The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 143, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 29, 1945 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.
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paY, November 2s,
fATHER
rffllM—p»rt*lr clou,,v ,onl*ht »n<l
11 warmer. Maximum yesterday,
^rriKi uiininium laxt night, 46
inber 28, 1945
®De ®ai(i) 3tin
■ r 5
DELIVERED
ANYWHERE IN THE
FOR 75c PER MONTH
V!'
Lee Defeats
Ball; Enter
State Playoffl
NO. 143
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS, TH U R S D A Y. N 0 V E M B E R 2 9. 1 9 4 5
FIVE CENTS COPY
Ganders To Meet Big-
Undefeated Milby Bu«felNBERG
In Bi-District Clash sel
gzis' No. 2 Secret
rvice Officer To
e Nuernberg Witness
A determined Gander
rocketed its eaftii
playoffs Friday niKht by jA
in* a sensational brand
defeating Bali high. The k J
played their best ' Gar J
Lee just
Nov. 29. —(U.P.)—-The No. 2 man’in the
service, Maj. Gen. Erwin Lahouser, has been
‘moned as the first witness in the war crimes trial, pre-
lably to give the inside picture of Nazi plots and secret
jngs, it was learned today.
Lahouser’s testimony, it was reported, may be the
sensational yet presented in the trial of the 20 top
leaders.
Lahouser
m
U. 5. Sponsors Revision Of
Potsdam Declaration Terms
«.♦
posedly great ^Tor ££ ^
to got started Friday Th.
ussaaiti?
until Thomas Peacock had b
ed his way across the dot#.
None of the Ganders tiaS
above the others Friday ■
were all stars from the boy*
started to the second strint
finished the game Hunt «L'
powerful as ever; Stoerner .
Tor birds aW; TCraffwasal
ever; and Peacock; our deft
star, showed he can really
Red Bale's line was good
one end to the other. The
nad their defensive formic
;sia Wants
isteeships
•ared Up
friets Want. League
Hons Mandate!
Nations
Under UNO
ripped to pieces and their™
had to pat
to pass with Gander jin
ail oyer them.
The opponents for Lee in thtfl
district game arc the rough j
rugged Milby. Buffs. The Buff,]
undefeated in nine games to <
and are being highly prais^i
Houston seribes. The thief I
tors in the Buffs' success hash
power and beef. To say Mill
big is putting it mildly.
Milby finishes its regular i
ion this week and the Lee t .
will undoubtedly be the most j
crested fans attending the i
This will be the Buffs’ finfj
iistrict football game; while 1
vill be playing In a W
;ame for her fourth time in I
■ears. •
b.VDON, Nov. 29. -(U.P.)
jia today indicectly call-
fon the nations holding old
Ljuo of Nations mandates
(say now whether they in-
ti‘to put them under the
aeeship system of the
r United Nations organiz-
irama Class Gives
'lay At Horace Mm]
statement on the subject of
it* by the Soviet delegate,
ei A. Gromyko, in committce-
ite at the UNO preparatory
ilssion conference went un-
rend by any of the six man-
Sty powers represented.
[The irohlem was ron.ldem-
ef |ilans to establish a tem-
trusteeship committee to
lien unfit some territories
ptM'ed under the trusteeship
leu when » permanent frua-
-kl|i council Is formed.
iroblem cannot be solved
til seme trusteeehlp* are ereat-
sime it la to be composed of
If trust and half non-trust na-
was the chief
assistant of Adm. Wilhelm
Canaris, chief of Nazi intelli-
gence services. Canaris is believed
to have been executed by the gee-
tapo last April a few days before
the Nazi collapse when Adolf Hit-
ler received information indicat-
ing Canaris was plotting against
him. „
Lahouser held the No. 2 post in
the Intelligence setup from 19.1S to
1943 and was hospitalized in 1944
after the July 20th attempt to.;as-
sassinate Hitler He was one of
those who was In the room when
the plotters' bomb exploded.
Lahouser was a specialist in
counter-intelligence arid it was
believed he may testify on the
Nani nlottings io take over Aus-
tria. The prosecution announc-
ed that it planned to conclude
its evidence in Austria tomorrow.
Lahouser is tali, thin and bald-
ish. He served in the Austrian
army between 1931 and 193ft and
was in active duty on the eastern
front In 1*44.
All evidence thus far presented
has been in the form of Nazi docu-
ments and affidavits.
Testimony submitted today dis-
closed that Germany was prepar-
ing a two-front war in Europe,a*
early as 1937 and that the Nazi
high command thought Russia
was poorly prepared for such a
conflict. '
A directive issued on June 24,
1*37, by the war minister, Field
Marshal Werner Von B'lombferg,
ordered the German army to be
ready for a two-front war with
main emphasis In the west, or a
(See, Nazis G-2, Page 2>
G-M Strikers
Want Truman
To Intervene
Truman Hints
Big Three To
Meet Ho More
1
UAW Policy Committee
Urges Settlement Of
Canadian Ford Strike
Changes In Pact May
Remedy Difficulties
In German Control
T *.*( HSS, i. . fij
BOV, SIX. IS FLYING NEWSBOY—A1 Bennett, Jr., six years
old, is pictured here as he arrived at Municipal airport, Chicago,
III., with his dad as eo-pllot of his Cub plane, having flown from
Middletown. 0, lo make’delivery of a new magazine, “Two To Six,”
published for parents of children in that age group. The young-
ster is just beginning lo read, so his father tells him what the in-
struments aay as he pilots the plane, Al Is believed to be the first
“flying newsboy.” . ■
(International)
DETROIT, Nov. 29.— (U.P,)
—striking members of the
■United Automobile Workers
union (CIO) today appeared
directly to President Tru-
man for intervention in the
paralyzing General Motors
shutdown.
The Strike committee at the
Ternstedt plant of G-M’s Fisher
body division asked that Mr. Tru-
man “use the power and forces
at yonr command" to bring Gen-
eral Motors officials into imme-
diate negotiations over the un-
ion's demand for a 30 per cent
pay increase.
“Your hands-off policy will
only result-in further stalling
by General Motors and .pro-
longation of the strike," the
telegram addressed lo (he White
4 House said.
The union appeal coincided with
renewal of labor department ef-
forts to restore negotiations in
the. giant industrial deadlock. An-
swer to the resumption of -nego-
tiations appeared to rest with
General Motors executive offices. .
e
WASHINGTON, Nov. 29. -
(U.P.) — President Truman
announced today that this
government has taken steps
to revise the Potsdam dec-
laration with a view to rem-
edying difficulties in the
four-power control of Ger-
many.
At the same time Mr. Truman
said in answer to new* confer-
ence questions that if the United
Nations organization operates like
it should, there would be no need
in the future for meetings of the
Big Three or any other type of
special, top-level, international
conferences.
SHORT AT PEARL HARBOR PROBE-Maj. Gen. Walter C.
Short, left, is shown above conferring with Col. Bernard Thielen.
of the Army General Staff, during the joint bi-partisan congres-
sional investigation in Washington of the Japanese sneak attack
on Pearl Harbor. General Short was in command of United States
Army installations at Pearl Harbor at thne of the attack which
brought the l'. S. into World War II. (International)
The second period drams (
pon request Wednesday i
resented a very delightful i
rtertaining play. “Miss
nut," to the atudonu of i
* Mann Junior high,
"Miss Lonelyheart. ’ a play i
n by Helen Louise Miller.»j
ory of the teen-age study,
esented some Very
aments. The cast included I
Bemei, who played the |
rs Fairchild, a symphattc I
; Don Hinton, who plaji
rt of the hepcat. Junior 1
lid; Elizabeth Hill playedJ
rt of the brat, Kitty Fai
d Betsy Ross Lindsey,
lyed the part of Scottie 1
ild, a lonely teen-ager. Al
ew, Taylor Miiicr, James)
r and George Crawford, all!
Eromyko oppesspf the temporary
hmittee on the ground that it
.Trusteeships Hokk Page 21
State Department
CIO Steelworkers Probe Starts Monday
/edemeyer
//lores Red
Infests
Vote 5 To 1 For
Strike Action
NLRB Ballot Cost U.S.
Taxpayers $300,000
By UNITED PRESS
Results of the most extensive
vote ih the history of organized
labor today showed CIO steel
workers overwhelmingly in fav-
or of strike action, if necessary,
American Inter- “» »>aek demands for a $2-a-day
in the civil war because wa*e Increase
Workers who fashioned the steel
and aluminum sinews pf war gave
DIKING, Nov. 29. -tUTi-Lt.
Albert C. Wedemeyer com-
‘ of U. S; force* in China,
I today he had ignored Chinese
nmunht Gen. Chu Teh’s formal
lou* roles of Jo*. Sgffl, BSi
instruction* directed him to
i only with the,Cbinc*e Central
emmeftt;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 29.
Responding to angry demands
promised an investigation into ex-
Ambassudor Patriot ■ J. Hurley's
blistering indictment of American,
career diplomats
Chairman Tom, Connaily, <D,-
Texas). of llie_senate foreign rela-
tions committee, rsaid he 'plknned
tentatively to begin an inquiry
Monday He said he -would call-
both Hurley attd Secretary of
State James F. Byrnes to get the
full story behind Hurley's dra-
matic resignation as ambassador
to China two days ago.
Connolly’s plans, however, did
not silence * congressional de-
1. Gen. George C. Marshall, who
will succeed Hurley as envoy to
China, prepared to leave for,
Chungkihg as soon as be testifies
;before the Pearl Harbor investi-
gating committee. He is an im-
portant witness and, according to
war department sources, may not
- 5W*
WINDSOR, Ont., Nov. 29. —(SU?) -
A policy committee representing
IftOOO CIO striker* at the Ford
of Canada plant today recom-
mended immediate adoption of a
settlement formula ending a 10-
week work stoppage.
Members of Local 200, United
Automobile Workers union (CIO).
Pearl Harbor Probers
Row Over FDR Pledge
Xptacmbled to hear the recommen-
dation and the .peace proposal be-
WA&HINGTON. Nov. 39. «Rt
Members of the Pearl Harbor in-
intercupted to suggest that “any
fair minded person” would consld-
The Prrijdent said that It was
these special eonlerences that
ruined the League of Nation*.
He said he opposed them for
that reason, preferring instead
t« see I 'NO do Ms job.
A basic overhaul of U. S policies
in Germany was' recommended
yesterday by Byron Price, former
censorship director who recently
concluded an investigative mission
in. Germany for*the President.
Price in his report complained
about the system under which one
of the four powers on the control
commission by a single dissenting
vote could veto operations of the
council. He blamed France for
obstruction of the operation of
Germany as an economic unit.
This veto situation, the Presi-
dent said, Is pne of the things
being discussed by this govern-
1
fore takipg a*”secret ballot on its ycMjgattog ........ qr.ctfttloris by the late
ment in its efforts to have at least
be able to leave Washington for
several days,or perhaps a week or
two. ,
AcSptnnce.
The settlement formula, report-
ed favorably • by the policy com-
mittee, was announced at Ottawa
by Labor Minister Humphrey
Mitchell. Mitchell said hi; believed
it would bo accepted by both un-
ion and the company.
tetty Winzer announ
y. La Nelle Norris w« i
. and Leon Cox, sound)
I Joyed Raper, make-up
y waa under the din "
s Hanna- MacGnff.c.
Are Thankful
enneth Sutton thankfui
•e are a lot of cute
i in R.EX.-namely h A l
>la McLain thankful Ast j
uch Bathing as roast tu
mlse Davis thankful that J
>rate two .Thanksgiving.
it Mendenhall thankfW
Bradshaw didn t vitck I
ting on a Texas history r
lly Macke thankful thtfl
■ast passing study hall,
tty Bemei thankful _
such a nutty Sngli»'
thankful that she is tfj
ilor. ; -
, Wedgeworth thankful!
IS so many “bright"
jrear. ' ■■"
ry Helen Butler
the will at ieas,t get Ml
Vggie-Longhorn game,
I Tharp thankful for
He said that presence at Yenan
I * U. S. liaison group, similar
[one in Chungkihg, did not con-
’ recognition of the Yenan
FSumst headquarter*.
Tmt zroup existert- nt Qenan
11 first came to China'and it
not been removed because it
been very usofut Jo me,” he
.a press conference. “It sup-
I intelligence on Japanese ac-
and located American
i who were forced down."
eyer said the Cbmmun-
Bsd promised him that six
ficun flier*, who had been ar-
after being forced down
of Tientsin recently, would
returned soon.
HOUND TOWN
one vote of confidence, the Na
Uonal Labor Relations board re-
ported on the basis of approxi-
mately 75 per cent of the ballot*
cAst.
The United Steel Worker*
(CIO), however, warned its mem-
bers that the vote did not con-
. stitute authorization for a work
stoppage; "that the final strike
decision rested with-CIO and USW
President Philip Murray and his
strjkc strategy staff."
The trade journal Iron Age pre-
dicted a strike could be expected
aomm tlme after the first of the
year
The latest figures from steel
and aluminum plants, iron ore
,;pits and bauxite mines across the
nation gave:
M2 plant bargaining units: yes
286,715; no 60,193, • ■ •
The vole, conducted by the
NIJIB at an estimated cost of
vestigation of all phases of Amer-
ican foreign policy fend the way it
is being carried out by the state
department Resolutions tor such
inquiries were introduced In bcjtb- records and letters
the house and senate \ .U the situation in (China. He was
Meanwhile, there Wore these de- keeping in ctose ' touoh with de-
velopments: „ velopments in congress.
2, Hu Hey reiterated his charges
that "double-dealing’’ state de-
partment "career men" were oper-
ating behind-the-scenes to sabot-
age American foreign policy; He
charged specifically that they had
underminded his attempts to unify
China's opposing factions. .
3. Secretary of State Byrnes be-
gan his own inquiry into Hurley’s
accusations against career diplo-
mats, calling for all department
7 Missing Fliers
Hunted In Oregon
day over a 1940 campaign pledge
by the late President: ftocfeevelt
that American boys "will not' be
sent into a foreign war."
Sen Owen Bn water ‘ ii-Me) quo-
ted the now famous paragraph in
which Mr. Roosevelt said he would
make that statement "again and
again and again."
Brewster asked former Ambas-
sador Joseph C. Grow whether Mr.
Roosevelt’s statement was pub-
lished in Japanese newspapers at
the time, . ' .
Grew, who had testified that the
Five Of 12 Aboard Army
Tramport Plane Safe
1 department roOS BAY Nov.'29. (I’.D -Civilian
dealing with vo)imteers and rescue te-
the situation in ; China. ”
Japanese papers in 1943 were giv-
ing prominence to isolationist or
. pacifist statements by American
leaders' could not refill whether
they published that statement.
Rep. John W Murphy vD-l’a.)
president too.
Chairman Allien W. Barkley (D-
Ky.) ordered that since one para-
graph qf the Sept. 16 speech was
quoted, the entire speech should
go into the Pearl Harbor investi-
gation records.
Sen, Scott W. Lucas (D-TH.) Said
that' if Brewster "wanted to do
real justice he would cite other
speeches by Mr. Roosevelt;’' ,,'He
said he would ask later to insert
other Rooseveit speeches, in the
record. Brewster said that was
all right with him but he “hoped
there will be no inconsistencies."
of the Potsdam
■nged. . |
Mr. Truman would not give ape-
declaration
elite information about this gov-
ernment's suggestions for changes
in the declaration, saying that he
feared .that a .detailed discussion;
might prejudice the current nego-
tiations. *
Defense Rests in
Yamashita Trial
This argument arose aa the com-
mittee neared the end of its ques-
tioning of Grew and prepared to
lay aside temporarily its review of
(See Pearl .Harbor, Page 2)
General Denies Knowing
Of Jap Atrocities
Goodfellows Ready To Go
Needy Children Will Be Remembered
teams from
the Portland Army air Base '■omb-
cd the heavily wooded southern
Oregon wilderness today in search
of seven airmen, missing since
their 046 plane crashed Monday. . _
Misplaced Mess Boy Heads Home
mw>»■«w„„,T.»,r
» ux.wfl, W C js on h(s way t0 Savanna^ Qa.,
Just One Savannah, Suh<
By Chief Goodfellow
Although the Welfare league
reports few children i« heed of the
covered approximately , j2atton
r» steelworkers. Page *),. rhristr
(See, UIQ steelworkers, Pag*
Reds Block Iranian
Attack On Rebels
LONDON, Nov. 29. —<U.R>— An
today
;gy McClure thankful
tmas is near.
ernment troops to move against
the Azerbaijan rebels in Soviet-
held northern Iran. S
Lost!
;reen notebook heienp
ynelle Norris has bee
Thursday, November
ned Algebra and MJJ
iks that it bo returmsi m
nd. ...
“lo«t and found
a Oiju ........ a I
by the student couflWj
Oy Uie .
e students to very s
;e. It is now located »
lal's office. If s^u"fS
le to use this accomo®
stray articles may )*
I of wasted
ih*- TriUities: Apologies to
R Parks for the error in his
iris . . but no matter bj what
he is called, the steaks serv-
at his cafe are mighty fine eat--
Can anybody tell us the
of the Goose Creek girl Who
interviewed On the radio in
York Wednesday"? . . . Depu-
Sheriff H. C. Spence reiuct-
l)f accepts an expensive intro*
Uoh to a Galveston ;munty cus-
Mrs. C. S. Moore know*
1 lightning is shocking ? . . Mr.
’ Mrs. Warren Bunting go lunch
ting . . Mrs. J. N. Hunt look-
foi a place to take the little
ik ticket . ... She got in a truck
too . . . Note to Thad Fel-
That deal in which you and
W Stricklcr were involved as
'Patriot* ha* been settled in the
4 efficient and diligent man-
Mayor C. Q. Alexander
Ctydh Kelly a-huntlng went—
I lane . . Albert Kiber gets _ wijxIAM B. DICKINSON
rather rough new* for an YORK, Nov. 29. U'.Ki—Char-
bner in the*e part* .' . . Nor- . A yndbergh sent a Japanese
» 'Stooges Hargrave finds that „ fjghte“r plane down in flames
necktie (like ail Gaul) may be v.-ith one short burst from the guns
M into four parts . . , Lt. CdL of. ^ army. Lightning during a
mavbe it's plain colonel) J. j,-ar gast Air forces raid on oii
installations at Balikpapan, Bor-
neo, on October 10, 1944.
The high military authority
from which T first obtemed this
story more tharf 13 months ago
has ” just released ^^ from jhe
Goodfellows' help to have Santa
Claus- visit them this year, the
Goodfellows again will function,
with the aid of the entire citizen-
ship of the Tri-Cities area.
The Goodfellows, in case you
don’t know, is a mythical organ-
which operates each
ChristmaJ season for one sole pur-
„ C po*e’ to see thaLeach needy child
- - in the Tri-Cities receives a Visit
from Santa Claus at ChrisWias
^ time.
Any child 12 year* or younger is
, Any cnilfl W years or youngci w
Ljj eligible for a hag from the Good-
fellows if there is any chance
Iranian embassy spokesman saido this child might not otherwise re.
that Ru: >ia ha' refused
formally io permit Iranian gov-
dwindled. Last year less than 200
bags- were filled, and many of
these were unclaimed. Welfare
League and Thrift Exchange ex-
ecutives report less than 50 chil-
dren oh their lists this year.
All names sent in for bags will
be cleared through these two
agencies. . Get the names in early,
if you can, please.
The Goodfellows seek approxi-
mately $400 for its work this year.
Contributions are strictly on a
•voluntary basis. Every cent re-
ceived will 'be spent for toys,
candy and fruits lo fill bags Any
unspent will be added to the re-,
serve fund accumulated in other
years, and which is $374.53 now.
a.physical checkup.
Two other survivors were being
brought in over washed-out roads
and hastily-constructed, mountain
trails from a logging camp some
40 miles from here. They stum-
bled upon the camp after two days
-f wandering through the dense
forest.
A third, flight officer Dave Reed,
Sedalia, Mo., dangled in his para-
chute harness from a giant qvei-
green fir tree for 36 hours before
he was freed.
Dr. Donald Long of Coos Bay,
first to reach the scene, adminis-
tered emergency treatment and
Sedatives to the injured airmen
while awaiting the arrival of
stretcher-, crews.
Maj. Frank Gaunt'said the plane
their good .will,, the crew gave-
WJtlie ‘’some biirhing whiskey and
MANILA. Nov. 29. <l.» - Gen.
Tomoyuki Yamashita, on trial for
war crimes, rested his‘ defense to-’-
day after denying that he ord-
ered or even knew of atrocities
committed by Japanese troops In
the Philippines. , ■
, In answer to a question by Lt.
Col. Harry F, Clarke of Altoona,
Pa., defense staff chief, Yamashi-
tu denied telling Gen. Artemic
11
the only Savannah he knows.
Yesterday, the skinny 17-year-
old negro sat in the defendant’s
chair in Judge R R. Zierleiffs
court, accused of the most heinous
of crimes. ■
A pulse beat wildly in his temp-
le and his bones pushed hard
against the worn iloth of his zoot
suit, making a hump in the pad-
ded shoulders. He trembled and
closed his eyes as the shocked,
tones of Deputy Sheriff M. M.
Brown's voice rolled through the-
silence "of tfi'e court room:
( ".Your honor, this boy was drunk
•'--in a Inis staLon!"
"In a bus station!’' Judge Zier-
Jeih echoed^ ‘ Boy, where are you
irum?" ■
Yamashita
some-wine" and took him lo the Rlcarte (puppet guerilla leader)
bus station. WiHie woke-up in he hadT issued orders to kill alt-
jail: Filipinos, -He admitted knowing
"I, i me go. suh;' I lie good, I Kh-arte howler.
aTn't teilin’ no story; I be .good; '-Jo kftl 30,OOftOW people
catch.me a ship to Savannah; can't unthinkable matter,
ratcli no ship. I'!l work and make said, . ’
some money to take me to Savan- Clarke asked
nah; i won't get drunk In no hus nil of the chjuwF • -
station.". Willie pleaded. ! ; imhotment against him ano It de
Willie lost no lime on the first tails o artocities .-hiwgcd were e
lap to Savannah. Five minutes plamOd ^ him in Japanese,
after he wan dismissed, he stood ‘«n intProre- “
on the sidewalk outside Goose plained 1 ully PJ.
Creek bus-station, a ticket in his ter." Yamashita. replied. I un-
hand. Tears still streamed tkiwn fterstootl everything. •-
his face, but he was smiling, and ' Did you evei i s i I
he wasn’t "drunk in no bus sta- any ofthose y
tlon." (See Defense Rests, Page 2)
ce've a visit from Santa Claus.
In years- gone by, the Goodfel-
lows have filled as many as 1,000
bags for children in this prea.
In recent year? this number has
Lindbergh Bagged Jap Zero
Famous Flier Barred From Combat
Texas E Bond
Sales Dragging
Last Rites Held For
Hayes Robbins
Inc big blue uniform* had moved
within range of his viaioh.
‘Savannah, suh,", lie, whispered.
'.Qnvannah Tmvnft9”
Stocks Close Today
dge of what
as organizations
ULDRES’ HO!»
Jhildrea1 homeroom _ (
it, Don Hintoa:
asurer, Hazel Ru
Chester
ee. Faye Schultz 1
Whltaaid*.
an Stratton i* back in town
for good . . . Mr. and Mrs.
J- Busch are In West Texas
lr * day or two . , . Mr. and Mrs.
j Edward Bethancourt are enter-
Mng folks from, these parts to-
. Identified they are Mr.
Pd Mrs. Prof, Sanders and Mr.
Mrs. Jack' Jacob* . Van
making plans to rush off
the city tomorrow night . . •
L Woods stop* his car to bid
home to a friend he hasn't seen
1 Month* . . ..Aubrey Banks get-
' his name in the pot early . .
Da Vi* being given an asrign-
t while he’ was out of town
business ... But hell come
high officer as I sailed aboard the
cruiser Nashville with Gen. Doug-
tas MacArthur to land at Leyte,
the Philippines, on Oct 20. 1944.
Lindbergh, then 42 years old,
had come to the Southwest Pacific
area some weeks before, as a ci-
vilian attached ,to the army air
forces, tp train American fighter
idiots, most of them little more
than half hi* 'a4»t in
long-range
pledge ot scorev/ , - -■ .. , B njr of popiar, Wis.. whose
time, and I am now able to *lve *score bf 40 enemy plane* destroyed ART PURVIS SERIOUSLY
of secrecy I gave at
flying. .'rt.. , ,
ne was flying with America's,__^
finest fighter pilots. Maj.. Richard ,
By UNITED PRE.SS
Texas is still in the cellar on
victory E bond sale*. The fact the
state libs sold 35-per cent .of its
$90,000,000 quota hasn’t affecthd
the state's standing among the
ether 47 states, according to Na-
than Adams, state drive chairman.
Texans will have an opportunity
to change the state's standing be-
tween Occ. 2 and 8. Adams said.
It was announced that Galves-
ton frould be the .site of a rocket
attack demonstration Dec, 3. Sim-
ilar displays are scheduled for
Freeport Dec. 5, and Corpus
Christ! on Dee, 7. . ' • *
Funeral services for Haye* Rob-
bins. 35, will be held
bins, 35, w
.day at> the home of his sister,
J. t: Harrison at 502 Belly road,
at 4 p.m. I
s sister, M:
“Savannah, Texas?
A tear cut a streak from , the
corner of his eye tq itis-chin. He
choked: “Just one Savannah, suh -
Courtesy Citizen. National Bank * Trust O*
to- * Savannah,
and talk. I
Allied . Stores .
American Radiator
American Telephone
Rev. J. I. F. Tharp and Rev M. A.
Cowey will officiate. Burial will
be ip Hill of Rest cemetery under
direction of Harrison-Losan tuner-
Georgia,"
“Stand up,'hut, _____ _____......
can’t hear you," Judge Zierletff;-,4iJfacohdB Copper■_
ordered;, and b'etween sobs, Willie’s American Maracaibo
stdry came out. Berkey ami Gu>'
al JjjmhST^
^ Burvivors
are the wife. Mrs,
Josephine Robbins; father,1 Cfrus Georgia «0
T. Robbins, of Polly; a brother’
five sisters and three stepdaugh
ter*. .
rkey
He shipped out from Savannah c^rfrier Motes'
as a messboy on a Panamanian S Service ®
.Commercial So.Vent
the Orders -the crew’ wasn't from
he was put off the
tanker at Baytown and told to "get
an American ship" home. To show
HI NABOR
By Olin Miller
POplar, Wis., whose
full details.
fo«son for secrecy—at least un-
til the end of the Japanese war -
was obvious: Lindbergn wa* a ci-
vilian. and a. ^ Z
a non-combatant. And after his
one combat flight to Balikpapan.
he was ordered by Gen. George C.
Kensev FEAF commander. . to
make*no more fighting missions.
The story wa* given me by a
ILL IN HOSPITAL
made him this countries top-rank-
ing>r °fwa4 ^o^b'MeGutee An Purvis, of Pelly. is seriously
*T j second-rank- lll at Goose Creek hospital of an
of Ridgefield h. J., second rank in{eMon sUrted from a
ing ace-„ th small scratch on the nose, memb-
lg^n.i^°La era of his family said.
30 fighters on the mission
There were Japanese aplenty
that day at Balikpapan, At least
(See Lindbergh Bagged, Page 2)
Purvis became ill Sunday while
fox hunting, they said, and was
Drought to the hospital.
The r*a»on»-
th•r• ’a »*
many I*** '*
because, they
was made for
"♦he other fal-
ter." - *
TWO. NEGROES BOUND
OVER TO GRAND JURY
Two Channelview negroes, char-
ged with burglary of Rachel s dry
goods store, were bound over to
the grand' jury under $500 bond
Wednesday after preliminary
hearing in. Judge Zierlein's court,.
* Mrs. e. K. Rachel, owner of the
Channelview store, testified that
money and clothing were taken
from the store and that she found
the cldthing in a room occupied by
one of the negroes. He was an
employe of the store.
Consolidated Aircraft
Curtiss-Wright .....
Du Pont . ....... •.
ElaetricrRond and Share
Electric Power and Light
General Electric . .■.........
General Motors c.,. -,.. ■..
Graham Paige ........ .»
Greyhound —...........
Gulf Oil .....
Houston Oil
*;•
Hudson Motors
Humble Oil .............
Jones and Baughlin ......
Kroger Grocery .'.......
Louisiana Land..........
Lorillard ........... •
Murray Corporation
Nash Kelvinator .........
National Qairy .....-
North American Aviation
Ohio Oil •
Packard Motors ............
Pure Oil .........
Republic Sfcel ...
Sh arpe and Doll me ........
Sinclair -................... • • •
Southern .Pacific- ........
Sperry’ Corporation........
Standard Brands
Standard Oil of Indiana .,
Standard Oil of New Jersey
Sun Oil ....... . ..«,.»;•
Sunray Oil .................
Texas Corporation ' ■ • • ......
Texas Gulf Sulphur ........
Ttdewater Corporation ,......
T-P Land and Trust
291.'. T-P Coat and Oil
United Aircraft ...........
21^ United Corporation ...'—....
■jgis^natfWpd' Gas,..... . ..
46 s; Unfted Stall* §teel . • •
0hk Walworth ..............
Western Union
jl ’•» White Motors .........•*’••*•••
32x* Wilson Company ...........
17% Cotton .............— Down
24% Hayes
34 Premier ..................
12% St. Regis ..................
46
71%
. ........
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 143, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 29, 1945, newspaper, November 29, 1945; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028106/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.