The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 110, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 21, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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THE DAILY SUN,-«0*SE CHEEK, TEXAS
f,5
1 v. "■■
k'-v* 'h. v
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21,4
IfoUred M *•** '* ^ JffiJT ,'0,,
nffict under lt« »et d Cimjm’is, March H, 1H»«.
SmaH Towns favored
Many a World War II 'veteran, will^turn
By Fred Hartman
COUNTY JUDGE Roy Hofhcinz,
who has tried to resign his posi-
tion, will come to the Tri-CiUes
next Friday night to make a short
pica toi the ecmnty-vidc bond is-
sue upon, which the voters will
express their desires co-incident
with the presidential poll on No-
V<The*Jclllttes of the public ad-
dress system at Elms field will
be made available to the judge,
and he will come through once
more in behalf of a project for
which he has done plenty of
work for the county and one for
which he will long be remember-
ed by his friends in this area.
TUNNEL SUPPORTER
FOR THE PAST four ~
1
Wolf In Man's Clothing ... Editorial Views
By MIGNON G. EBERHART
room, and ‘ Beevens was looking
up for the night. Mr. Crate call-
eel for help, and they found mm
. he'd fainted by that time. The
response to a can docTor was called at* once. Mr.
... -,-lvcry. local ipedico. , r - - -v
ZL paid.no attention to the
As Other Editors See It
Synopsis Kcat„ antl Druc up'for tin' night. Mr. Craig call- ^^^nfEnR-rprlJe) 'jfc
^Nurses • . g t man„ ed for help, and they found him The death of Marshal Roromfel Is at last oonfi
SSSStw* at - is
nil Uiflar’a mtlifnuv Irvarforci P*Oplp
"" •’Who's" been
frightened recognition and pleads maid’s pleading
___HL _____^ romnin. That, taking care of hii
with skillb acquired in service that will m g tunnela lintlcr thc Houston
!$£ S'anrt- he la mus- Stag™ » -£ .
tewd OUt. he wanted them- right before the
We’ve ben reading a great deal lately
abcut opportunity in the small towns ot more . tll(, pMUjentt or aho Tr.,
America, and only this week the Saturday citi(,s area- by selling the com-
SSitSld“wrad nrttetound in the jSSS*"? m S. fn
rities or on the farms, but in the thousands W(, do not hand these bouquets
nf smal towns of America." to the county judge,merely be-
, Well, the Tri-Cities are small towns, and .hoff!cii^^munty,
hprp we believe, as we always have, dial but wo realize now, as we. have
“f‘£' von hear talh « -«£»» feSS
..... Everywhere yon turn you near i»ik or.. ^ccompiished more toward con-
thines that are a barometer of business structi0n of this channel crossing
ahead for the Tri-Citios. TliS'S “1 “:
The school improvement program,^the
county-wide bond issue, the talk of Pelly
and Goose Crek joining together—all of
this will play a parkin'better days ahead.
Today you can talk to any merchant an
any town, and you ll find him dreaiiiing .of
the days when he can improve or enlarge.
And you find many a person, now employ-
ed by some- large firm here, who talks of
•'getting into business for myself.”
- You may not have noticed it as we have, we win toss a com wun r>
but a number of concerns, small ones to be adeha to see which gets who.
sure, have sprung into existence in the past (;KT |,| K;sTy
few months. . ALSO IN .connection with the
Mote some large ones, will comm as county bonds comes the splendid
wartime torn pace. »re prof^ional men
Will move here, unless all predictions ar. ajneer Hugo zapp prepare for l.
Wrong. G: ’ Sandej-s, chairman of the tun-
All of which means opportunity right ' ------■*“*" nt th" nnm" *
hfere at home for you.
It means more jobs for returning veter-
ans. '
r'It means more people will h^ve. an op*
■ portunity to,contribute their bit to the
. community, aiding not only themselves but
their neighbor. . • , -
It means we have better times to look
forward to
with her not to remain. 'That, taking care of him? You?"
coupled with Drue's unusual onx- ------- r,r"° Anri
of nil Hitler's military. leaders, '
Although Americans found little to admlm •
Rommel as a man-he was vain, arrogant and'"
••Yes Miss Drue, And Mrs. Hitler satellite-rho nevertheless had his parts
gfsiiSSi 2TJ5Lt^j-rss»
tgar^f s.rum >t js-'s.’ss.i.fffi'mSr w«5 a a
qu, inted with the Brents. Anna „ ou£. But Rommel undoubtedly gave the allied .high com
ffuntly takes them to Urate's whispered Drue j^more «««** t* worry than any other
_. . _. S,vl2Lg?, /li. V Aadd th^^Ses01^ ^noithent 'Attfa ttyF|p|me*op
Chapter Two , . th,> tablet in my h .. mel appeared th' AVnerican newspaper* and
It was a large bedroom dusky, Dru? waited while. I l«td JM sp()kf.n by A1Hed leaders more than thc „a,
' ,fci bit; ranop.nd fotiwster knpw gl,e was watdrmg me,to. .see m other Nai!i unlcss was Httlw hint#
riddle of U was on what I thought of what 1 read t[le fameci Afrika Korps eommanded.by Rtt
-ONE WORLD”
this b
In the mi—— — -- - --
bulkily against the gray light
from the windows along the op-
posite wall. There was a fire-
place with a couch drawn up be-
, fore it; and the massive shapes
of too much and too heavy fut-
niture. Then I saw Drue, and
she was kneeling at the stae of
the bed with her head down.
Anna gave a wavering ItttTe
sound, a kind of angry moan.
She went to a table Urd 'turned
on the light in a lamp that stood
there. Then I could see more
clearly; a man lay on the bed,,
vow lnnc under the white
there and I knew,
was counting on my
experience, That was why she
had made me i»»»e with her,
(To Be Continued)
Looking At Life
£Si
Axis powers, with the result that the Nazi* were
ehasejl along thc northern coast of Africa throueh
Libya,'to Tunisia, out of Ttinisia to Sicily, out of
Sicily to the southern end of Italy, up the Italian
peninsula to thc present battle lines above Home
Before all of this happened Rommel had been'call-
ed«$JOmc by his friend and patron, Hitiej., to been’
trusted With the even more vital defense of Prance
and the fatherland. , .
One ot the reasons why Americans found some-
thing to ititerest them In Rommel was the tact that
he was no Prussian aristocrat. But it might be
«, stretching a point to call Rommel a self-made man
. ' . as the pharse is understood in the United States'
from a*l ^‘‘Oitlp11 yyttfaout Hitler ta give him a hand nn
Baptist Churches
Naming Delegates
ToWMU Meeting
rmiBHlrnf-eover,-a^,-Ihme..^JLe> , Delegates frmd dll T^-Ohif^ -ytnthtwt-Hiiier to. aive him a hand nn Br,—i
taco:dtt his hand' which- lay out- Baptist churches were- being sp- -prebabJy roever would have risen very high in the
' lected tbls-Week to attends the QfiMnan anny, and he was shrewd chough tojtnbw"
that the way to make his fortune was to curry fa-
vor with
Tri-Cities and
any other one man.
We would not lose sight of
the many weary hours that other . Little' Billy came to my house
individuals and groups have put yesterday to see me. But I was
in, but the fact remains that in jjew York, so he had quite a
Judge Hofheinz had the ammu- talk with rny wife,
nition to fire that the others did * gj,^ toj^ hie all about his visit
and how she had learned a
whole lot about juvenile delin-
By Erich Brandeis
not have.
Judge Roy has two sons. We
are told they are Called Butch and
Spud. . '
We favor naming one of the
tunnels Spud crossing, and thc
other Butch tunnel.
We will toss a coin with Pas-
nei committee of the Goose Creek
Chamber of Commerce.
As we hoped yon read yester-
* Harris county stands >
c7 nnr
irwaiu w.
It means we may be entering a new era
when people cease to scramble for, the ‘ al-
mighty dollar” and compromise on fellow-
ship, happiness and endeavor as well as
money.
If the predictions be true perhaps a
“Great Day Is Doming” for the small towns
of Which we are proud to be a part.
day, East ...............
to get approximately $7,000,000 of
bonds. A part of this, of course,
was included in the 194.1 bond
issue, but a great deal of it is
included in the new issue.
Cost of the tunnel is set at ap-
proximately' $6,000,000 with an
- additional miffiair'db“'be Spentrorr
"“the Marketkfreernmd and Deck-
er drive nito Goose Creek.
queney from Billy.
And after she got through tell-
ihg me about his conversation
With her (Billy had apparently
done most of thc talking), T had
learned quite a hit about, juve-
nile delinquency, too.
But first let me tell you how I
met Billy.
I was on my way to the village
a couple of Sundays ago to get
my New; York-papers. ,A straw-
blond fellow, about fourteen, was
limping down the road,
As I passed he gave me the
hij^h-biker's thumb and I picked
him up.
“Where are you goingT’ .1 ask-
ed him. *
“Oh, just down to the railroad
‘atkrn, ahduti miJb from here.’"
He had never been in New
York, he said, although -he lives
only sixty-five, miles irom there.
But some day', when he was a
little older atid his legs were all
right again, he’d go and he'd go
for good.
He didn’t like the country.
Nothing to do for kids.
Too many old fogies of thirty
or over that ^always told kids
what to do. *
GroWn-ups don’t understand
kids.
So they did break a window in
the volunteer fireman^s house
wtih a football. They didn't do
it intentionally, .did they? Was
that any reason not .to let them
us the firehouse a.iy
i j *
de. lected this-week to attend*, the Qennan army, and he
Anna stepped toward the kneel- -40U* annual meeting, of the Worn- that the way to make
ing slender figure and said soft- an's Missionary Union which will yor wiy, Hitler.
! ..nn Jon mustn't If his fa- be held at the Second Baptist j
ther ?m’dsy°youTeSre - " church in Houston^on. Thursday .
Drue lifted her head. She had Octobci *6. ^
hpr hat «o her light The convention will open at 7:39
!‘Ung brushed upward p.m. at the music hall by the Coll-
zzsz
smal^head,U shone softly in tfe will be given, according to an- _ ____.............. „.....v,^ ^
light and looked disheveled, like nouncem n . Jim explains, is an Indian word fqr bye-'and-bye ]
a child’s.' Her face was very Guests speakers for the ocas ion The motto of Jim’s state would be “Quiet, Please ’ I
pale; she looked upward beseech* will include Mrs. B. A. Copass, nd itg constitution would consist of one sentence- 1
ingly at Anna and -whispered, “Is - J®* ------ ......- *-
b<> mine to die?”
IT’S A GOOD IDEA, BI T-
(Sioux CIty Tribune)
If, as and when Jim Marshall, magazine writer,
sets up the mythical state of Alki which' he joking-
ly proposes to establish, he can count on the ap-
plication Of this column’s pilot for citizenship. Aikl,
Ursa ovnluine ic an InrUfin \L’nrd fni* hunj'a'nd
he going to die?
“No, no,” cried Arma._ “No,
please God.”
There was a moment of com-
plete silence, with only the fine
sipnary Union; Mrs. Olivia Davis,
state treasurer and Miss Jo
Scaggs, a missionary who recently
“•••rhed-f'*»w 4friM-
from
us - uic ,,*.*j more?
Am\ did the boy-scout master al-
ways have to tell them not to do
this and not to do that? Kids
don't want to be preached to
ail the time.
And why don't they put on a
movie in the,town hall every now
and then? Th - nearest town is
eight miles av.ay and the boys
.>11,,,,.,..1 tn (fl-iTC (too
rain whispering again
dowpanes. Then Dnu
chart':
I won
I kno'
iters i
is the
have
me . .
Anna went
Drue rose in
followed her
him di'
'. Webb.
, E. H.
A.- Boh
eft
ck to a ta
swift ilKjt
I went cl
on and
He told me that his father was 'aren't allowed to drive (too
a IlVeman on the train that .young, although they know howl,
passed through at 9;30 In- the and -the “old folks'' never have
- ----------------- ' " time to take them,
You're Telling Me
SyWatemRitt
There arc 30,000 varieties of flies and they all
make a beeline for the break in the screen.
Like many a more modest motor car the Nazi war
machine is finding thc going plenty tough this
yCZadok Dumkopf says he finds it hard to feel po-
etic while raking up autumn’s crowning glory.
* ‘urtle which -saw. Napoleon during his exile on
ilena island is reported still living; Evidently,
'5 favorite dish wasn't soup. . ■
tnras trees, according to Pantographs, origi-
nftted in Egypt. Next thing we know they’ll try
“1 us the first reindeer were really camels.
Mfl■;5'^M 'MLABAAfWL.nril/l .inW-)
Plans are to make the Market
street road a rotir-lane highway
to Greens bayou and to build
twin bridges across Hunting
bayou and across Greens bayou.
The road would be widened to
to a three-lane thoroughfare
from Greens bayou to'within a
, mile and a half of the Sail Ja-
1 cinto bridge:——----------
The road through the river
bottoms would bo repaired and
a four-inch layer of asphalt
- would be laid on the present con-
erctet foundation. ’
Prom th'e Pour Comers inter-
section to the second intersection
of the new road with the Market
street road, the highway would
be widened to fotir lanes. Then
two lanes would head into Goose
Creek by way of Decker drive,
and the other two-lane (present)
highway Would go into Wooster
do but work- and read. And who
wants to Work and read all the
time”
time? *«er B
paraiy- ' So When the boys and girls get deeply
ry well together they all taK'about leav- like hi
hnmn anrt aiVnYo somewhere oiv fin
__i Jhc
fiioirpihg” on the way to ‘ New
York, a»(t hc ;t1w,iys Vent to the
station (if could ggt a hitch-j,
ami'-'Wavcd-tojiia-dad as the train
passed by. *]
MMy liad had infanUie .
sia and couldn’t walk very .— - -n~—-- —, —-
yet, but he was .getting better ing home and going somewhere
ail the time. . where there is excitement and
-Gould he come down to my. something for young people to
place, and work around, he ask- do, , , ,
ed. He was good at mowing There must be—don t the books
laWns and pulling weeds and he and the magazines and the
'POUld"'TiO'adot'mf“handy--w<)rkv.....mowes--and....Xho„.comi(a....ftLLJteil
he said. ; ' you about it? ' ,
••Sure, come on. I'll find you Since my wife told me all
soniething to do” I said and let about Billy’s Visit I’ve talked
liim -ofL at the stntion, ——some..... “
So yesterday, he came and my
’S'iFL ■ - Wlw. ,inmn HIAulr . tA fin
the bed and stood there looking
down at my patient Craig Brent..
He was asleep. . .
Obviously it was a drugged
Sleep. I didn't know. then, what
was wrong, and I didn't like the
drawn look in his face, young
and' lean, with good bones, a ra-
ther stern, brown profile, and
hollowed eyes. I didn’t
his pulse either when I put
my fingers lightly on his wrist.
Whatever this man, this house
and the people in it meant to
Drue, to me then, the main thing
was my patient Drue and thc
maid had withdrawn with the
chart to a curtained doorway
Dave -Martin, W. A.
s Box, E. Hollpauir, R.
E.-.P. Ashley, J. M. Lil-
iregory, E. E. Slagle,
:r and W. R. JRLoberds.
•ill be Mesdames Clyde
J. Compton, C O.
. A. Ur.bb, J. 1. P.
Jones, H. H. Powell,
min, T. R. Wilson, W.
ind . I.ee Vinson,
church dele •
A. A. Thomp-
son, Mrs. G.- B. Hollingshead, Met
C W,Wolfe, Mrs, A.JV. Whit*.
Mrs. -ft. R. Lemons, M a. G. T
Parker and Mrs. G. S. Bradley.
JL. IDUmilWH *■ vi i y*
Stewart Heights
gates will be Mrs.
“For God's sake .shut up," Its immigraCios ten
would bar politicians, columnists, radio commeffti-
tors, round table discussions and other nuisances.
Mr. Marshall would tolerate neither taxes, armies,
navies, political parties, philosopher nor propagan-
dist. His police force would be limited to two tough
cops whose duties would consist of throwing oat
people who refused-to mitld thcir own business.
We. think there, is a genuine need for such a par-.
adise on earth, . but we greatly fear that Mr. Mar-1
shah's, (Tream- and ours—never will be realized. I
in the first place we fear that half the applicants j
for citizenship would tie trampled to death in the
rush and in the second place we don't believe tbit j
two cops could make everybody who got in mind
their own business.
Maybe we’d ah better just, forget it and go fisfc-
. ing. We prefer to take chances on the mosquitoes
rather than human pests.
Barclay on Bridge
By Shephard Barclay
SINGLETON LEADS BAD
about what is the declarer's side
wife gave him some work to do
while he worked he talked.
2e my wife tola me an ing room. I followed. It was aoout wnai is me ueuaicro oius
Billy’s visit I’ve talked to small room, with windows along ”8Uit, or that of the dummy, a blind
of the bigy/i-s around hcre?r'<mc side and i.-iipboyds lining the___singleton opening lead is an es-
tiiey don't seem to think other; one1 aTTHe «ther end of it tremely hazardous proposition.
. and
But — -----
that kids know much.
Oh, don’t they?
the source of each streams Goose
Creek stream, Cedar Bayou
stream, Spring guliy aild all the
and on into Baytown, ,The federal government- has
?KA?s^Bsss «...
^ and flood waters in Harris county, and this
t0.A*!!, ClUlLdraen,^Laf( m.n $9,000,000 county project is ‘
ter and the threat of flood, the
land itself in Harris county will
carry a greater value, for land
that today is waste prairie be-
cause of inadequate drainage will
ttimorrow become ^productive as
any in the state.
The march of progress in Har-
ris county will parade past the
other; one1 aTTHe ®ther end of
was another door leading into a
bathroom.
Drue was reading the doctor's
orders intently, and Anna was
close beside her, watching Drue's
face and knotting her; fingers
nervously in her apron. Drue,
tvas white, and the .upward gleam
of the light outlined the clean
line.of Her chin and cheekbones,
add cast a soft Shadow around
her byes. She looked up directly
At me with a poignant appeal in
United States, according to -
hunters still continue to miss 'em.
Whatever became of that reported Japanese plan
to Seize Antarctica and the South Pole- They cbuld
have had a lot of fun attacking icebergs-which
can’t fire back.
.js sue Grab' Baa
FDR or Dewey. _ ”
” Beauty expert says that 98 out of every 100 wom-
en have crooked hoses. And any man who reads
that statement out k>ud to the Little Woman is
liable to have one, too.
This is one football season when the greatest in-
terest seems to center on the electoral college
An educator urges that the art of debate be
revived. It has—ever since the footbal seasc
^Lunchtime has been limited to 15 minutes in Ger-
___ AL ...All a Kohiio: had trt«f his Arm#*-
Easy Knowledge
The aim' of Harris county -flood
coiitroL engineers is to end for-
ever the threat of flood in any
section of the county, and by a
master drainage systetm move as
much as a four-inch rain from
anywhere in the county to the
bay in at least 24 hours.
Besidese getting rid of the wa-
’your vote. A vote in support
ALL of the bonds is one in sup-
port of progress. The Tri-Cities
area must not fail the remainder
of the county at this time. We
have every assurance that the re-
mainder ot the county will do its
part for us.
This is one time the Tri-Cities
can not lose,
seaSon be-
One-Minute Test
1. What is, a caryatid? •
2. What kind of stores deal in
incunabula? . "
many. Oji, well, many a Nazis has lost his appe-
,,T»r3rbK»" 5““', sjss?
will soon disappear. Oiiite already ha's—about three
“13amiS&SS'.« »-d ta.
favorite one-man band is thc wedding ring.
Warmer weather in the middle west. Must be
thc result of that just closed red-hot American
league pennant race. _ „. '
A town in Minnesota is named North, Pole. Its
Today’s Horoscope
You are a natural leader and
‘have decided executive ability.
You are also a leader in your so-
cial life, and are responsible for
many of the pleasant afairs your
circle enjoys. You^are charming,
gracious and always appear to the
best advantage, have many real
friends and are loyal to them. De-
termination arid initiative augur
much success, promotion being
probable in your next year. You
may safety seek favors, advertise,
travel and forge ahead generaly.
DAILY CROSSWORD
i -ACROSS 5 Speak ”4. Dull pains
! 1. River (Fr.) 6 Shoshonean 25. Male fowl
Indian 26.1 am
7. Old (contr.)
measures 29. Sun god
8: Draws off,. SO. River (So.
as a liquid Am.)
11. Before 31. Developed
13. Wise men * abilities
15. Back . . 34. Feather
, 5 Prosecutes
. C. Broken coat
'! of cereal
seed
' 10. King who
married
Cudrun
11. Antelope
(Afr.)
12. Barks
14. Succor *v.
16. Silk (Chin.) ,32.|j
!!
aloB
a pfr
ill
the rain outside, “Anna, who shot
him?” ‘ '
Well, that gave me .a real and
most unwelcome start; it was the
first I’d known of that. They
had said at the registry office (or
rather, I remembered suddenly,
Drue Hhd said when she persuad1
'ed me to take the case wi&i her)
that there’d been an accident.
Not that it was a shooting acci-
dent. I don’t like shootings. I
held the tablet In a hand sud-
denly gone stiff.
Anna shook her head., “They
said accident," she whispered. In
fact, our whispers and the dreary
day, the, silence in, the .great
thick-walled house and the rain
against the Windows gave the
whole thing a kind of eeriness.
Drue's small,'—J~
shoulders.
tremely hazardous proposition.
That suit is more likely to be the
dangerous side suit than one hi
which you hold several cards, and
opening it may start the declarer
on the very plan he would attempt
if he could call a lead from you. It
may help him early to set up his
suit, and put him in position to
drop,your side’s trumps promptly
unless you can halt that By means"
of the ace and ope or two other
trumps, or the king and two.
4 5 ' y. '
4 AK 10 95 3
*AQ84
4* J S 7 4
• K 10 9 5
3 2
♦ Q7
♦ AKQ
; lo o 3
•QX
4 J8
*K J2
♦ F*
f-7 8 4
♦ 6 4 2
♦ 10-7653
*9
i^ands caught Anna's
“Anna, yon must tell me. What
,n.,norw.HV”
’hamber'of”Commerce, no doubt, has small hope of Your health improves (hiring this 17.
Five Years Ago ff-1*
Sjp>»-'- .“*—
yers And church
“ headlh may suffer
disorders and excesses.
^msoroers ana excesses. 2A Embrace
Today’s headline: Hitler^ lo Seek Italian Aid Horoscoiw for.Humlay^ ^ ^.Exclamation
t Turkey. , ' . „ ,
’ Hitler intends to consult Benito Mussolini
Turkish-British-French. mutual aid pact as
i he has completed his own analysis of it,
any and Russia clearly displayed their re*?
With Great
of the National Bank
will be the principal
ng of the Goose Creek
W. WHkins, Jr., en-
With a
on her 15th healthy, bighly inteHigent, Indus-
will attend the p . _______ __
1 as a
A birthday celebration, today
means you have a keen mind,
shrewd judgment and a strong
will. You arc robust and have ab-
normal endurance under stress.
You are bright, witty and a good
entertainer. Y,our life will be un-
eventful. but you , will have the
steadfast love of your mate. Na-
and intellectual activities make
good progress in the next 12
months. Love affairs Also pros-
per, though an eider may cause
annoyance!; The child who is born
today will be Very fortunate.
33. Bag
34. Chum
37. Large worm
39. Breezily
43. Pale ’
44. Furnishes
45. Wicked '
46. Narrow
roadway •
47. Wrest'
48. Mast
-■ ws
DOWN
j. More clever
2. Mountains
.(Russ.)
3. Coins
- Yfhim.) r-
4. To hold in
aitedion
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H
v>\
ib
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.
n
r
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3
.
TT”
-
4Z
___
w
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n
1
w
rr
•
n
y
............. Miss Drue. I
I don't know. They found
■ garden there by the
n : • ■: v,... V. 'f
ie garden? When?"
mghL About eleven,
They carried him into the house
and sent for the doctor.”
“Hut What did they say? How
could there have been an >acci-
” "They said he was cleaning a
Anno'e nvaa wuvprGft A
gun.” Anna’s eyes wavered and
went back to Drue's.-
“At eleven o’clock at
(Dealer: West. East-West vul-
nerable!)
West North East South
1 ♦ Dbl 2* Pass
4* 5+ Dbl
E^st could not very well be
blamed for his double after that
kind of bidding, but severe cen-
sure was due him for following iris
habit of fthding a singleton al-
most every passible time against
a suit contract. It made North’s
task a cinch,.
The club 9 was covered by the
10. U and A, tlie diamond A and
K. dropped ■ the ’outstanding
trumps', the diamond 3 was ted to
the 6, and the club 5 was fed from
the dummy. When West played
low. his 2, North, certain that
East, a veteran singleton addict,
had no more, finessed the 8, and
it held. The drib Q then dropped
the J. the 4 was led to the 7, and
thc 6 furnished a .«w«w4w» «i‘»'
'
murmured Drue. “In the gar
den?”
Finally,
said,- “Who brought -him
Who found him?”
' The maid swallowed “Beevens,’’
“Becvemt! And^ ^dmNse?”’
“Mr. Nicky and Mr. Peter Hu-
ber. He's a friend, an old
school friend of Mr. Craig's."
“I don’t remember him." Drue
was frownirig. “Is he here?
Staying In the house?”
"Yes, Miss Drue. He and Mrs.
Nicky and Beevens heard the
shot; they were in the morning
If your not vuincrSble partner
makes repeated overcalte in one or
two suits against vulnerable oppo-
nents. who nevertheless bid on to
game In one cf the other suits,
Whai has your partner told you
apotit the. general strength of kU
hand?
NOT TOO LATE
TO START . . .
r'-%
Sfti
A thrilling serial presented daily
on this page. Read second in-
stallment today.
LuHDAY. OCTOH6R 21,
Classified
Ossified Ad-Information
for (ontHvdv* in«eilions:
jj wurd minim nn.............
......"
ill diwilW »d‘ *r* f‘’b wIth rihUr^,
Ij. „ » niurtwy Wld ennvcnirmw
I m III iAr ad« over the tcleplmne «nu
I"*1" memo -harge” until the cu„
I^IshamA a check or «>me to p»y
I ue" ‘
1 t the o(f‘ce-
■:
RHP
G EBERHART
. e-nn- The Dally Sun will net be re-
Igx.tt'iftS
i Trml f'>r bfsl inlc"'5‘, °f bgth
I J,miser* and reader.
T.Unhone your ad. to our ClMiifled
I »ho will aidlt you In word-
f £ the «opy- ■.
PHONES 520 521
[• ft must be inby II a. m.
FOR RENT
iriraller, electrlo refrigeration
available. Adults only. 5UE.
Pit* ".L'
bed-
Z, shift workers or couple,
pilose 1102-M.
98-tfc
a- . bedroom, nicely furnish'
|rfyK». Winds. 222 East
. ------- 107-4tc
Jjames. .
l^ in
^odaiiqns for -two. ^
6
I ..room furnished hoiwe apply.
1 Zise on right after Market
Sheet Road, South Coady. vY
T. Schoppa.______”
nished bedroom.
Ivicelv furnished bedroom. 233
New Jersey, Raytown. ^For
J( men only. _____
lTvo~rooms and bath furnished
1 apartment in Wooster, across
(mm Humble Station. Mrs, L.
* Haffeifinger, 108 Homan, ;
Stewart Heights. 110-3tp
I Nice bedroom, adjoining bath,
" .rivate entrance, garage avail-
Sle 516 N. Ashbel. Phone
J19-M. - 110-3tp
Ipnc room, cheap, ciosc-in. Single
ar couple. Phone 1388, C. N.
Cook 2i4 E. Texas Avenue.
110-3tc
I for rent or cate beautiful 8-room j
brick homo in Bay Villa.
Phone 570-W. 110-tte j
BBT furnished house. Couple |
ot!v. Mrs. Chester Read, Ce-
dar Bavou. Apply after 8 p.m.
•no-ttp
Main.
us for girls only.
314 W.
tio-oic
News
ly Mrs. R. A. HOOPER
(WEB HUNDRED MOTHERS
I VWIT UKiHLANDH SCHOOL
One hundred twelve mothers
[visited in the class rooms of
i attends -Etemmttary -School oo
i Unday afternoon Id observance
I ot class visitation day, sponsored
■ by the Parent Teacher Assoeia-
Tided, announced, and expressed
lira, Mrs. A.. O. Dunaway, pro*
her thanks to the P. T. A. Room ,
Bothers who assisted In the ar-
[ n«tements. Mrs. B. R Hopper
[ b room mother chairman.
| Mowing the visitation period.'
[ Vbort business meAing was held
| ® the gymnasium, with Mrs.
[ Dundway presiding, and flttial
[ jjlM v/erc made for the annual
IIWNi’w carnival -
to be held
school. The
Cctqber 31atatthcH
wngress Birthday by a. gift of
Wmpmmm
»r the use of the hospitality
toamittee. Also, It was Redded
““t the Association would buy
•“wm for the i. avlng picture
“srames-to be used by trie ele-
schools in the visual
tejcshon soon to be instituted.
u. v, sc‘;ir.adJ and Mrs.
f f./.UuMwt€rson Prided at the
I mSnt lable durnig the *o-
j nwtm^r f“llowing business
~jsgg&g&,
If?* Uomonatratioa club at the
I .^eUng of the club
S ?JSS
t «r, d,le'
I iad^lj-^brncdl, reporter,
lZMn- -w’ " * * ■
-H.
I
R Ilderton, treas-
Ufa V -
^^jfding were tl^ ones raen-
W- HS£e& C Ben-
m8, V«a »|Bilntaki.
■«F*TBn
*5'| Tn
' tt.
—score when the
Wia ra T aub Wed-
lS n borne of Mrs. W, C,
Ym nC°« prize Va» won
...
Th
plant
ka -si
estin
6f th
US
Author
I#°£f«rices^
hostess served, a
™n preeeeoing th
l^N’AL v":
<faughte^r
j
*bile Mr.
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 110, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 21, 1944, newspaper, October 21, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028547/m1/4/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.