k;...
*rice Control On Aid Buying Considered™ w.tda«y
■ •••- - - ... | , . . - _ _ ' ' » v. least two Jews and sending |_ nA» M tt_ji j
Government Would have To Purchase At Market Price (n smoke some 50 Arab |> Dclny ndllCQ
•houses formerly occupied by _ ... ,,
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 (!'.!’> A on Monday by Rep. Kari E Mundt, in the bill at,costs higher than Jews. IA 'All VATAFC
plan, to impose price control on R, S.D., in the form o£. an amend- the prevailing market price for St&bbin?* plubbine’S and “ ■ ™ » VIvIJl
Boc-.nho.tw.il,
Ut^Lhat.it would have (he blass- Mundt sa.d details of hi* amend- For initanco. Reheat were sell
mmmmrnmmm
presented chases of cowmoSities authorized be^hWtod^by’th« an^h‘W°bte^renianS'
raised the day’s known- death toll
b5L»«.' The number pf^deaths«in Ahead Of Deadline
S^lo^'StrikrMarHalt
TJ22JZZXZ Production Of
SC.’Stt S Atomic Energy
“n“teSrihU,Tcte called
to reinforce regular army 1© Prevent Walkout
By FRED. HARTMAN
They won the battle, and we won the war. They couldn’t
e the forest for the trees.
The score: Robert'E. Lee 13, Lamar t
And late today in the sunny Rio Grande valley, Superin-
tendent George Gentry and Coach Dan Stallworth frill be
there for a toss of a coin with the winners of this after-
noon’s Harhngen-Brackenridge game, to decide where the
quarter-fmal contest will be played next Saturday after-
noon for the championship of South'Texas—and a spot in
the semi-finals.
And so back to last night*s '
Enshrine in gold -the names of
Alvin Derryberry, Tom (Swede)
Stolhandske. John Carroll and John
Adams, and you will have partially
paid tribute to the 1947 Gander
team- that once again met a test
and walked off the muddy gridiron
like the champions they are. And ■
there was plenty of help from the
other Ganders too.
The fates placed this quartet of
:.Gan<jter$ in thy r.tarring role a* Lee
cent victorypnethat was earned
even though the statistics favored
the lads from.River Oaks.
Little Alvin Derryberry was the
J‘~ "" oie
Ma“nn Studervfs Contribute $102.77
. - received a "very
*37.80 your money- will have helped fion* Which led him to believe that (See Jew-Arab, page 2)
102.77 youngsters galore to enjoy Christ- the committee would support the
Frt-v inuxly. reported
Ho race Mann Student*
• Total today ...;f
fh CHIEF GOODFELLOW
f.0ur.;' ....... '■ '■
$14077 rn?s *•*"- \ amendment When. it is offered
This fine gift of $104" raised the house floor.
I
. v 4
sish, ahd in the entire
tTie . Gopdfellows, since
— ..... r-e..... ...............ich shattered a monentary lull be a municipal body politic and- ures Ivhiti^PremkTTtobert ariSJl that wouM <*>* U S. .production Bound in adhesive tape', protected
.at'-an executive session of the-for- on the Jewish Sabbath. - corporabS-in perpetuity, under the man sought to combat the crisis of ?ital atomic energy. by soft-sponge rubber on nearly ev*
, eign affairs-committee. He said he More than a score of Arabs were name of the "City of Baytown’’.. Th“y rSeeded UrnfomhL ” ’ ' " ' ............—*
received a Sery _fayorabie’' reac- wounded in Uie new^ (border out- That’s the paragraph in the .pro- (sJ French Page^f ' f
posed charter now being mailed ' ’
to the residents of the Tri-Cities
«»* vW; Boy Seoul Dinner E“lhaSSrLS Highlands Real
2 Thettrtors were delivered from EStflfe IS ACtlVC
'lie printer’s Tuesday and the at- , .tc
. S-tver .“nce^aS^d1^" Sales Totaf $75,000 ' run and was helped to the
. ..................... .....---
Members of the gas, coke and ffy ?art °f his bqdy excePt around
chemical workers union (CIO) “j* hoart' this lad made football
were reported ready to walk <Sff "ls^ory on Memorial ,-;tadium when
ftihir jobs at- the Carbide and Car- he intercepted one of Doyle Beard’s
bon Chemicals corporation gas dif- Passes, looked down and saw his
fusion plant here Tuesday unless goal .“** under him and
company officials agreed to meet then proceeded to run, push, shove,
a 24-point union program. and s?rbn) b s way *00 J’ar<ts for
riiEL7'‘.ru“r °»«the toichdoWi
A blanket 25-cents-an-hour wage eVer turned In by a Gander athlete
increase headed the list of union He dropped from exhaustion 5-
General debate on thi
hoi
bill was
- members
At Annual Me©tjlng
» as on,- of the nicestcan always use a. gifts a csk or - Men th7 E^" Hlrrl^co'unto6 dttrict bT^daf nighT'^cl," ery'oMhe cofstrurtion'T,h h°S,egWands “"atd standto^im agLtostX Zfin- of'lhun^l^
ic^Ma'nrfw noundl lonaumed nine hours and-51 min- BoysScouts of America-will be held- ^thrn^a °Heek ^ftor That"'Tavlor tTnew™0- ar?-bpin?‘^ns^er^d crease. But Carbide and Carbon the stands wished that‘a son of
sssjsss.% sAj?aa ^ ^ asys «asaiwswk,M?.-
ovation he
ihort of a clap
How many parents in
SsrHS®!'
(See Control, Pnge 2) Rev. Lee C. Pierce, castor of the T" and many were-sold by individual before the Tuesday strike deadline, ter. But if it had not been for th»t
body, and L. El Pen.- but it sure Would b.- hin- to have
tod, sponsor', .when .they some fine gifts shower in .on JS
7ht in a’ box of m“oney which the next few days,
pd 4105 77 ' «r«..
Bands Compete
Elks Jo Observe
Memorial Sunday
Rev. Lee C. Pierce, pastor cif the m ^ultod hv*W 8nd many «r®,r®' solfl by individual
First Christian church of,Goose Five thousinT slk hwdre^ °WnCrS Md other rc&Itors'
Creek.
" more than
Iped b t h t-'8"'1 yoli hplP a Lit ?
EJSrfSIK' ^nfe gave pennles,
e^nae - dimes, some quarters -and
[to one was asked tp give one cent.
In Huntsville
Insisted), and the results
|p*k out loudly. ,' -
^ Itiis sin
Houston college. " be one of. 1600 memorial services the MethoSst women .inder
Robert ,E Lee high school band planned by Elks throughout the e^ftl IA Am VP NlUlflpU
♦round TOWN --SjffS&ZUTZSSi — • « “£'’4r* 0 Amve iUnflay
* TH-**., «o™. w*eJ:> Activity
urtvinsr into htuim>w home _____ciru^b. WA«ou»H4. commit- Members of the district com
•Boy ScwjtpPtgfr JJ) -...... ■:
before the Tuesday strike deadline, ter. But if it had not been for that
J«S*. C S
tor-final u
Robert R.
sons of
.............appear on the Doll MPymond Martin bought the curity imormauo:
77-.7T™., rSjQgSS wSKSK S 2=“m
- SM!^7iSwfi&3 a'5-tstM r?S-~r • •• ---------
s««ssaSwiSSA?-* ;. .So
Recreation^Leader .
Bloodhounds Put
-D to James Bridges for $8450. An- (See Strike May', Page 2)
other six-room home sold in the -
’ ...U~ 4L. A ,
I Each band given a first division merchants of Goose Creek are in- BOOSt'Oil PlICC
' blnhdS c^e^^ore^'^hrmer ratin* wi" a troPhy' ViSd l° Rtte"d’ J°"eS '
same neighborhood was the M. O.
Spain place, bought by Douglas B.
Stone’for $5000, . ;•
T'he former R. H. Harris home aa. /% • a T *1
on a 1 acre-tract at the ihtersec-, llfl I AttVIff | fp||
tion of Crosby-Lynchburg and Har- VII VVII TIVI 11 Mil
ris roads was seld to Mrs. Frances
Kaminsky.for $4250. The feuateam Escapee Is Believed
house is being remodelled by Mrs. n , D n
Helen M. Dauncey of New Kaminsky who will occupy it. v«xOrn6r6CI Dy rOSS6
ationally fecognized author- - ^......p,,!,,,, nonir.i.
training, will arrive here late to-
morrow afternoon for a week’s sta;
in the Tri-Cities as a guest of
government- gcore of lts own.
.......ly came after the
been repulsed al-
most Within a shadow of the Gan-
der goal line.
But for Derryberry’s run, the
score would have been: Lamar 7,
Robert E. Lee 7, and on penetra-
tions:' Lamar 4. Robert E. Lee 3,
It remained for Doyle Beard Sr.,
one of the veteran sports writers*
of Texas and long a member of the
Houston Chronicle staff, to pass by
the press box afterthe contest was
over and say in all truthfulness:
"We should have won.” ......
’’’ - ’W * -AAntr-Wonder W«Wd, *ad-it nSt '' m
ten for Alvin Derryberry. . .-
Captain Jack Taylor had fumbled
[ phones in some Brigadier news
his
. ’id bcr ^aere Bloodhounds today were placed
toy ?£ rndCa r" Fit7ver»w ^hd thf £r?H of a M-year-oM esca,„ ....... ........ „ ulc .
the L0mM^ti^the' operation or George Fonuke. had
Captain.
escaped in the opening seconds of the third
on the Lee 21.
Stocks Close Today
holidays . E. e. Waugh and Earl
Camp have returned from their
brer hunt.. Mrs. Waugh- .thanks
■ JjP the Lamar'mothers for fringing
I m their Goodfehow bag*.
Dallas, w lle £ z issfsszrsr^i -ssL *.«»u-
of crude oil today had a 50-cent wm a series of conferences at tr^ct incl^ded thicket off a little-used Kiamichi elected to try to strike through
per barrel increase secured by the /Um Hi*™Sj# a two-room dwelling and the chick- mountain trail east of here. * the air. * g
m^oT mrtomtnies'irTexL tod > to. civic tod ^ Ptiee ^ The fugitive was identified earli- “Lyle Beard Jr., one of the fi«-
nu.kA... and . will diiwet »n4.r
Ai-hed Chem ........ ......
Alleghany
Alleg laid S
X’on’t get.. .Donald Lewis has left Ah*s Chaim-
lor Whiting, Ind., where he will Amerad I et
--19D
8 ... Kirby.Pit ..... , — MMi nounted its’ njsw pric# would be folk daneesr-
2&L Kingston Prod v. - 414 $2,65 per harrij] instead of $2.15.
attend school.. Little Mavtha Bar- Amer Roll Mills
oett chanting at the top of Bet AT and SF
Magnolia announced Friday . it ®d
_ ;■« top oi ner •->*
voice “I’ve got a new blather baby” Amer Tel and Tel
Mrs. G. A. Lillie is a norh dip- Anaconda Cop. ...
*°mat. Margaret Phillips and Budd Co .........
L°St' '^^kynfc4effinhe steel HUH
- .lwo-w*°.Ky. - vacation ne AM, S6Vi Kenn Copper 44H
..... 8344 La ‘ Land J6A4
S3% Libby MeN.and Libby 9%
ge1! Macjk Trucks ,. A............. 5144
152*-j Mid-Con Pet ...... 43
3344 Nat Fuel and Gas .......... 11%. . , w .
10 Nat Dairy Prod 26% HOUSfOn ICC PlCK
| Alice Sparks are always hungry . . . Cfeole -Pet • 36% Nat^Bellas Hess ............ . ^3^ u—p. | ' p__:
“rvice':.::::::.:;::: ^ EL* S Murder Puzzles Cops
fWne, Mi -O- ~t«~ ......(.....SS..........
2 Radio -Corp .......,.......,.... 944
r 7V, Rio Grande Val Gas ..,v., . 1%
.%% Salt Dome 10%
. 21% Sou Pacific .....:..... 42%
14% Stand Oil Indiaia, 89%
. 37% Stan Oil N J . , . . 73% Goldstein. Justice of the Peace Tom
180 St Regis Paper ............. Decker said -he had been stabbed
56*4 Sunray OH ... ......... 10.* with an ice pick and beaten wjth
*44 Texas Co —.......55% a giunt object late yesterday.
28’4 Tidewater Corp ..........-^52% JESTER ELECTED
Mary Beth McElroy, who assist- *®ee
I Dan Stallworth in recreation
take
lots glory -sentence. He*h«d been iden- found ore of his favored receivers,*
(See Bloodhounds, Page 2) (See Sports Streamer!
■ ...bought-, two JmmG
Hi^hlands. Page 2)
sun1 1 att07^ to- 8f9 Four C/iiwiTo SIiow Compromise
• UnonW. CfnllionsIL . _ . ' . a- 1 __ . . "
dowmbySfootoanLspom1bi?ities.< 1 Still In Disagreement After Two And Half Years
“Leaders make or break a pro- "*
(See Recreation, Page 2)
LONDON, Dec. 6. —(&Ri The big mai
tods
'Miner
AArdean
Jean Meadows executing a Con Edison
f beautiful ballet leap. ..with “dagr Callahan Z-Lead
8br in hand”... * lialumetjind Hec
Kitty Kay and Charline Rhoden Curtiss Weight v.
take over-new jobs.. Louise Davis Davison Cfiem . .
tonfesses to an embarrassment . ' Duval Tex'Sbl ..
tvs a rose a day for Dinky Sto- Dow Chem ......
vail Eutha Carpenter showing Du Pont
h«r dimples. . .Befa Spalding sur- General ‘
HOUSTON, Dec. — (UP>- Police'
today were trying to unravel the
• mystery surrounding the murder
of a 55-year-old merchant whose
stabbed body was found under
wreckage of his fire-blackened,
store.
The murder,victim was Barney
Motors
, Wised with birthday gifts from Graham -Paige .............
tbe girls...J. F. Koenig looking Greyhouftd ... ............ 11-. Texas Gulf Pro
At o------ ■ •"•.V* • —-----*=» Ul CVHMUIIU • ■ ■
typical professor with his new Gillette Safety
6'asses.
Gulf Oil
We have—a pair of beige fabric Houston Git
ovrji which were fmtofi at Mem-
I m.A stadium last night the own-
Iw-Win come by and get them.,..
OKLAHOMA (TTY, Dec. 6—flT.E)—
......._____ Gov. BeaStord JeS&r Iff Texas was
Hudson Motors ;...... A.... 13% _
Humble Oil ... 67% Wilson and Co.......... .....14% oil compact commission at the
Inti Nickle ..y 26% Woolworth_................. 45J4 closing session of the commission's
Interlake Iron
68 % Union Pacific —......: 148
25% U S Steei . . ., 73%
White Motors .............. 22%
Wilson and Co........
| »ny as an economic unit. It is sitions. there appears to be littla
four showed no evidence today that still divided among the four vie- prospect of any-progress toward
they were prepared at this session tors. That is the real Issue. an agreement. Marshall asked the
of the conference of foreign mini*- Russia .insists that an all-Ger- $64 question at this session of the
ters to make the compromise's nec- man central government and sptis- conference yesterday, after inter-
cssaxy for eliminating their basic faction of its reparations claims preting a Molotov remark as con-
differences over. Germany. must precede economic unification, tinued insistence upon $10,000,000,-
The United States’ George Mar- The United States, generally sup- 000 reparations for Russia,
shall. Britain's Ernest Bovin and*'ported by Britain, insists that steps He asked Molotov to say whether
France’s Georges Bidault accuse toward unification, especially elim- that was correct and 4f so to tell
the Russians of insisting on deal- ination of the present zonal bar- the council how he proposes for
ing only in generalizations and tiers', must come first. the Germans to meet such an obli-
making false accusations. France insists, that the Saar gation.
Russia's Viacheslav M. Molotov must be incorporated into its eco- Molotov replied
says the others are only giving lip nomic sphere before economic though earlier he had
service to big four unity and are, unity and even then it must not sian position was
in fact plotting to divide Germany prejudice the future status of the mav try to a-
permanently and set up a govern- Ruhr and Rhineland. France wants
menT for the western paft oTli. a special, four-powpr regime for
Nearly two-and-a-half years aft- the Ruhr, with other neighboring
cr the Potsdam meeting, the -feig countries associated with it
four are still arguing — and dis- Until there is a break
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 153, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 6, 1947, newspaper, December 6, 1947; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027688/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.