The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 104, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 14, 1944 Page: 2 of 8
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: ’■ ' v ' • ■:
Jl/RDAY, OCTOBER 14,
SATURDAY, OCTOBER l4
THE DAILY SUN, GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
Political Sniping
Grows In fohme
,rs,r&| w HSirts „x
negan charged the GOP with poll 75 per ecm ??,0?'1 ^
starting a whispering campaign vote. 01 A* T«Xi
concerning the president’s health. L—£44. ,
His statement,...tol(i*ad. one by ^ . .. w,
BartrsfSJS - i <*«**
asr^ssajsss —1
was denied by GOP National „2ufia'vs of Santa ft" I
Chairman Herbert Brownell, Jr. Halfway f0 Shanzhai" !
Additional speeches by the Pres- 1™. I
ident were |n prospect as he re- At The ■ ; ~~
vealed he was discussing plans for
Cct. 21 foreign policy address In
New York ...
appearances in addition to his
Vice-President Henry A. Wal-
lace in Cleveland -attacked Dewey
n« .1 "front" ' man who "cannot
Rcv Cert Mattingly, of Chan-
jLv baptist church: k, has been
rL, to be the principal speak-
\v the meeting of the Intcr-
L.Tralnlng Union Sunday night,
L sW announced today.
The meeting will open at 7:30
L st the First Baptist chnriJh
E . Creek, W « Is expected
Eat least nine churches will
f prr.-.'r.tad by members, of
(Continued From 1’age Olie)
maintained a tight blockade over
tho enemy's two remaining eva-
cuation ports, Liepaja and Vtnts-
pils. Only yesterday, a 6,000 ton
German transport was sent to
the bottom by the warships, while
naval pianos accounted lor a 6,-,
000 tonner.
The Germans attempted to case
the pressure against their south:
ern flank with an amphibious
landing behind the Soviet lines
near Palanga, 14 miles «oith of
Memel, but were driven off by
Soviet guns and planes with a
loss ol four of their 24 landing
vessels. ■ *
Scores of Germans were drown-
ed in an attempt and others were
killed by shellfire* and bombing.
More than .300 prisoners were ta-
80n. ' • '■
In the Balkans, Marshal Ro-
dion Y. Malinovsky's Second
Ukrainian army widened its
(Continued From Page One)
lng was being left undone to
achieve acme solution.
Both Churchill and Stalin, it
was pointed otrtr-hav* frequently
gone on record in favor of a
strong. Independent Poland 'that
entertained friendly relations with
the Soviet Unioh.
It was admitted that the two
leaders may have a different def-
inition of these terms but It was
emphasized that they share an
overriding desire to settle the Po-
lish pioblem.
So far as the London Poles are
concerned. It was noted, they face
one situation which cannot be ig-
nored namely the fact that the
Always /T—"
Double Feature
STARTS SUNDAY
Feature No l \
IJuZwMMir^
sfttfyffifiiyag
rr~"— Feature No. lyisqg:
Leon Errol
[„ >£*' ■■ in K Uja
“STRICTLY in
[ raft GROOVE” M
Also .;l-<
‘‘Fend There War"
PLAN8 FAB AHEAD
DARUNGTON, S. C. CRt A
man who plans for the futute is
Darlington*;
WRHraS
INI. the other in 1856 Howard
is taking no chances on their
being the third generation at the
South Carolina military college.
i ’
AN AMERICAN SOLDIER stands on the deck of the French battleship Strasbourg and looks at the four guns of
tfca Wwer turret which were cut off when the French scuttled the ship in Toulon Harbor, The vessel was :
wrecked to prevent its falling into the hands of the Nazis. Signal Corps photo. (International) J
j H Ashworth a layman will'
fundin' ii)f> services at Central
Moiram conducted in all baptist
Sics throughout the South <m
Ky Miss Pauline Knowlton.
rfucatic.rta! director, announced
sskin? pledges to the church bud-
cel for the current year, Miss
fjHWlton said, The church last
y,*r . raised $20,000 through
Qrs, she added. Included in
Jk budget is provision for tho
Sdis "co-operative program”
Si) contributes to ..the support
^vrvU'rnnfprx: anil mk.
V ENDS TONITE
"HOOSIER HOLIDAY11
"MADAME CURIE"
m. Americas Sta,.
fV Way Into Aachen
Police Study
Hunter Clues
gradc-Kragjuevac railway, isoiat- the Mannings. The youngster was
■mg Aarge German .forces south found -iiwpassfissipn. of a. woman
and southeast of Belgrade. reported suffering from alcohol-
(Continued Front Page One) Riga, third .Baltic^ and fifth ' “ ‘ ~ *
ern part of the city overrun in the European capital to be liberated
first 24 hours of the assault said by the Russians in their l(i44 of-
rcsistance was comparatively light tensive, fell to Gen. Ivan I. Mns-
this morning, and only one Ameri- lennikov's Third and Gen. And-
ean casualty had been reported up rej j Yeremenko's Second Baltic
to 11 a.m. v armies in a three way assault
Frankish reported * tremendous fl0m the northeast, east and
destruction” in the eastern part
of Aachen, with only one or two
At The
(Continued From Page One)
door of tho upartment open us lie
fled.
The snappy convertible was
found yesterday out of gas in .a
negro district. One complete set
of slightly smeared fingerprints
was taken from a door liandle. t
Penprase, meantime, was check-
ing her diary, full of names of
servicemen she had met at the
canteen, civilians, and idle mem-
oranda. .
COMPLETE
of hospitals, orphanages
• CALL 15 FOB SCHEDULE •
STARTING SUNDAY
TIIBC TUESDAY
Eads Tonite
Gulf Coast Electric Co.
„, Baytown, Texas
DO YOU
HAVE A
as “Heppy”
BROADWAY'S
MUSICAL
SENSATION
COMES TO
THE SCREEN!
Doctors tell us that hobbies
the span of our lives.
* - ,
Make a hobby of carrying
SUN A MON
LYNCH'S PLACE ON BEAUMONT HIGHWAY
ON SAN JACINTO RIVER
Shi iNirtDil
»ho wirW*
man-hunt!
WKlm' his' staff were ready to move in. AT 73, SETS PAGE FOB PL
i | , \,'t He was preparing to handle the cHaMBERSBURG, Pa. O)
; » | H problem of .a water supply, which g r0(2> an employee of the
Li l ' HkJII ■'* had been cut off for three weeks, Ordnance Letterkenny Depot
f I . Py W'< . and had food and medical sappiies has worked 20 months wi
f-1 1 a X-JiP ifJmML aA ready, " , ■ - missing In hogr of duty a'
A supreme headquarters com- time and’without being late i
■^j munique said the Americans were gig day. Jfe'pas never -
LL ' -t«. iit-. WES' m "advancing slowly in house-to- timc out for sjckness and has
■k- ll0Use fighting” in the northeast cr taken a day of his »
4m section of Aachen. leave. Rqtg is 73. drives 4$
4- > /.Jm 'MM To the northwest, Canadian a jjay and transports five
h Jm&f' . fr '-if’- Wk. forces on the south bank of the ^epm workers.
^Schelde river advanced 2,000 to __
’^■BuiP ! 3,000 yards on a narrow front be-
fe- * I teen Biervlict and Savoyyaards-
IO VIVIAN ltANI. yohng cherry piaat against stiffening opposition, Plane Parts Drop On Farm
blond screen actress,, goes the extending thci^MjJgehead to nftn*Rtwrj.ir r* stfc *-
novel distinction of being “the girl within three to four miles of qther
we’d most like to be submerged roops on the north bank of the
with,” voted thus by a crack sub- Qg°nan counterattacks haltef a
marine crew in the^South Pacific, Canadian advahee toward Bergen
the Beveiand-Walcheren peninsu-
la in the Scheie estuary. r *
(An unconfirmed Paris broad-
cast said- the besieged German
garrison at Dunkirk on the
French channel coast had attack-
ed the allied line, only to be re-
pulsed and thrown back to Us
original position.)
' TM British Second army con-
tinued.. to inch eastward through
mud and woods toward Venray, 14
miles northwest of Venlo, in An
attempt to widen the British cor-
«m Ikn ’ "NYr.ihoelorif n tltLa
protection. You may f
of your credit.
STARTS AT 2:30 P. M.
BULL-RIDING, BRONC-RIDING. BAREBACK
HORSE-RIDING, CALF ROPING
and cold drinks
more i
thrilling
than
ever!
- Plenty of Barbecue
orf the grounds.
- ^•: .. ,'A.f ::J- .:..... -•
Admission—-Adults 45c and Children 25c
M-q-Mmm
Firmcff’Tfhder'Irit
. For Fun -
"Chicken Little”
An Important Wartime Message to
EVERY FRIGIDAIRE USER
in the Tri-Cities area
For Schedule
Call 661 :
Doors Open
Daily 1 P. M.
■ \t.:- - « o combination of medicin
' ^ ^ the stomach lining, aid in
gpH Mol 2^( Homo ond fomi
^551
i--~- Ends Tonite^-
'Cliayeiiiie
Wildcat" ;
"Allergic to Leva"
STARTING
1 SUNDAY'
THREE STOOGES
—'Siipfeme headquarters ri-Ti-aYM
that German pressure against the
northern end of the British corri-
dor below Arnhem was lessening
as the Germans shifted some -of
their best troops, including those
who hurled the British Red Devil
paratroops back across the lower ■
Rhine last month, toward Aachen
for what may develop into ope
of the decisive batfics of fhe wAiv~
United Press War Correspon-
dent Henry T. Gorreil reported
from the ..front that the enemy
forces massing northeast of Aach-
en were among Germany's best
panzer outfits, specialists in coun-
terattacks.
•PHONEY EXPRESS"
SCARBORC
PHARMi
309 Minnesota-Baytown
By Superstition!
has been appointed a
FRIGIDAIRE AUTHORIZED
SERVICING DEALER
215 N. Goose Creek
ARTS TOM
HEART-THUMPING
THRILLS! :
f ** , f ^ :
For only you ;
who love
Action!
•■F:
Shopping less
frequently?
Mrs. Baird's Bread
stays fresh
longer,—
Wartime condftions are exacting
a heavier and heavier demand on
your refrigeration equipment.
Hiat’s why reliable service, when
you need it, r&o*Hwporta*
r/T Y*T
trained in Vrigidaire factory methpds .
and using genuine Vrigidaire parts,
are especially qualified to serve
nS J
- SiA
Dependobls Day and Nigh! Service!
Lew Standard Prices!
MRS. FRANCIS ANDRiWS, 38-year-:
old socialite, awaits the verdict j
in her trial at Salinas, Cal., forj
the murder of 19-y*ar-old Jay
Lovett,.whose body was found on
ihe htghway near har . ranch last
July. At the trfal, District At-
torney Anthony Braiil toelated
Mrs. Andrew* shot and killed the
youth in a fit of jealousy. Mrt.
Andrews, denying the charges,
SrlJS-sS* £§!
“HARE FORCES" "INSIDE FtCflFFTNfi
rozleyoarequipmrn
bootlft (at uk« of
«i«, One forihoK *
»ir conditioning eq
jrout copy todflr.
-ALSO- =
IB V. H. A"
REPORTER”
TUCK INSURAh
05 S ASH BEL ST tfPMikoJt
Jet 'S ta£& nlnu t VOt
w»l{- WILLARD PARK CP
5 t*nin9'
irntt lfM.
WATERS ROCHESTER • HOPN'
OUIS JRM5TR0N- RiX IH'-SAW • BWt fU'S'-1"’
esr nil OiiiHtSTKA hit HAU iOHMOh .■*'
Oti.ma franclrot 1 *
DURBIN • TONE • 0'S?
FRIGIDAIRE
SERVICE
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 104, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 14, 1944, newspaper, October 14, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028011/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.