The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 148, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 5, 1944 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
MONDAY. DECEMBER 4>
"FOR QUICK
NOTICE
1..' -
■.
,f, r 1
pi
ffXAS: Cloudy and r older; rain
•flrriiiMin, partly cloudy and colder
1 —, Wednesday partly cloudy, ron-
i nonl e*kL
*>•
Wind* diminishing Wednev
, ff 'w
-
tanicls. Floor*......flnl.hrd' ^p-^Mio. 2? VOL.
14fl-3tc while you u*t --—■
MW.
; *
>
'■’I;-
at
■
i
sSH
its any
Apart-
148-3tc
e, and
I'linontl
k, also
0.19-M.
147-3tc
“» them1'
GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5. M44
■If
♦
•lr Ex- ------------------
•nt. 8 Typewriter and
Irf. anv repairing, i
Phone 868-J. *
Get a new figurrlolpV
C **“ d«lon.a FPp0fU L
•nlture. designed to jgjj-TJ
r~w -^:~*rso-bHEpH
J47-3tp £fr* E- F. Smith,
----------- Spencer Corsetl.re
Goose Crwk, Te«i “*
Storm preof your
doors with Athey cBT,
■metal weather strip®
' S&ASIII;
C.,A. Cldburn sibeehtaafr
!|P roo^nK- Guarantee ■
Write Box 83, Goosey,
Mature and motor
Sisffisyss^l
house-
. $14
place.
Wal-
>r call
48-6tp
witch-
entice
piper#, —...........
Need- For estimate on
tricts. house ml! ----5*
for
Apply
jgScanr?gj
47-6tc
week.
47-2tc
in-
toute
i-nip
o.
.SB5r*^
Bayou road. ™ *
We wish you a Merry (
but don’t monkey u
■ To ng.‘ ‘ Very iltt le whUkr^
able now. Other stc^
qps*rar5H55L
gin. Baytown Liquor j
Market Street. Phone t
good
Ford.
bber.
iapcr
7-3t«
PHONE 1367-W
For Complete
Electrical,Service
Gulf Coast Electric C
Baytown, Texas
Notice To Veterans—
L. C. Brookshire |
ice officer, will
----------- the VFW Hall SI
every Monday f
- \ . to 9 p. m. tort"
erans or their families
problems that they may.L.
W. H. Dommsrtjj
Robert R, Tuck I
912 VFW meets \
day night, 8:00 [J
VFW Building, 1
way 11? and
Creek street, Pelly,
W. H. Dommert <
Called Communication.
Goose Creek bodge]
1192, A. F. & 4”
Tuesday, December t
7 p.m. Examte
the degrees. Visiting
cordially invited.
:* L. D. Howell, W, H|
A. C. Coker, Sec.
FOR RENT
House trailer, electric
' tion. Adults only. 514 ED
Large bedroom suitable fwj
or two persons. Phone.lr
400 E. Wright.'
Small bouse and 5 scree 1
*'re miles' from Thoiss
Corher on Coady Road.
167-M. Mrs. Jesse Jar
Nicely furnished 2-room
ment.. Available:,M6rtday,|
. 7-:7(riafter 4 p. me **. 77gj
keeping" room. 3l8j7;M*|
Street, Baytown.
toms with private l*wi
.nee. Phone 2, 503 Wj
>m furnished ap
able Wednesday.
108 W. iMaih.
MX. I
com with twin ,
inc and .close to I
Vright, Phono 16
>ly furnished
suitable for J
ns. Phone 38W-
i Jones.
WANTED TO BUY
Used furniture, raaios,
anything of value »
chines, furniture, aao
for rent Best cash F"
^“ww'V.'«
Street, Pelly. I’hone •
Clean cotton ragl, i>°
move buttons. 5 <
pound. The Daily Sua,
► Creek
Caah for 1936lo^
rolet or Plymouth m
cbanical condition- **«F. ^
bell, 420 Michigan
town, / __
’wi~pay~rt,asonill>!c
or 20 gauge shot jj
\ iffwt
" ■ - - g|.. modcrh ---
sd. Phone
VIA IXHTS®1
2 S
Mr. and *<Vr"
1, 409 E-
enlisted « 14
AVES by the .
icer jwocureme81
..Fwiler,..
te of
was formerly^
n Jacinto
1! leave ak
raining at
. n V-. ^ L- ' “-'V W' "■ Wf' t ■' 1 -■ .71"'V ■’.'"‘S- ‘ •• , fcH’ V.7..3 . ■ xPr*F;r;‘"
A TT0N LUNGES INTO SAAR
SSS
Refinery To Hold Open House
Humble To Celebrate 'Billionth Gallon'
LJ
&
A,
K..;:
It will be open houae at the Bey town refinery of
Humble Oil and Refining company for four day*,
beginning December 14, when Humble celebrates
the distinction of being the first reftacry in the na-
tion to manufacture one billion^ gamma of flniahed
100-octane gasoline for the war effort
t.ordon rained, superintendent of plants, today
said buses will be nih through the Humble plants
at for visitors just as faaV^th^uscs can ^ nurw
“We waiit folks, to know they aye welcome to, sec
the exhibitsjmd then see the plants," he said.
Work was started yesterday on the “tent city” in
'"uat...«f Bayiown'.45?('SSV“”i'” h“"‘“
These tents will house In replica the various
operations of the Humble company, including drill-
ing, transportation, and refining of oil, and other
exhibits will show the work or department* in the*
refinery such as safety, industrial relation*, plant
protection and others.
Full details of theae anhlblia will he annooaoad
later, but Ferned tald today the exhibits will glee
anyone u splendid Idea of the plant’s operation if
all exhibit* are viewed closely. H>"
Siegfried Line Forts
Boner Yank Troops
With Heavy Artillery
PARIS, Dec.‘ 5. -(U.P.)-Lt Gen. George S.
Third army, striking out .from its bridgehead acres* the
twentythinl appearance, thi* exhibit baa shown to a new breakthrough ot the Siegfried line. '
capacity crowds m the principal industrial dtiee of Front dispatches aaid element* of the 95th
the East and Midwest, and consists of booths -dia- believed already to ilfiC - -
mfrwwrar prodaenon.
A navy exhibit, as well as one from
(See Refiner)—Fagr *) i
MilW
l V^.rtSWNf •»- —— ■
PROPI'LSION UNIT of the V-2 rocket robot
bomb, latest terror weapon of the Naiix, Is seen
IB this ptitito. Bombardier L. Snell of Orllla,
m
i- » ,.. -mM
Ontario, is looking at the jets inside. This i*
an official I toiled States Signal Corps radio-
uhuto.
(International Soundphoto)
Appointments Reds Crumple Noas'
14 Shalteop h Lake Balaton Lines
ite Department
htmm
In Greek Civil War
Churchill Gives ! Fierce Battles Break
^^‘■GuflnOtyOf Athens
signal mineral-rich 3|gr ha«in and
the RhinelanABeyond. If' I I
Siegfried line fort* were ¥31)1#^ |3I|C
hurling thousand* of shells across I UIIIU* JUU)
this road of advance, into Saar- - — - *
lauicTiT itself and at the “Saar"
bridge over which American In-
fantry and tanks were pouring
[Strong' Leadership
ught By Roosevelt
Washington, Dec. s. - rr.p>
sident Roosevelt, preparing
t state department for “strong"
lership of American foreign*
ir. the critical years ahead,,
ji'41 studying new appointments
lipersohncl change* today to
pplcte perhaps the most sign!-
shakeup itr the depart-
ment's 155 year history. . - ’
Mr. Roosevelt began the reor-
'rttion yesterday, just .three
r after 44-year-old Ed-vard R.
linius, Jr., became secretary
f state to succeed Cordell Hull.
6 named a neW Undersecretary,
ARthced reslgpatiohs of three
secretaries, nominated
dr successors and transferred
i ike department what may he
first in a series of new cur-
'ind economic activities.
! The president revealed that the
Wjtrtihent would absorb the
part of the office" of coordinator
flhter-American affairs, whose
it,-ijtw Appointments, Page 2).
columns
sides of-
LONDON, Dec. 5. — (U.P.)— Russian armored
crashed through the German defenses on both _______________ „
Lake Balaton in a mile-an-hour drive ort the Austrian ^on- ^.jau weight of arms to restore
tier today and roundabout Berlin dispatches said alarmed der in strife-tom Greece, but t
Nsizi officials were fleeing Vienna in the path of the Red
were used in an attempt to im-
pose a “communist dictatorship"
on the. country. . , "V »
Churchill sketched for a clam-
orous house of Commons,- which
frequently interrupted him with
pointed questions, the hloody
crisis In Greece. He said tjhe
“considerable'1 British forces in
Greece would be engaged fully in
an attempt to put down leftist
demonstrations and attacks, and
to stave off "the threatened civil
war. ’ ,
Even as he spoke Athens dis-
patches reported hew outbreaks
of violence. f
“We and our American allies 5
are doing our utmost to ’give as-
sistance, and our troops are act-
ing • to prevent Woodshed,”
Churchill told a cheering house
of- commons.
But hurchill said that; the al-
lies could not carry on the task
for the next stages of the assault
on the $*ar basin
Menace Haarbruckrn
-Along a 40-mile front, to the
southeast, Patton swung his right
flank northward to within a Tit-
tle more than aix miles of 8aar-
brutiten. capital of the Saar basin,
and five miles from the rmnh
border city of 8arregu0mlnes. Pat-
ton*’ artillery already was bomb-
arding Saarbrucken,
v The battle along the Roer river
before Cologne and Dusseldorf.
where the’ American* first breach-
ed the Siegfried lino, settled down
largely to patrol action and ar-
tillery duels as the First ’and
Ninth armies _ gathered strength
Tor a lunge to ihe cast bank Jfc-
man proparatiohs for eouiUerat-
tavjis against Unnich and Luch-
throughout*the*city* After Vn unofficiaT report^'circulated *mMhed by Amerlcan
that Premier George Papandrcou had resigned. At the northern up of the too
London. Dec s. cm - prim* " Leftist ELAS forces attacked the gendarmerie bar- mil* woaterp front, the Germkna
Minister Winston -churchiil said racks of Hadjilf.osta in the center of Athens and a pitched
Prime Minister Scores
Warlike 'Events'
* ATHENS, Dec. 5. —(U.Pd —Fierce fighting broke out at
several points in Athens today and minor clashea spread
army juggernaut.
: , Routed German and Hungarian, troops fled westward
ov%r roads choked with refugees as the Soviet onrush
crumpled both flanks of the
Lake Balaton line barely, 60
miles from Austrian soil and
120 miles or less, from Vienna,
Berlin acknowledged the fall of
Siofok.on the northeastern shore
of the lake to a fast Russian co-
lumn that pushed up four miles
froth captured Sagvar, and spoke
vaguely of "clastic” - defensive
tactics id that sector — the usual
prelude to announcement of a
general German withdrawal.
. At the same time, a Berlin dis-
patch received in- Zurich , said
gestapo chief Heinrich Himmler,
now reportedly in full control of
the Reich, had ordered Nazi of-
ficials in Vienna to prepare for
Immediate" departure. Some Nazi
(See Reds Break', Pffae 2)
0 In Goodfellow Fund
peal Made For More Names, Cosh-
rfmEF GOODFEUUm’
pwously acknowledged ... 35
'J Ml an (} Barber 35
| CMV'- Eberiy ..... $20
;*r >■;' •*
Total today $30
I There’s no reason why any child
’rtfe Tri-ClUes area should not
We a merry Christmas this year,
lyoull help a little btt.
■ ios can help by turning into
1" ckarc League, or the Daily
- ®r to any Parent-Teacher As-
5tion head the name of
sifts you know in dire ch-
ances, or by sending in
money (any amount you
to become a Goodfellow.
.those two things are needed ~
Bl»*y. and names’.
' Goodfellows have «
;othc sponaorshl;
ch.Mren W* A$#td , *«g, «•<»
With.. a .bap of toys,......candy and
fguit. Iii!R year, approximately
260 were .served. The list should
be around that number this year.
However, it must, be remember-
ed time Remaining before Christ-
mas is less* than- three weeks. Bags
must be made, toys must be ___ , ..
bought, and bags mu3t be packed. (See VVV F. Whlte, I*age 2)
You can t doc these things until
W. F. White Heads
Scout Committee
Tri-Cities Scouters In
Annual Dinner Meeting
W. ,F. White today held the
position of chairman of the dis-
trict committee of the Boy Scouts
of’ America jn the Tri-Cities area.
He was unanimously elected last
night at the annual meeting of
adult scouters at a dinner at
Grace Methodist church in Goose
Creek.
Retiring Chairmad James Har-
rop was elected vice-chairman and
A’: Kr StW 'dTsirrrcT 'toWimisWon-
er.
White’s nomiiiation WSs : made
lii' Nat Pacc, representing the dis-
trict’s nominating eommijttee. He
and tlvc other officers were unan-
imous choices. j
• Whftc has-been a member of
IKeinstrlcr committee for We
past three years. He was a scout
himself as a boy and is itow head
of the technical service division
at the Baytown plant of the Hum-
ble Oil and Refining company.
' All other members of too dis-
battle ensued with both sides using
Followers of the rightist EDES
Need For Channel
Bonds Explained
Part’Of Issue Marked
For ^Tunnel Construction
Fort Director Russell Wait's
animated sketch of thp financial
history of the Houston ship chan-
nel, the problems the waterway
faces today and.the need for im-
mediate improvements to pave the
way for postwar expansion today’ , • «® 'mmeuiate contir-
resutted in. civic oiganizations of 1
mortars.
organization barricad-
et! themselves in the metro-
polis hotel. They showered
pistol fire and hand gren-
ade* of EIAS demonstrators who
counterattacked with heavy weap-
ons, precipitating some of the
heaviest fighting of the three day*
of disorders hero,
Derndhstraiors * besieged the
Athens police headquarters, where
the struggle wag intense.--
The death toll in the rioting
stood at 27 before hostilities, were
resumed: today, and the leftist
leaders proclaimed their intention
of carrying on until' they have
won a new government.
There was no immediate conflr-
biew up dikes along the lower
Rhine river in Holland, flooding
the British-Otnadlan bridgehead
above Nijmegen to t depth of *
foot in some places In an effort
to., discourage any renewed at-
tempts'to force the river.
The Canadians “changed” some
positions in the flooded area, dis-
petches said, but beat off an at-
tack by n German parachute
division Fifty. Germans were
killed and HO captured, 7
British troop* in Southeast Hol-
land liquidated-—the—German
(SefcRatton fkitige*. Rage f)
Lose Ships
In Sea Fight
Each Loses Destroyer
In Savage But SmtH «
Scale Surface Battl*
ALLIED HEADQUAR-
TERS, Philippines, Dec. fj.
—'U.P.) — American de-
stroyers sank a Japanese de-
atroyer and pixitebly dam-
aged Mother in Ormoc gulf
Saturday in the Sfst naval
surface engagement since
the battle of the Philippines in
October. Gen Douglas MacArihtf
nanounred today
pne American destroyer *!(«
went down with gun* Maxing, but
most of the crew was rescued,
msny of them by Catalina fljrtoi
boats which Imldty Inndcd Wlthll
(See Yank*. Japa. Page 2)
’ ' ^
OPA Turning To
’Smoke’ Shortage
Agency Plans Probe Of
Southwestern District
,
'existed
or The
you know how many bags arc to
be filled and delivered.
If you have bee r. asked'to pre-
pare a list of youngsters, please
make that list now and turn it in
either at The Daily Sun office,
or to Mrs. Ophelia Jones at the
school office. But hurry, please.
The fund today stands at $30
thank to two .new Goodfellows.
One is U. Julian G. Barber, now
serving in France, and the other
U C. W. Eberiy. Thanks a lot,
both of you! „
N<*w, who will bo next?
'«»e Today
m
'Jp
i,,J,'s ........ 21 National Dairy ............. 25
*n ^lator G* North American Aviation . 91*
- Telephone 166-, oh,0 0j, . 16%
to Gov*........... Packard Motets ;............ 5V‘
*ey and Gay
Rustless, Steel
Sharp and Dohroc
F'nclair
Skclly ...........
Southern Pacific
. Sperry Corporation
•^:5=R
3 ’• .1
L" •' >*£......SOU
1 Pai*c................
.81
Grocery ........-g*. • Walworth -------------
W'estertt Union
AROUND TOWN
In the Tri-Gities: Note to V, It
Reese’s Baytown scout troop . . .
The pans!) house won’t be avail-
able Wednesday night . . Your
meeting has been postponed to
Thursday nigbt. ■ .Santo time,
same place , Mrs. Shorty Staf-
ford suggests that when the tun-
nels are completed, they might
bring the ferries hew to run be-
tween Baytown and Goose Creek
on rainy days ...
Attorney Leroy Andbrson, of
Crosby, ready for a court bout
with Attorney C. D. Little, of Bay-
tdwn . . . Paul (Bunyan) White
wtnt deer hudyng and klliad a 10-
point buck that was the biggest
deer killed thi* season in a coun-
try where all deer grow big
not satisfied, be hopped over to
Anahuac after work one day and
killed the limit of geese ... he is '
.. . . setting his sights on iomething
.. 15% else now . , . Constable Wyatt*,
, . t’A Busch hunted all oyer Southwest
13 Texas“and couldn’t see. anything
IVk to shoot'at ... a lady, new to the
12’? Tri-Citics, plaintively asking "but
'tart gbw do you git through all CMfe.
water?" . . . aad geffwg the *n-
“wait for a motor
of rostoring7 economlc order and
providing relief '“if tommy guns
provided for. use against the.Gcs-
mans are now used in an attempt
(Sec Churchiil Gtvea. Irtge 2) ? -
Snow Blankets
Texas Panhanle
Uy t nRdd Proat' - • ? ■ ; ’ J
The upper Panhandle section
of Texas lay under a blanket of
'SlHiF.i9^iifrffdtMrtWo to 713 tor”
ches in; depth today as clear! i
skies were predicted by tonignt
for the area and for East Texas
by tomorrow’,
Some snow (lurries were expect-
ed to the Panhandle this, morning
before fair weather *et in. bring-
ing colder weather, ranging down
to t» degrees tonight-
Rain fell in the east and south
portions of East Texas todav.
At 8:30 a.m. light' rain or driz-
zle and fog, was reported from
practically ail sections of the
state as leadSn skies blanketed
all but the ares around El Paso,
Heaviest precipitation in the sis
. hourr ending at 8:30 a.m. Was at
Ssn Antonio Where JEW inches of
rtin was recorded an* at Nftva-
sola where 1,70 inches Was re-
ported.
Guadalupe Pass’ 28 degree mini-
mum was Texas’ coldest today-
white Amarillo, Lubbock, Claren-
don and Dalhart reported 30 dc-
«■ cc* and Pyotc. Wink and FI
Paso 32 for the only other frees-
tog temperatures.
Two Inches of snow lay on the
ground at Amarillo and nine in-
ches at Dalhar^
the Trl-cftles area redoubling
their effort* to gain support for,
the Dec,'19 navigation bond elec-
tion in Harris county.
Voters of the county at that
time will be asked for the second
time within six weeks to author-
ize issuance of 35.000.000 in bonds
bjr he navigation distrief to "fi-
nance. needed improvements.
resignation, but the hour* of itis
(See Fierce Battle*, Irtge 21
Tri-Cities Area Gets
2.5 inches Of Rain
There seCmed to'be iitore than
__ _ _____ dew around here early today end
Tt£
*'««- ....
Another onc-fourth wilt be use<l «P »/»» X ^ L
(n repair and eehuild ilockxtot
the tuning basin. Another one-
fourth Will be used to buy out'
the ..remaining interest of the
City of Houston in port proper-
ty, and a final fourth would be
, used to make improvements to
the channel itself.
Thi* -fast project would call
for .Widening of the channel at
Morgans Point, and erection of
(See Need For, Page 2)
Late News Hashes
Crecy (■ame tb AVosstcr 10 year*
ago from Coffman county to
make his home with his sobs
there. jHhc had been an invalid
________ __ for the past five years. =
told the - la<r“irree atjhi, and Me rt’adrvived by two son*,
moved around to thr north when gcott and T, J., and four grond-
DALLAS, Dec. 3 -CPJ The
regional office of price adminis-
tration prepared today to launch
« sweeping five-state investiga-
tion into the mysterious disap-
pearance of cigarette* from retail
trade channels.
Lester C, Boone, assistant reg-
ional OPA enforerment attorney,
said that a program has been
mapped to catch ceiling price vio-
lators in Texas. Oklahoma, Louis-
iana. Kansas and Missouri.
'.an,n- SJTllS
lSiTliS"VSJrw 3f3±gfltss&m,w>m
Bant let church, of GooSe Cr< »h ’Thlre’#-* -bt* iftummt
nllTetaltog.“ Bartel'will be
of Rest cemetery under direction . rtOTtores ” Snone Mid bu
ofjiaut U. Lee funeral home: _certain that the mui «oppiy is
substantialty creator than t* fMt,
war year* and that there is mal-
ittalstkitllMa Ine WA«Ha a*4ta*h
T. W. Crecy Dies
AtSon’s Home
Thomas Walter Crecy, 63. died
at 2:25 a.m today at the home or
his son. Scott'Crecy, at Wooster.
Funeral services will be held at
I
'cigarette
distribution for some esuse." ,
He clfod record* showing tax
a cold, front'blew in.
Winds up to 30 mile* an hour
over the last three day* kept the
temperatures flown around fho
40 level. They were the .-back-
wash from a blizzard that awept
down the east coast;
Minimum temperature last
night was 41, the maximum for
the 48 hour period was 69. It waa
(in even 60 at noon today.
children, all of Wooster.
Cltr|d
cent pirer, wife-rtSis.
tbc-f.ountcr sales have dropped
from 80 to 70 per cent in recent
week*. One retailor, Boone point-
ed out, used to get loo cartons
’twice a week, and now he ia get-
ting only ten.
Cooperating to the check
il
*¥* 1 . "
.INFANT I HEN '
James Madison TScott, infant
son of Mr and Mr*. A. Q. Scott, Cooperating
of Highlands, died at a local ,haa- -wholesale and retail salmi will be
pital at 9 p.m Monday. . regional and district OPA en-
The body will he taken to Luf- torcrmcnt officials, price panel
kin late today by Tri-Citic* fun- a*«i*UnU. all OPA employe* and
era! honm for'interment. consumers, Boone soMak ■
■
By Unired Press
LONDON. A greet fleet of
British raiders rocked the Rhine-
land rail center* of KarlsruB® and
Daily Sun Will Present Merger Facts
Here Is First 'Question And Answer' Series
■
The question of consolidation of
Hellbrown with more than I'.no pelly and Goose Creek into one
tons of bombs last night.
mil etfUA, — Kamiotph
powerful, undefeated Rambler
fooMiati team Ha* accepted an
Invitet on to ’ play In thb Oil
bowl here on New Yeoi'w dft)U
oaaiiMt nn opponent yet to he
-elected.
WASHINGTON, - The wnafe
foreign reiatton* committee todav
approved the nomination* of the voter* so
row state department Mgh1 com- baiiotf,
mand, but a senate floor fight
against some of President Roose-
velt's selection* appeared immin-
ent.
community will be settled at the
polls in both cities on Dec. 16, and
since many question* have been
raised in conMedmi with the pro-
posal*. a question and answar de-
portment ' has -town set up by the
Dally Sun.
If you have any queatlon you
Want answered, the Sun will try to
find the correct answer. The
Sun* interest is first and fore-
most to lay the facts before the
they can cast intelligent
y. old an.
assistance offices, etc. Under the
taw it must be maintained os a
public building.
JO. Win Ire Height* be annex-
* A. It is not a portion of the
plan to consolidate Pelly and
Gooae Creek to annex lee Heights.
q. Will each district In Pelly
have H* own voting boxf
X. That is, the present plan;
equipment fa now needed at both
of the,, fir# stations, There haa
been talk of putting a new fire
suftan in or around Morrell Park
and Stewart Height*, giving the
consolidated city three Are sta-
tion* Additional purchases of fire
fighting equipment Tiii be distri-
buted where needed the most,
Cf. Doc* the City of Goose Creek
have an ordinance prohibiting the
keeping of cow* and chicken*?
A. No. and neither does the City
■■, 77 7
of Pelly. State taw prohibits only
the’keeping of swine within
MnR I
7-? s;f ja.Vttf.3S District 14 j
:"'g
•J - _
Conroe To
mk
b
!te In
lelbal.
ROME - Eighth nriny troop*
taw mbiml the Important
rood center of Ravenns, eight
mile* intand from Ilnly** Adria-
tic cnant.
mime W °< New Jersey 5|3 iSbMeV^S^^
Tidewater Corporation..... 1 ■ ■'*
United Aircraft ......
Unired Corporation
SLJ
shift for
■^Hughes gays
Texas is good enough for him af-
ter where he has been ., Mexico-
„* way; it wot. .. Mrs. Si Moore be-
zL,} ing wanted for** telephone con-
versa tion . , . Mrs, A. V. Barber
■JL* saying there are some things she
ML- will acrap for with her brother
Here are ttw first of a aeries;
Q. By wham will the two dio-
trlcl* in PeO} be set and what
will their boundaries be*
A. These districts will be set
after conooildation bp the city
commission; the boundaries have
not yet been set but will be tome-
what a* follows: One district will
include all territory la Pelly
Bv unanimous consent of other LONDON—More than 550 Flying o^h Addition 'ajid^aU ^tcrritory
members of interscholastic league
district HAA, thk Cbnrn* J(j>gb
whool team today had been ed-
mltted to compete in the 1945
baslfrtbail rack, . ■ ' -
.The nutter will be discussed
and settled at the January meet
Portresses and .Liberators, escort-
ed by upward of 800 fighters.
hammered industrial -- tpUpm
Berlin and rail freight yards
Munster today .
in
Land m
^Poreucn J{;
'teHtnfUni- is-;
•■ : ?
White Motors
Wilson Company .. |
rr,. ,v. "
::::.up
Johnny ... Btondie Brieger mak-
ing the rounds . . Mayor C. H. ^
Olive getting too many tnvUa- ?,n basketball alone wo* token by
‘°7* wiThave to ft** hair day SpJk U* PtlpPrt. to de-
,k *n 01 th,m- termiW! Co8roe*bMkrttaU
Osk Addition and all territory
east of Pruett street on the south
side of the interurban and all ter-
at ritory south of Main street. The
other district will include aH ter-
ritory south of the interurban and
e’Ssisw pTSWI »X
“communist herder area" of the - T: ..... .___
north weak hove halted for the Q- What dtapositlon will be mode tedf com!
ef the city haM in Petty?
there Is no reason why they
should not have
ff. After the war will the Pelly limit*,
fire station grt a new pumper* (J What pro-rata will the
X. 'Additional fire righting (Bee Daily Sun. page 2)
Pelly Citizens Back Meri
’Get Acquainted' Meetings Plan
■ ,
A steering committee of residents of I
duct a campaign In that city in favor of
tion on Dec. 18 to pare the Way for cons
“We are planning nightly meetings in different
Chairman Elmer Gray said, "and we believe
We feet that this movement is the best for
.we can sett the Idea to our friends in Pell;
weeks.
(R«jr continued that “this more
" ho* been advertised too much
7;
of Petty has been named to
ro^fcwitbIc5mJ&
TSZSX" b"k'
—i-
Jap
Chinese
A The city hall will be
»ail
talnM a* nt present,
toel3R^ J.
■
m:
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 148, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 5, 1944, newspaper, December 5, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028485/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.