The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 77, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1944 Page: 2 of 6
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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THE DAILY SUN, GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS
I
i* *?.
For Victory
V-Day
hazards would be encountered in
an attempt to transport *o many
people in truck* from one town
to another.
"A military organization is
equipped for handling such a pa-*
Continued From Page One)
have yet to he worked out, Tracht
rade and tor transporting a large
number of people by motor ve-
hicle*, but we are not, and too
many lire* would be endangered
if we should try It. It will
U.S. Planes And
Ships Continue
Blows in Pacific
Big league Dianoad
Star Is Prisoner ,
d*P>
(Continued From Page One)
Guinea killed 504 more Japanese
troops, captured 116 and liberated
s*-1 or "asst
- * ;«rs."s slsi ».r“,£ - jsss ASsstl-Jr
regret the reat
Tracht aaid.
"After taking everything into
consideration, we decided that
■t „ .......
tenting each organization, for happen that we would
sSctJb*?' =*■■*• -.....
veterans who might be included in
the parade, for a reviewing stand
The parade will not go through parade from Goose Creek to Elms
alt of the Tri-Cities because chil- Field "
dren and a great many old people Frank Read, of the Raytown
will ^included and it would be utilities corporation, % C. Mor-
impossible for them to walk the rfs. reprereiating ithe Jayrees.Jake
. r- - sfe«or^-=«ri»-w»caMia. M«Rr Rolt<rt the Elks. W. H Dom-
mert, of the V.F.W., Mrs. Sally
3ixteen-jnch shells whistled
PHH.ADELPH1A, Sept it
- Phil Marchildon, former
Philadelphia Athletics' pitching
star who enlisted in the Royal
Canadian airforce in 1*42, waa
reported a prisoner of war in
Germany by officials of the
Philadelphia dub today. <
Marchildon bad been missing
in action. He pitched two s<to-
sons for the "A's" and lead the
mound Staff in m2 with 17 vie-
Storm Alert* Wine For Entry
Sounds Along S***"
Atlantic Coast .&£%§#
But
before dead-
in Texas, In-
Shipyard Worker
Drowns In Channel
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER hBw£dNE$DAY, SEPTEMBER
tance down the channel'(M
When Yocntans’t rir n,
authorities, the TrUcSi?1,
MIAMI, Fla., Sept 11 (HID In-
teresta along the Georgia and
Carolina coasts were warned in
In theTflcvaiutionarv „J
ican troons in il.JwI
late Weather Bureau advipery
erts, as
coastal defenses and buildings as
120 tons of aerial bombs plummet-
, ed down on the hapless .defenders.
The hub of the Paiau group's
defenses. Feleiiu ard Babeithaup,
got the brunt of this new and de-
vastating attack launched by
Adm. Chester W. Nimitz' forces.
>me
guishene, Ont.# Canada.
long di !.ccau»e many
Amazing Way for
'RUN-IKIWN" people
to get Hiw
VlTAUTY..PlP!
1
-
Sullivan of the Navy Mothers
Club, Maj. Killough of the
state guard. Louis van Melderf of
the Baytown fire department, W.
L. Blanaett, of the, East Harris
County Auxiliary Sheriffs depart-
ment attended the meeting last
| night and pledged their support to
| the celebration.
I Committees will be appoihted as
‘ plans for the parade progress.
| Tracht said, and announcements
j will be made from time to time
) about participants and the time-
j ’Tracht, Grover Edge, Van Mei-
dert and A. B. Pigeonne for tiie
i general arrangements committee
j for the parade. Edge,
and S. W. Dobson are parade
1 marshals.
BwM Ptanes Attack
Rdcktl' planes, shooting ISO
rockets into the apanese, added to
the destruction.
It is posmbie the carrier planes
used in this blow were the same
as those that attacked Japanese
shipping on Mindanao. In the
Philippines attack, American sur-
face craft and carrier planes
knocked out ,89 Japanese ships
and 68 Japanese planes Friday.
Palau is 600 miles from Mindanao.
Bough and tumble Adm. William
F. Halsey's Friday raid on the
Philippines may nave cost the
Japanese much more than the
shipping, pianes and men lost.
New Fire Station
Being Considered
The big convoy, caught and sunk
off Surigau, on northeastern Min-
Blansett danao. probably was loaded With
lumber, badly needed by the Jap-
anese. That area of the Philip-
pine* is. JapanV principal source
of timber.
May Have Cost Iron
Likewise, the sinking of 32 load-
ed coastal ships in Hinatuan bay
must have cost Japan much iron
for that section of Mindanao pro-
duces a lot of Japan's iron Supply.
The 'Pacific fleet headquarters
mention of battleships in the new
blows against the Palau group
brings to mind that these modern
surface craft were employed sim-
ilarly "just before the invasion of
Guam.
.Fleet headquarters announced
the new Palau raids a short time
after the Tokyo radio had broad-
Red, Romanian UnHs
Near Hungary Border
I (Continued From Page One)
j which fei! to the Allied column
j Monday.
j The capture of Dcva gave the
| Soviets space in which to deploy
j their armor for.a swift invasion
thrust up the Murpsul valley into
j Hungary.
i The Soviet early morning war
) communique said Malinovsky’s
forces took Deva yesterday and
struck out for Iipova, 58. miles
PtOto for a building a house
a new fire' station, living quar-
ters and.*a elubroom for firemen
and possibly an auditorium, wiil
be studied by the Goose Creek
city council at its regular meet-
ing next Monday night.
A building committee compos-
ed of H. L. Townsend, chairman;
Fire Chief N. J. King, C. W.
Grantham and Paul Black of the
fire department, J. A. Ward and
H. G. Bailey, commissioners, has
been named to submit plans for
the building. m '
Present plans “call for the
•' * in
here today to continue ale
an Atlantic hurricane reared
northwestward about 400 miles
cast of Stuart, Fla.
The advisory stated ail danger
appears to have passed for de-
stiuctive winds along the Flori-
dacoastline, but small craft
warning remained posted from
Melbourne, Fla., northward,
"The hurricane 'is centered
near 27.3 degrees north and' 73.5
id 74.5 degrees west," the advis-
M «idt Jiy* aUcndcd by a
be closed to entries Sept. 15.
Kidd anticipated a large list, of
competitors. Last year 612
schools entered league football
play-
large rirea of hurricane winds to trie Belfort gap.
arid gales over an area of 500 French troops moving northeast
miles in diameter.'’ from Dijon, maintained their rap-
Army and Navy pilots ridftig ‘ id advance against slight opposi-
herd on the disturbance estimat- tioii and swept past Longeau to
ed winds of 140 miles an hour in within less than five miles of
the area which they covered.
The weather “bureau cstiinated
the hurricane was attended by
winds ranging up to 90 or 100
miles sn hour. 1
The body of Robert Lee Yoe-
*v* - — —r~ _ mans of Houston, who drowned"
terscholastlc league 1944 football ’ h _ .,1 Tuesday
competitions, Director R. J. Kidd in Houston ship chan el Tuesday
today reminded high schools. night, was- at Tri-Citie* funeral^ rican troops in the Co,
Conferences and districts will !l0mc today awaiting arrival of army totaled only 35^
relatiicea to
ments.
Yeomans was drowned about
7:30 p.m., according to.a report
made to Deputy Sheriff C. Wil-
liams, who went to the scene ot
the drowning. His body was
found about 10:30 n.m. by the Tri-
Cities amergency squad and em-
ployees Of Tfi-Citics funeral home.
According to statements of wit-
nesses made to officers ■ and to
Justice of the Peace Praha Boyle,
who conducted _ the
mans, a Todd Houston Shipbuild-
ing corporation employee, had
gone fishing with three other
shipyard employees. Late in the
afternoon, they said, Yocmans in-
sisted upon going swimming fully
clothed although others in the
crowd urged him not to. When
his companions tried -to locate
him, Yoemans had disappeared.
Two men who were some dis-
ociet;
Carrie L|
Allies Closing
Trap On Germans
(Continued From Face One)
roads and railways leading east
building to be' located in the
city park, facing Gulf avenue,
and it probably will be.a two-
story structure with the fire sta-
tion downstairs, arid -other rooms
overhead. As little restricted
material as possible will be used
in the-building, and it is pos-
sible that construction will. be-
gin shortly after plans are ap-
proved by the council, Fire Chief
King Said. V1'
Baytown Private On
Maneuvers Drowns
Nan's Abandon
Lomza To Rea*
Words was received today
from the War Department that
Pyt Vernoft Treybig, 216 Cypress
street, Baytown, was drowned
late yesterday afternoon" while
participating in maneuvers near
Camp Chaffee, Ark.
Pvt. Treybig was formerly em-
ployed in the Baytown plant of
Humble Oil and Refining com-
pany. He is survived by his par-
ents Mr. and Mrs. Charles Trey-
big of San Antonio; hiS /wife and
a 15-months-old daughter,,, who
make their home in Baytown;
and a sister, Mrs. Lena Hanna of
Wooster.
• Langrcs.
The two French forces were
only 35 miles apart and at Lan-
gres, the one unit jyould be 20
miles south of the American .lines
at Chaumont and 68 miles south-1'
.west of Nancy.
While the French were meeting
decreasing resistance, American
troops operating 35 miles farther
cast ran into heavy German de-
fenses at Port-sur-Saone, seven
miics above Vesoul.
Severe fighting was reported
from the tector. with Hut Ger-
mans attempting several counter-
attacks, supported by tanks and
self-propelled guns. The enemy
resistance extended cast of Vesoul
to as far as L’Is!ev
On the extreme right flank, one
column of.French troops made ad-
vances up' to five miles north of
Pambelin and were driving rap-
idly. with little opposition towards
the Doubs river and Montbeliard,
11 miles southwest of Belfort.
WHM
I
tretchmar-Alpha Nupl
it High Mass Sepferab
,nni../3^W
Ptf™ « lot
Next time your dinner (
well, and you feel sick 1
able, let soothing pfr
help you. Relieves heart
upset stomach-helps retard*
mation. and simple dir
your druggist for pgPT0 □
when your stomach h up*;”
a korwiqh
cast that a second raid by carrier-. penetration.'
“l.___J ______ 1____ _______ A filial.
(Continued From Page One) ■
tanks, were able to' achieve a
ahead, where the valley broad- 'based planes had been made on
ens out to the west and north-
east into the Hungarian plain.
THESE two important steps may
* help you to overcome the tUscom-
WILLIAMS
Chiropractic Clinic
Dr. A. C. Williams ....
. Dr. Rosa Williams
.3 CHfi,
. Licensed Chiropractor?; .
10f N. Commerce Rhone 254
Goose Creek, Texas
weakness, poor complexion!
So with ample stomach
PLUS RICH, red-b:
Sh
f you are subject to poor digestion 0?
suspect deficient red-blood as the cause
of your trouble, yet have no organic
complication or focal infection, SSS
STRENGTH when defic
Build Sturdy Health
and Help America Win
Thousands and thousands ot users have
testified to <£he benefits SSS Tonic has
brought to them and scientific research
shows that it gets results-thafs why so
”’“"yeay"S3fi Tonic builds sturdy haalth
Creger Hotel
Family Style Meals 50c
Sunday Dinner 75c $8 Per Week
“Best Meals in Town"
No Drunks Allowed
107 W.. Pearce Goose Creek
B & G Refrigeration
1007 Leaviris Street
Goose Creek—Phone 1067-M
Strickly Independent
C. A' (Check) Brittain
E. M. Gladney
Cars®
zqasgsay-^Tpn^buaaastyrgnsyw .. -
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TOlifC
Https build STURDY HEALTH
$39.50
SPECIAL
fri-CitiesBody Shop
Pruett at Main
Peijy, Texas
WMt LOANS
A Polish underground com-
munique reported “Soviet at-
tacks in the Praga district.”
Praga is the eastern suburb of
Warsaw on the east bank of the
Vistula river. ,
“Soviet antL German air battles
taking^ place, with
t supremacy," **•---
m.-.
This unit apparently was at-
tempting to swing in back of the
'Treybig
were m San Antonio with Pvt, Roi^ only a few miles from the
Treybigs parents when the mes- g . s . der and „ mjles due
sage ot his death arrived. g,uh ofthc Belfort pass.
L M U 6. ANDREWS, dtriy
qualified and acting chairman of
Harris County Democratti; Execu-
tive Committee do hereby certi-
fy that the following persons re-
ceived a majority of all the votes
cast for the respective offices set
opposite their^ names in the Sec-
Democratic Pri-
held in Harris
ond (Run-Off)
mary Election ncm in num
County, Texas, August 26, 1944,
and that the same are the Demo-
cratic nominees for such offices:
Mr. Joe Harris -State Represen-
tative, District 19, Position N'o. 1.
Mr. Ed Clauder-iCounty Com-
missioner, Precinct No. ■ 3.
Mr. Thos. I. Decker Justice
of the Peace, Precinct No. 2.
Very truly yours,
M. L. O. Andrews
Chairman Harris County
Democratic Executive
Committee.
Soviet supremacy," the eommuni-
rided that -a Ger-
man/'withdrawal from the east
the Philippines. There has been
no confirmation of this enemy re-
port.
IT. a Sub Lost
The navy announced the loss of
the- American submarine Gudgeon,
the twenty-ninth lost in this war.
Truk, once thought to be a tow-
er of Japanese strength in the Pa-
cific, got a 72-tbW btasting: from
Seventh air force Liberators as
rocket planes hammered at Pa-
^m^WMi simi^were err^ A 11*1)1 All ^AftAII
tinued against Iwo Jima, Jaldit, Hll IIICII tJVlIvll
Maloelap and Miii islands. /
Five or six Japanese plmtos rose
to intercept the army ^aiders at.
Truk. One enemy plane was Shot
down, another was, damaged and
three American glrines were hit.
Pro-FDR's Begin
Reorganization
The French at Ponte do Roide
have been stalled for four days
by the Germans who have been
fighting desperately anti so far
successfully to keep opetKthe five
mile corridor between the town
and the Swiss, bolder.
marked
que mM,. It add
man/withdrawal
bank of the Vistula “increased."
(Continued From Page One)
ing the prior, nomination by suit.
•‘‘When such a suit is filed,'1
Renfro declared, “we wiil de-
fend it. And you need have no
apprehension that the supreme
B"**------
Vj
* An army bomber is made up
of about 40,000 separate parts.
Just Receievd!
NEW SHIPMENT OF
SEAT COVERS
against us.
the Roosevelt fac-
Rhineland Forts
enemy
convoy itK the Adaman sea<safter
a 23-hojJr fight. The convoy may
have ybeen trying to reinforce be-
leagtiercd Japanese trops in Bur-
ma.
/ Enemy troops moving toward
the highly important Allied base
at Kweilin, China, crept forward
a few more miles. American 'war-
(Continued From Page One)
Headquarters refused to comment,
however, on a Paris radio report
that the paratroopers and glider;
borne infantry would soon be
landed behind the Siegfried line to
smash the enemy's eommunica- •
tions and traftsport.
Disclosure that the Ninth army
was in the field came as French
units of the American Seventh
plangs ettaekgdJthe .Japanese 67 scjne at Chatillon, 42 miles north- ruviuenuy, ui« ysu-noc
fflik&/Som,Kw#n. This indicates west of Diion and SOuth- leaders didn't cdpsider Jfe
that the Nipponese are nourmy m .. ^ PfgTiTi - -mH-HfritiDTr--«—»!»"«-
• '''AMM' 'TS5F Kw'agsi junction . .. ...
province;
army from the south reached the' Harry Truman.
Evidently,
court-wilf^Tule
Promptly,
flon elected Robert Calvert
Hillsboro, its floor leader, as
temporary chairman and ap-
pointed a number of committees.
Heading the important com-
mittee on presidential electors
was Rep. Wright Patman of
Cass county.
The committee will be made
up of one member from each
state senatorial district. It will
name 21 of the new electors,
and two are to he selected at
large. ' ■
It was hot known what would
become of ‘ the eight original
electors who pledged support to
President Roosevelt and Sen,
Chungking admitted the fall of
Wenchow,.'a central China port,
which the Japanese captured
Thursday. Strafing attacks by
Allied piahes in that area killed
many of the enemy’s troops.
Good news crime from Burma,
■ 'qdie?e'’Qarhhi*‘ giildlttw routed the
Nipponese and firmly established
themseivM.pn .importantridges
within 60 miles of the enemy-held
port of Aityab.
The a4yentages of dealing-with
friendly home financing institution, and
you will see why so many of your friends
ly so
and neighbors have used our home pay-
ment plan. Own Your Own Home!
. ,~s
Jaycee-ettes Hear
WAC Recniiters
The Jaycee-ettes, at a board
meeting Tuesday night, heard
Lt. AVe Schroff and Sgt. Jeanne
Wallace, of Houston Wac recruit-
' ing office explain the import-
ance of trained women in the
medical corps to do rehabilita-
tion work with veterans, and
Mrs. Cl A. Long’s report on
Clerical assistance to the Red
Cross. .
Lt. Schroff and Sgt. Wallace
are in Goose Creek to recruit
Wacs for the medical corps.
They, will return on Sept. 21 for
the showing of a film illustrat-
ing the work of Wacs with the
medical branch of the ,v service.
The care of a soldier from the
time he is wounded or becomes
ill Until he leaves the hospital
and is back service is shown in
the ffljn. .
Mrs. S. H. Tanner is in charge
of arrangements for the show-
ing of the film at Baytown com-
munity house on Sbpt. 21.
Mrs. Long reported that
in force with Lt. Gen.
George S. Patton's Third army.
Front dispatches said the Amer-
ican First army spearheads in
Germany were pounding steadily
eastward against relatively light
opposition, probing into the main
works of the Siegfried line. Tanks
equipped' with great flailr. moved
ahead of the invasion columns to
clear away the enemy minefields,
while formations of dive bombers
streaked in overhead to bomb and
machine gun the retreating en-
- DaTeft- reports'
•icah force about a mile inside the:
German ’ border beyond Lammers-,
dorf, 10 mites ea*t of Eupett and
12 mile? south-southeast of
Aachen. ' ., *
United Press War Correspon-
dent' Henry T, Gorrell, riding east-
ward with the invaders, reported
that American tanks, troops and
pro-Roosevelt
" early
dally""
opened. After winning the
driver's seat, they* started over
from scratch. They sang the
Star Spangled Banner, and call-
ed upon Dr. Bonner Frizzell of
Palestine to deliver an invoca-
tion.
Before recessing last night; the
convention Invited Gov. Coke R.
Stevenson to speak today on his
compromise plan to .list pro and
ariH-Roqsevelt electors on the
November ballot and let the
voters take Jbeif shplee.
At The
EKD
ALWAYS A~
DOUBLE FEATURE
TODAY
THEF THURSDAY
Feature No, 1
OUT
JAP
HUNTING
Feature No. .3 . ,
left Gorrion • Marsaret Lndc«
—Also*—
(‘Dick Stabile Jamboree”
To Fit All Popular
Make Cars
Tri-Cities Tire & Supply
497 W. Tetfnji Phone 75'
Cali 37 For SHedi*
I I I'Tl v .
■ itiracting interest of many friend
I Att of Miss Anne Isabelle Kr
baM al pI V, Jerome Gassnfer was the
L hurch choir, with
fc"dC Mirtha Mary as organist. fo
■ She bride was beautifully gown- 1
*■
Bft-ajBaAr
l’r st!hn trein and was held in
lald hv a coronet of seed pearls.
E'4ce b/rp as her only ornament
®he 'V0 , of pearls, which had
' jCrn by brides in her family
I
STARTS
TUESDAY!
FEATURES
FeatureNa, 1
SMASHING H|
CKAfHlNO |M
The oldv
re-born!
RICHARD -
DIX
JANI
WYATT
-Feature No, 2^
BELA LUGOSI
-VOODOO
MAN"
. .-ALSO-.
Musical, Comrdf;
as considered un-
fit would be
guns were streaming into Ger-
many in force, rolling swiftly past
sullen German villages who made
no open attempt to interfere.
More than 50 miles to the south,
the second invasion column last
wast reported more than six miles
into the Reich after a thrust
across the Luxembourg border
north of'the ancient Teuton city
of Trier. The main works of the
Siegfried line «t that point Jay
some 10 to 12 miles east of the
frontier and it was indicated that
the Yanks were Just driving into.
the fortified belt. .7
Between the two columns, an-'
other First army force captured
the Belgian town of Bastogne in
the Ardennes forest and drove for- .
ward 13 miles to take Ciervaux
in Luxembourg, only four miles
short of the Nazi frontier.
Malmedy and Spa, southeast of
the Liege, also fell to the Americans.
week, and It
likely now
adopted. ■ .
Ah eld-fashioned party detppn-
stration followed the pro-Roose-
velts taking over the ebriyett-
tion.
, The display of a portrait of
; President' Roosevelt touched off
another demonstratiqn, and in
rallying speech. C. C, MeDoRaid
- e' ix .L S 4a ti.ll
of Wichita Falls termed Roose-
velt as the country’s greatest
president.
,a-i !
Jaycec-ettes have given a total
of 46 hour? elerjc&l assistance to
doing the work are Mrs. John wtd * ft™?*
Baldwin, Mrs. Elizabeth Ellis,
Mrs. Shannon Morris, Mrs. Jake
Rutter, Mrs. Mary M. Tanner
and Mrs.'Anna Pearl Thomas.
preceding the first carbon incan-
descent lamp by almost one-half
a century. **1 a
NOW OPEN
for expert shoe repair
, ,,AVork. 20 years experience.
All work guaranteed!
HOLLOMON’S
SHOE REPAIR
217 I
- Uf i
3
24-hour feryifto
Best Materials
M •
PhoneTo93-M
■T-rr^:
ALWAYS OOOL
' Cali 061 For
TODAY
THRU Tin RSDAY
BIG HITS
>,m No. i
ROSAUND
- RUSSELL
1 . T n ‘
• 7
• .
424 V^est Texas Avenue
CARD OF' THANIB n ,
Wh wish to take this means of
expressing our appreciation for
the thoughtfulness and beautiful
r J
Phone 1383
A. T. COLE
floral offerings from Goose Creek ,
neighbors shown us in the death j
Mrs. H. D. GUeg.
Will pay ceiling price for
Good Clean Cars
Any Make AH wodeis
-
More than 90 percent of the
world’s molybdenum to produced
in the U, 3.
!.J. Cole-Used Calf
I '
Hit No. 2 -
“
THIS
THING
CALLED
LOVE1
......'"—
II
ii
T‘"
-PAtoo—
OUR. GANG in
“A TALE OF A DOG”
“HERE’S WHEK^OO ALWAYS SEE A NEWSREKI
SHOWING THRU THUI
Lt4J
l
tief
CRO*
■ ■ •
STEVi
m
I mamrnzmmf
R ;■") f */f i hi '
'■
C’eraens ■ w
—Also—
VERY LATEST “MOVIETONE NEWS’’
COLOR CARTOON • “HAND TO MOUSE
“CHIEF NEELEY’S REPORT* ,
i:
“■ Cal J5 For Schedule ',
DARING! TIMELY
'Ivtttytl! 'WOMEN
*
|
BONOAI
’
(
3
J ' ' ■ '
.
ALSO
“NEWS OF THE DAY”
> -■
......- ' ...
' ' -
r--
THE
SIGNPOST
• sum
with 7
i GAIL PATRICK
GERTRUDE MICH/
s NANCY KEUYj
Welcome, Newcemer*.
Here Is » Business
Directory of the Tri-
Cities. -
We have the new Cold Ray
Machineless permanents.
3df NGilllard Phone 104
rosi
hurl
slectncai wum.
SSTrmf'
(night 933-W) W. F. Miller
& \V. E. Gunn.
.......
TRI-CITIES ELECTRICAL
»“S„ 1363-W
305 Main St
Buyt^wO
FmS5ts FLOWER SHOP
I Flowers for Every Occasion
102 N. Commerce Phone 13.)/
riimiture.
"New and Used. Pr.ccs right
F.asy Terms.
HOME FURNITURE CO.
105 VV. Texas Phone 94
Insurance...
KERR INSURANCE
AGENCY
201 Pruett Bldg. Phone 3-2
Points...
Seidlitz Guaranteed Mildew-
prtiof paints. Brushes and
painters equipment.
BAYTOWN WALLPAPER &
PAINT CO.
Phone 1217
Used Furniture...
Walked Now. We Pay Top
J ALKHEABP FURmi Ultg"
COMPANY ■ I
200 S. GoosCvCrc»k St
Phone 491
Wallpaper...
Complete Line of “Unitize^
Wallpapers. largest stock in-. , .
East Harris County. r
HGMELUMBERCQ,——-
“By the Big Oak Tree" -.
Phone 13* •
Most Complete Stock at
BAYTOWN WALLPAPER &
PAlNT-e©; -------* ' - ,
"tytiT i
40614 Baytown-Peily R4-
Phone, 1217
Firms wishing to be listed
in this directory, which
will run Wednesday and
Saturday^ can obtain
particulars by telephon-
ing 520 or .521.
IDEAL
FOR SCHOOL’
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 77, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1944, newspaper, September 13, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028201/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.