The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 112, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1944 Page: 1 of 8
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, l9*
Relief At Last
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Keep Your Wateh In
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Repair!
There's not a minute-
a second to lose. See
that your watch keeps
on the job, getting you
to your job on timel K
it has been losing time
or speceding up- don’t ■
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for rapid, experienced
repair service. .la
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CREOMULS
For Coughs, Chest Colds [
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PLAN TO VOTE "FOR"
AND ASK YOUR FRIENDS
1 TO VOTE AND SUPPORT
THE BOND ISSUE NOVEMBER 7
-
0. 27 NO. 112
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1 944
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FIVE CENTS A COP\
MIGHTY SOVIET ARMY
DRIVES INTO PRUSSIA
_ ------—
stSSS*l
BAYTOwy
■A.
p?- ' rri ^ *„
£ • t
Yank Leyte forces
Capture 11 towns,
Berlin Says German Resistance In
Reds 31 Miles Holland Falters Under
E .
Three Small Islands Inside Reich Heavy British Attacks
LEYTE,l PHILIPPINES, Oct. 23 (11')—Japanese oppressors
since 1912 have inflicted the multiple atrocities of torture, pil-
lage, miinfer and rape utWHf ttW) THIplno populace, It was rtftt-
elosed today by four guerilla ofneers who' led a resistance
army of 4,000 men.
GENERAL MACARTHUR’S- HEADQUARTERS, Leyte,
Oct. 24. 'l l'’—American invasion forces, with 11 cities and
towns and three adjacent islands already in their hands,
plunged seven miles inland on Leyte and widened their of-
fensive front on the strategic island to at least 23 miles to-
day. ' ■;.)
(A Japanese Domei dispatch /laid Premier Gen. Kuniaki
Koiso had told his people that Japan’s position was more
J fosre Ot'T, COME ftl'T, wherever you are. And
Bite Nazis do, for the war Is over for them. The
Germans Claim Second
Huge Russian Force
Poised For Offensive .
MOSCOW, Oct. 24. -i i"-One
of the greatest armored
forces ever assembled on the
Russian front swept across
East Prussia today in a rap-
idly mounting drive aimed
directly at the great German
port of Konigsberg.
Si THEME HEADQUARTERS, AEF, Paris, Oet. 24 (IT)—
British assault forces stormed into the key Dutch transport
center of 'S Hertogenbowb today amt Berlin, reported that
American reinforcements hail moved up to the Aaeheft"*fRlnt'
for a new.Rhineland offensive expected soon.
.scene is Loiana, Italy, and these Germans are
surrendering to members of Allied Fifth Army.
(International)
tanco Again Faces
heat Of Civil War
V
critical than ever before and
warned them to be ready for
another allied “attempt” to
smash our strategic defense,”)
(Another Domei broadcast re-
corded by FCC monitors contend-
ed that American troops had gain-
ed only a "toehold” on -Vcyte and •
"would be cMished like an egg-
shell once ti» Japanese forces
launched full Vale counteroffen-
sive operations.”)
Report Manila Raid
(The Japanese controlled Mani-
la radio said 22 American carrier-
borne planes raided the Manila
area 350 miles northwest of Leyte
today, concentrating on airfields.)
Steadily expanding their initial
(See Yank Leyte—Page 2)
Heavy Air Blows
To Hit Germany
During Winter
MOSCOW, Oet. 24. (III!) One of
the greatest armored forces ever
assembled on the Russian front
swept across East Prussia today
in a rapidly mounting drive aimed
directly at the great German port
of Kpnigsborg.
In the deepest penetration of
German soil yet made by any al-
JUPREME HEADQUARTERS, AEF, P$ris, Oct. 24. *»—■
The British Second army cracked into the German anchor
bastion of ’S Hertogenbosch, key to the.main escape routes
for 60,000 to 70,000 enemy troops in southwest Holland,
today and front dispatches said resistance appeared to be
crumbling. 1 t ...
British troops and tanks fought into the northeast out-,
skirts of ’S Hertogenbosch, 52 miles northeast of Antwerp,
during the night and soon
1,000 RAF Bombers
Hammer At Essen
lied force, Gen. Ivan I). Chernia-
sky’:). Third White Hussiall
France Demands
Equal Voice In
Germany's Fate
;Backers Cry
loOPA Director
O'Daniel Tour Arouses
Appeals To Agency
UNITED PRESS. .#■
j'Texas political pot wtjit be eas-
«p*to a pre-clectijiti lijnmer
__ i week with the Texas Regu-
Ifcxr'ftcp’ttTlTerrmr ■ nort ’'Dernrn?nrTV
well mailing a bid to attract and
attention of.the folks
BrttS east' the votes on. Nov. 7.
BY UNITED PRESS
A Spanish Republican
broadcast from Southern
France said today that Cata-
lonia and other parts of
Spain were in “open revolt”
against the Franco govern-
ment, but Madrid reported
regular array troops had broken
the only knowri uprising in the
Aran valley. . ..
"The time has come for tho sit-’
prrtnc attack," a spokesman far
the “national union," organized in
France to oppose the Franco gov-
ernment. said in a broadcast over
Gov. Dewey
Drives Into
Minnesota
War Chest Fund
Nears $40,D00
By United Press
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey carrjed
the Republican standard into
Minnesota today with a major
address to touch upon the latest
developments'" in "The “foreign
policy debate.
He speaks in Minneapolis to-
Trenckmann Hopes To
Reach Quota By Oct. 30
The Tri-Cities War Fund and
Community chest drive approach-
es the $40(000-mark today as Gen-
eral Chairman LeonM. Trenck-
_m§nn_ sped the. campaign in all
sections Ih lhe hopc that the goal
can be reached by Get. 30. ,
Money and pledges already in
LONDON, Oct. 24. ‘IT' More
than 1,000. British heavy bombers
battled through heuvy snow and
Strong German defenses last night
to hit the big steel and rail cen-
ter of Essen in the Ruhr, while
Other night, raiders again har-
assed Berlin, it was announced to-
day.
Essen, an inland harbor 40
miles north of Cologne, is the ecu-
terjpf the huge Krupp steel works
wbieh have been raided repeated-
ly during the war.
The bombers encountered a
heavy anti-aircraft barrage as
they swept over the targe and
were attacked by strong forces of
Nazi fighter planes as they start-
ed the flight homeward. Some
crewmen described the. German
defenses as the strongest in a long
-Umer-
Although the target was par-
tially obscured by the weather,
the red glow of fires lit the sky
kovsky’s. Third
army smashed in to East Prussia
along an 87-mile front, captured
home than 400 towns and villages
and sent spearheads thrusting as
deeply as 19 miles into the Nazi
territory’.
(Berlin, which has been report-
ing the huge Soviet offensive for
rhore than a week, said the Rus-
sian troops had reached the An-
gerapp river, 31 miles Inside East.
(The Cairo radio, as reported
by Exchange telegraph, quoted
De Gaulle Wants Place
On Advisory Commission
PARIS, Oct. 24. (III!) - Gen.
Charles de Gaulle's provisional
government, finally granted full
recognition by the United States,
Britain and, Russia, demanded to-
day, that France be given an
equal voice in determining the
fate of Germany.
after dawn reached the can-
al running through the city
proper. Two other columns were
within three miles or less of the
city from the .east and south.
United Press War Correspon-
dent Ronald Clark reported from
the front that the Germans ap-
parently were preparing to aban-
don the city despite their stub-
born resistance on its approaches.
.No large numbers of German -
tanks or anti-tank artillery have
been observed in the area, he said.
(A BBC correspondent at the
front said the fate of 'S Hertogen-
boscli “well may be decided- to-
day.”)
The Canadian First army again
sealed the entrance to Beveland
and Walcheren islands in the
■We believe' that henceforth! schc1de estuary with a drive across
the paiticipaUdn of France in all (Ser Nazi Resistance—Page 2)
i
■
v
German reports that the big city
of Tilsit,. in the northeastern tip
of East Prussia had been evacuat-
ed and that tho key rail junctiofl
of Interburg, miles east' of
(Kee Great Red—Page 2)
of Spain.
'"Help the forces of the .glorious
guerrilla fighters for the recon-
W. Lee (Pappy)'t O'Danici,
will take his motorized caravan
Mll-biily entertainers to Fort -0Mt of spajn,” the spokesman
™ l1v-P'nJu said. "Rally Cataion forces quick-
Iteep Of North and West Tex- , RaH and fightr
to opposn.on to a fourth term plst<lr(s ^cture
Ptestdent Roosevejt. The speaker asserted that Cuba,
the NBC and Blue networks. “rer
CfSsS'
his speech to reply to charges J? *n sight, but not Jn the bag, f
made against hihi by President Trcnckmann said. ^
Roosevelt in his weekend foreign much work to be done. ^
policy address. He may
iceouniea tor «y ome over Essen soon after the first
I. W. Stncklcr stood at v39,- N(,ombs v/ent down, indicating the
“There is still
also
[^Spearheading the attack. for"
-leibstyted Texas' Reg(ilare ~'
bolted the so-called Demo-
jtstie' party at the Dallas ’ con-
Ittstiori in September - - O’Danici
[till move on to Wichita Falls to-
Thi ~ n'Djuijalj iilliiirii Ip;
for Childress tomorrow
■afternoon and Amarillo for a
I^jH stand. The sehedule C*JI«
lu LAboi.lc and Btg Spring
touch upon the decision of Sen.
Joseph H. Ball, Minnesota Re-
quis for a time had held the Aran
valley in Catalonia, but asserting
that the situation had been "defl-
huraday. gan Angeio and Abi- t mle)v restored."
n« on Friday; and Brownwood Th‘rec srna]| hamlets in
Foit Worth on Saturday. Pyrenees* just across from
W»rcntly, the vote* O'Daniel (g<* franco Facing—Page 2)
jW lure away from tho Roo»e-
•■Truman ticket are; not wor-
Demoorats supporting a
term. Chairman Robert
Fedcn of the committee for
‘"ratio nominee* said in
that he feels opposition
niel will help the cause
fourth term. <£
"iei is too well known
C0l<anfeiA.«nOrugy^yJ}ad brofc^, l)jHi?anr ;^0
cn off diplomatic relations ;witn |erm on grounds Mr, Roosevelt
the Franco government. has made stronger‘ commitments
The broadcast was recorded by on tj,e question of international
FCC monitors soon-after a United CQllnboration.
,6ther .campaign developntcniB;
Sen. Harry S. Truman, Demo-
cratic vice presidential nominee,
took the party's campaign Into
Wisconsin after charging in a
Minneapolis address that Repub-
4i<*h Senators %ad ado^tM'-a
"rule or rtiih" policy in an at-
tempt to "blackjack” the people
into electing a president satis-
faetoiy to the isolationists. Tru-
man proceeds to Chicago tonight.
Dewey's running mate, Gov.
(See Dewey Campaign*, Page t)
He reported that Dr. N. S, Hol-
land, superintendent of schools,
had turned in $1134.06 as a part
and faculty members. The total
contribution from the schools last
year was $1375.20, and the partial
report indicates that the quota will
be exceeded.
was'*"
speeding a canvass of Tri-Cities
railroad employes, but she will not
file a report until Oct. 30, which,
she said, is "railroad pay day" in
this area.
Jimmy Frazier reported that
(See War Chest—Page 2)
RAF pilots found their mark in the
vital steel works which produce
a large portion of Germany's
heavy war materials. The air
ministry said eight planes were
(See Heavy Air—Page 2)
negotiations regarding Germany
will be vijal not only for her-
self, but for the other interested
powers," Foreign Minister^
Georg! s Bidault told a press
conference after announcement
.that, the Allied“Big Three'' .had
accepted the De Gaulle rigime.
Want Equal Role
“Logically, we should have a
place ip such discussions. It is
impossible to discuss Germany—
or for ’that" matter, cny “matters
of world importance without
France playing an equal role in
the, discussion*:"____________________________
As a first step, France was ex-
pected to seek representation on
the European advisory commis-
sion, at present composed only of
American, British and
delegates,
Diplomatic observe: s believed
(See FTance Demands, Page 2)
Yanks Threaten
Vital Italy Road
Nazi Defenses Slow
Main Bologna Drive
K.....'7("rTjKrt«5r
troops of tile Fifth army pushed to
within five miles of the Bologna-
Rimini highway today., threaten-
ing to sever the Po valley's main
Butler Holds
Party Record
For* Casti"
Roosevelt To
Make Speech
In Chicago
Three Persons Hurt
In Crosby Collision
Presidential Vote
Hay Set Record
CROSBY, Oct. 24! (IIR) —A tWo-
truek collision on the Bjaumont
highway foup miles east df Crosby
in Texas to mislead the last night resulted in the injnry'
‘ Peden said. of a woman and two men and the
where and how the death of three cows.-
senator from Texas is get- Ernest Tanner 32, of Hardin,
gasoline to carry his blabo- tiimftv county cattleman, his wife,
d truck ami earavan on and Joe Epps, 58, Dallas truck
•ejected 3.000 milo atump 'driver, suffered minor injuries in
Backeia, Pago 2) .... the crash. .
mm.. ..*7 > - fm a
*: '
l s
Pally Ejection
Petition Ready
§■
A committee will carry a pe-
tition to County Judge Hofheinz
kr3
in Houston tomorrow asking for
an election in Pelly to dissolve
, the municipal corporation.
The movement is another step
........... ». in the proposal to 4kw83yt>
atisens Nation*! Bank & Trust Co. Goose ,'Creek and Pelly into one
iM Kelr'r.to, ............ Mayor C. H. Olive and fctty At-
9*!-! - ..a." ' S ' rtf
Today
and I. A. Yount, and
Bpb“. srrs:' , .,
* .......«* Sfo;1”"'" :■ Ss »>*
and Share ...ICFl Sh oil of Neiy.Jersey. 55_
Bond
........
4 *
SSs.
Momrs .............. «2>*
(sh< 0 —................221» t-P Coal and Oil .......... ”£-----
...... .. .-lOSfe TTriited Gas .................
• jr'- .Tilted. States Steel ......*»’*•
38^ .tw ......... fm
By I:«lted Press
A record presidential; vote was
in prospect today as registration
figures disclosed thousands of
war workers had established le-
gal residences in busy armament
centers and were prepared to
cast their ballots on Nov. 7.
A United Press survey showed
registration increases in west
coast shipbuilding -and airplane
manufacturing cities, in Chicago
and Detroit and in the war in-
dustry communities of New Eng-
land and Ohio.
There " were exceptions, notamy
St. Louis and Pittsburgh.
A system whereby prospective
voters were compelled tp go to a
central election board ratfttr
than register by precincts w;ts
blamed for the drop from 449,1('0
registration in 1940 to 389,783 this
year in St. Louis.
In Pittsburgh political Ieadrs
could give no reason for a de-
cline from 356,021 in 1940 to tbs
latest available total of 3*9,850
for 1944. '
In Pittsburgh political leaders
TSaVSTtSZ SSf from SfiSoyMn" 1 AW »
■&»»‘U, .V.U.MO M « 3«,l
HOUSTON. Oct. 24. din Valu-
able records of the Texas Demo-
cratic party will not be surrend-
ered to the Pro-Rposfvelt group
now ih control, until a state party
deficit of $3,500 is paid, Gcoige A.
Butler, ousted state executive
committee chairman, declared to-
day."
.Replying to a request for the
record* from W. H. Kiftretl, Jr.,
of Dallas, secretary of the new
-execufivfe cqmi»Mfec- Butler said
he intends to give the-records to
“nobody" before he gets the
money.
The records include county
convention instiuctioni - and
names of county and precinct
.chairmen.
“That’s just like a bunch of
New Dealers," Butler said, “to.
want to take over the . assets
without, the liabilities."
,
LI. Carpenter
Lt.F.B. Carpenter
Dies In Accident
artery between Bologna and Cas-
te! San Pietro.' s
The closest strike yet toward the
Russian . highway in the Bologna area was
carrier out by American units
which captured , the village of
Frassinetto and continued toward
Monte Grande.
Oth#r American forces, operate
Tng fust east of The Fiorenec-Bol-
ogna highway, ' occupied Monte
Caldesaro and. Hill 568, a mile
west, while the main U. S. troops
moving north ward on the road for“
dtfgfei ut-iull on Bolog^ ^rc.,
beSig hampered my 'heavy mine*
fields, demolitions and wire en-
tanglements., -
Cutting of the Bologna-Rfmini
highway would eliminate one of
the main German supply lines to
T
WASHINGTON. Oct. 24. (UK). -
President Roosevelt will make a
campaign speech in Chicago, the
White House announced today, ^ ^ Ital.
iart sector around the Cesena area
where" heavy mud has almost
stalled the British and Canadian
drives.
VI
Flovd B. Carpenter, 20, hr my
fighter plane pilot previously
i- \
5H' president of the Tri-Cities Junior'
Chamber of Commerce, sponsors
of the move, will present the pe-
tition to the judge.
After the 100 signers to the pe-
tition have been certified ard
approved by commission rs court,
the group will a3k Judge Hof-
heinz to call the election for Den,
sante date Goose Creek
JAPS REPORT YANK
RAID ON KURILES
NEW YORK, Oct. 24, 43 -The
Japanese Domei news agency re-
ported an.....American daylight
[bombing raid oft the Kurile is-
lands today, asserting that six
Liberator'bombers attacked Para-
mushiro and Onnekotan island?.
Flovd
;r plar
ported missing ,.in the - Asiatic
theater of war, was killed in An
airplane accident on September 2,
the ivar department has officially
advised his mother, Mrs. J. B.
Smith, 315 Commerce.
The telegram received by Mrs.
Smith gave no details of the acci-
dent, but said a letter would fol-
low.
Lt. Carpenter received his pilot's
wings and commission at Eagle
Pass on March 12 this year. The
lieutenant was a graduate of Wink
high school where he was valedic-
torian of his class; he piayed on
“the Wink football team, and Was
a member of the National Hondr
Society. He whs attending A. and
M. college when he entered the
Air Corps. He was a frequent vis-
itor .in the Tri-Cities and was
well known here. “
and although there was
cii»l word on its time, previous
scheduling of ft Democratic rally
there next Saturday led to be-
lief lie would speak Ihen.
White House Secretary Stephen
T. Daily told reporters the Pres-
ident was starting work today
on both Ihh (Shicagd speech and
the aqdress he i?4 to deliver Fri-
day night in Pfiifadeiphia. Oniy
one caller......W. “Avercll Harri-
man, U. S', ambassador to Rus-
sia who flew back with reports
on the recent Churchill - Stalin
conferences in Moscow was
scheduled for the chief executive
today. - r , ■< 1"
Early said he could not give a
date, for;-Die. Chicago speech.
Previously,’ however, it had been
announced in Chicago that there
would be a Democratic - rally at
Soldiers' field on Saturday. .. ....
Eariy would not discuss plans
for any other campaign . talks.
Mr. Roosevelt speaks at Boston
on Nov. 1 and there have beep
repeated reports from- Democratic
sources that • he dfJJJ. speak in
Cleveland and Detroit.
ARdUNDTOWN
2,000 V-? Robot Bombs Built For AAF
German Vengeance Weapon To Be, Tested In U. S,
Tolas Gulf Sulphur ........' 34
rnmnOis Oormrktkm ,4
tfiyt j *nd Trust
; fatqst available
for 1944.
s'on of six members tp administer #.ooa JAPANF«r
VVA&HINGTON, Oct. 23 (UP f—Approximately 2,000
V-l robot hombs-a3ert#any's vengeance weapon™
arc being produced for the army air forces for ex-
perimental purposes, it was learned today,
Employment of these weapons against the enemy
-more likely agaiast JapA*-because that.,country
Is expected to be in the wafTonger- was foreseen as
Oil
Motors
Oil ...
Walworth
grocery
1 -kwd .1-,,,
White Motors ........••••••■ *
Omnpany . . ....... **-
Cotton—up...................
SL Regis .j...............
ht when
Leyte, Oct .24. 43
lerican troops, deepening the
yte beachhead to oa minimum
seven miles on * front of. near-
miles, have already killed
than 3,000 Japanese and
____Henry H. Arnold, who; commenced _
mentlng with robot bombs in the last war, recently
said that developments, to date Indicated pin-point
bombing was far more effective than robot* for a
Secure of effort.
impulse; engines; Republican Aviation Corp., air
frames and ascmblies; Jack add Heinz, control
equipment, alloy products, air bottles, and-Monsanto
CTiemical Corp., catapulting rockets.
The launching rockets and catapulting equipment
are. necessary since the robot cannot take aft under
power of its impulse engine. , i
The technical service command at Wright Field
minimized the likelihood of employment of the
by the,United States, saying effective
In the Tfi-Cilifs: J. D- Saunders
says he will return to Camp Polk
this week end and perhaps it won't
be long before he gets Overseas
. , . J. T. Massey is sure enjoy-
ing a furlough at. home after being
overseas many, many months . .'.
"Headline" Harry Harvey pens a
note to us from his prison camp
In Germany . ., M. S. Kerr lets
us know Mrs, M. Harvey is his
. sister . . . which reminds us that
M. Harvey seems to. enjoy life a
great deal now with the respon-
sibility of only one store in the
Tri-Cities on his hands . ", . Roy
Hofheinz makas inquiry on. how
the bond issue will go in the Tri-
Cities area . . . Lansford and
Cind*y Cook moving iftto their new
Home . Looks good again to see
Bill Dalpes and Sam Tanner oUt
and around daily . . . Dan Dis-
brcrw, home on leave, puts in a
few moments at his old chores
... Albert Wotipka is now at
Drew Field, and brother Alfred is
at Columbus. Miss. . . . Thad Fel-
ton getting ready -for an out-of-
town trip again . . - J- B. Hollar
way waving hallo as he passes ...
R. C. Stephenson hurryii
in his station wagon .
Johnson breezing along
. . . Have you ordered Christmas
cards? . . . Harry Sample flnish-
es a, second nap in time to go out
on a graveyard ,r, LoweU I«m>
mers in a most comfortable posK , '
]
IS
I
i already been reeon#tructed and fired
biding homes and nviJkm their style show, so we hear . , ,
Rev. Ben Behrens strides.toward
line one mile north'bf Port Ar-
thur on the Beaumont highway.
counfir thrust*,
vested today.
private manufactures including Ford Co.,
.populations." . I Rev. Ben Behrens
The V-l was reconstructed in the laboratories his office and a Lion luncheon.
(8m EMM V-l-J?a*e *) ________ . ............... ■ .........
T,
Hhh
said
Ruhr
many
Holla
Bot
prope
neci
Bill
Mrs.
m
the d
Eagle
troop !
The
field di
Blackb
sisted
Bobb
Troop
Blac
Fred
Troop
^ j1*
Eagle
future
v. — -.....
'iwm
ATTAC
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 112, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1944, newspaper, October 24, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028424/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.