The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 139, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 24, 1945 Page: 4 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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, w|r: • ■■
THE DART SUN. GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER u,
NO’
GMaili>£un Sun Slants
l'lsH»bc*t fjrh <l»> aftrrsn* K TW Duly Run C.wieMJ,
t» W*>1 fVarrr Slrcrl, ('&*■ fWk. T««
By Fr*d Hartman
r*E0 HARTMAN. Cfctor
ROBERT RUT HERNE. Buvwsi Ml»j«er
!
-*l»rtd h
Sf'HMT.tlTlON BATES:
Mur,ik. Tic. < $4 li: Year. t«M
Special Rale To Uc In Service-—5®c Month
AH Mail SoWripHam TtfMt U Advance,
wcomi tilts mittrr at Gw Crwk, T#y*%
umkr Ctc act of Conjm», March t, 1197.
Bigger Business
White its total value may never be known
in dollars and cents on any chamber of
commerce reports, the fishing resources of
the ansa adjacent to the Tri-Cities is an
asset of inestimable vaiue to the commer-
cial life of our community.
The art of fishing itself has drawn the
taunt* of industrious brain-trusters since
time immemorial, and Isaac Walton follow-
ers have more than once been laughed at
for the obviously lazy demeanor of their
sport.
But thousands of dollars a year are
brought into this community by virtue of
the fishing fraternity who let no expense
bar the road to their having a few houra of
relaxation on the bay. These fishermen,
and women, too, these days, first invest in
tackle. There are several stores in our area
who specialize in any kind of tackle they
can obtain in these times and their turn-
over annually is a good sum in the aggre-
gate. - ■
Fishing camp operators, too, realize a
tidy sum from rental of skiffs which they
have available for hire, and an even great-
er aggregate in the dollars and cents col-
umn is realized from the sate of bait shrimp
which one dealer blandly nicknamed
“swindle bugs."
A tabulation of commercial fishermen
who make handsome incomes annually
v i: EMi Mum
THIS IS A reminder to all business men of ttye Tri-
Citii-* urea. A Tri-Cities Chamber of Commerce will
be organized at 7:3t) *>. tn next Tuesday at Robert
E. Lee High school Every member of the Goose
Creek Chamber of Commercc-and every member of
the Baytown Chamber of Commerce lifts received a
personal letter from the retiring presidents asking
each of them to attend this session.
I here are many, many business men in the area
oho do not belong to either trade group but uho
should oclong They will be given every opportunity
to join the new and enlarged organization and will
be more than welcome to attend the Tuesday night
session It is the duty of every business man in this
section to affiliate his business with this new and
growing organization for the benefit of the area his
business serves.
So make it your business to be on hand and help
us organize this new civic organization. Remember
the time: 7:30 p. m. Tuesday.
4s$'
would read like a “Blub I.........
AVIATION NOTE
HERE IS AN aviation note that is interesting in-
deed: .i............................. ......
The world's first, twin-fuselage military plane, de-
signed to combine long-range flight with the speed
and altitude of fighter craft, has been built for the
Army Air Forces by North American Aviation, Inc.,
at its Los Angeles plant, the Air Technical Service
Command has announced. • -fH
Contract for a limited number of the new planes,
designated the P-82 Twin Mustang, was awarded
by the Army Air Forces to North American sever-
al months ago. Production of this plane at the Los
Angeles plant will supplant production of the P-51H
Mustang.
The new plane has a top speed of more than 475
miles an hour and "a combat range of 2,500 miles
carrying full armament-it can easily cover the
Pacific stretch between the West coast and Pe
Harbor. Tests show that it will operate effici
up to 45,00 feet.
It carries a pilot in each fuselage and an auto-
matic pilot in the main cockpit to reduce bHot fa-
tigue on long-range missions The left cockpit con-
tains the norma! instruments including/ the auto-
matic pilot controls,‘While the-co-pilot on the right’
has sufficient instruments for relief and emergency
operation
The plane is powered by two twelve-cylinder; 2.-
slbO-horsepower engines, utilizing two opposite-ro-
tating four-bladcd propellers. /
“^Armament Consists of six. free-firing .30-calibre
machine guns, twenty-five.rikketa and four 1,000-
potmd bombs. The plane's.TodteLflrepowcr is equi-
valent to a light eruistry full broadside. Camera in-
..... * ' and Tartar instalia-
-V
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
SUPERINTENDENT BATTLE
had enjoyed his holiday. There
were stilt three days of it to run
and he was a little disappointed
when the weather changed and the
rain fell. Still, what else could you
expect in England? And he’d been
extremely lucky up to now.
He was breakfasting with In-
spector James Leach, his nephew’,
when the telephone rang.
•Til come right along, sir.” Jim
pt’t the receiver back. c
"Serious?” asked Superintendent
Battle. He noted the expression on
his nephew’s face.
"Wo'vo got a
Trcssilian. An old lady, very well
known down here, an invalid. Has
that house at Salicreek that hangs
right over the cliff.’’
* Battle nodded. ■
"I’m going along to see the old
man", (thus disrespectfully did
Leach speak of his chief constable).
'hi i;nriSi
.......____ . •>
• ,£*' ar llliCTH* CHRISTNt MAMhWANJftSWHRW
“Perfectly straightforward. She
was hit from In front with terrific
force. First blow smashed the bbne
and killed her, but the murderer
struck again to make sure. I won’t
give you thf fancy terms-just
plain horse sense of It.”
"How long Has she been dead?”
asked Leach. . ■
“I'd put it between 10 o'clock
and midnight."
“You can't go nearer than that?”
“I'd rather not. All sorts of fac
tors to take into account We don't
hang people on rigor mortis nowa-
days, Not earlier than 10, not later
than midnight.”
“And she was hit with this nib-
»»..Riw ..^.wi.R»e»YKUirATt'lt^,,
IAS5IF
III Informal!
Uckf
The doctor glanced over at it
“Presumably. Luck, though, that
the murderer left It behind. I
couldn't have deduced a niblick
from the wound. As It happens
the sharp edge of the club didMt
touch the head—It was the angled
.BP’-v-
Sfc’.v
"He's a friend of hers. We're going back of the club that must have
“ ' “ - ■ '■ : hit her.” 1
THE CLOC K Hi KIKES “ONI!"
to the place together.”
As he went to the door he said
-RAB BAG
Olic-Minuir Test
i. Who said, “I!
Easy Knowledge
H I can stop
heart from, breaking, I shall
live in vain”?
2. Ttie dosing line of one of
Shakespeare's most famous
speeches ends with the words.
“Nymph in thine orisons be all
my Sins remembered.'' What is
the speech?
3. Whacking said, “After me,
the-deluge?”
-son if you wish to get your way
one - today. Being aggressive or using
not force wilt not play in this day and
^ age, in the social world, at least.
Put your mentality to its fullest
pleadingly:
“You’ll give njc a hand, won't
you. uncle, over this? First case
of this kind I've had.”
“As long as I'm herb, I W*L Case
of robbery and housebreaking, is
it?"
“I don't know yet”
Half an hour later, MajorRobert
Mitchell, the chief constable, was
speaking gravely to . uncle and
nephew.
"It s early to say as yet,” he said
“Wouldn't that have been rather
difficult to do?” asked Leach.
“If It had been done on purpose,
yes,” agreed the doctor. ”1 can
only suppose, that by rather*’ odd
chance, It just
“but one thing seems ^ear. This
,t Just happened that way.”
Leach was raising his hands, in-
stinctively trying to reconstruct
the blow.
“Awkward.” he commented.
. “Yes,” said the doctor thought
fully. "The whole thing was
awkward. She was struck, you see,
On the right temple—but whoever
did it must havejstopd on the right
Horoscope for Sunday
wasn't an outside .Nothing ha4i side of the bed-facingthe by. ‘“Left the wespon-ieffl
in. All j head of the bed—there's no room fingerprints on it—wonder be (fi*
luruwope tor Sunday • taken, no signs of breaking in. -----— —- - -— -—- - - -----
You are endowed with compas- the windows and dome found shut on Ihe left, the angle from the wall
Words of Wisdom
sion, unusual common sense, an
amiable disposition and carefully
controlled emotions. You are fond
of travel and the fine arts. Your
are optional.
While reflecting gho influence of the P-51 Mus-
- These fishermen sometimes make any- tang, the P-82 Twjh Mustang is a complete different
where from $200 to $400 in gross catches
daily. They don't do it every day. Sdmc bl e*^rimtjfe America's World War n com-
of them make anywhere from S100 to $180 /■
net a week. They ship catfish buffalo, and ARE YO/ editated
other fresh water fish to markets all over
the United States. The shrimp catches from
the bay is no small part of the annual
“take” from this source. '
Bankers here will tell you its common for
a fisherman in the commercial market to/
cash checks from St. Louis. Chicago, Bales'-
tiRe, Little Lock. Dallas, Fort Worth, and
Houston in one day’s deposits.
These men who earn their living
follow it the year around. When C
this.morning.
He looked directly at Battle.
"If I were to ask Scotland Yard,
of travel, and the tine arts. Your do you think they'd put you on the
• interest m other people suggests job? You're on the spot, yod see.
.•ITtZg-^Tfaithfu. pulpit is “J£r j»Jhc medloal-
ho ingAn siiferuard of a nations ^ nursing ficiG.s. Today lot your witn I/flcn hBW,: iuit u,. if your.
Me'^nHMI * faith endmv you with peace'and willing. It means cutting the end
life.-John Hall. • serenity. Spend part of the day 0{ your holiday”
H ' ' refleetbm of the everlasting "That’s ail right,” said Battle,
truths thit will not be daunted, no "As for tbe other, sir. you !! have
matter who or what force attacks to.put it up to Sir Edgar” (Sir
them. You will Bet solace from Edgar Cotton was assistant com
Today’s Horoscope
The aspects at your birth
augured a troubled life, but one
in which you would achieve suc-
cess because of your power of ap-
plication, yor tenacity, and jn
dustrv You have an artistic tem-
perament. You like, music and
Canadian did n pretty fair job of setting it down in yol,r 1 g c 4nd yollr ab,llty t0 ru* *■ Louis xv-
black and wjhitc:
He »W.
1 Power to think, .■■■■•■
2. Power to manipulate facts, .. .
3. aatisfnction found in being mentally alert.
4. Broad-mindedness and the ability not to resent
the strange.
follow it the year around. When they can 8 Proper appreciation and use of books,
they take salt water fish from the bay, and Realization «r having hammered out spme prin-
when the river ?et* on a fresh'and w»nri« tiP|e» nnd v“lc’ s h-v which to act and be guided
cats to market. / j: Picfereuce for quality rather than quantity.
Some of the fishermen ttirn to trapping 8 Community responsibility.
their work SO well they just keep on fishing it gives you a: questionnaire that will judge your-
in the winter and if/ihe fish aren’t avail- »elr^ But be sure and be fair now. i.
able, they just take it easy. -------------
Yes, the waterfront area adjacent to the .
Tri-Cities is ah item which cannot be list speckled trout, flounder, shrimp, cut-
overlooked. The waterfront workers bring fish, buffalo, gaspergoo, and aU of the
outside dollars into our community every other members of the tribp of water in-
day, and the aggregate of their annual
Barclay On Bridge
--n . 1 "It s jjoirig tit be a ease where we the floor: remarked,’*Tl)ifi golf club
B» Shephard Barclay K3**«-*?AnS: “BarSWSSTS'JSS
missloner) "but I believe lie’s
friend of yours.”
Mitdiell ruxkled,
“Yes, I think I can manage
E.lgar all right Hitt's settled,
that! Ill get through right away."
He spoke into the telephone:
“Get me the Yard."
• “Y-.u think it's going to be an
important case, sir?" asked Battle.
Mitchell said gravely:
is too small
Leach pricked up his ears.
“Left handed t" he queried
“You won't get me to commit
myseif on that point.” said I-azen-
by. “Far too many snags. I'll say,
If you like, that the easiest explana-
tion Is that the murderer was left
handed -but there are other ways
of accounting for it. Suppose, for
instance, the old lady had turned
her head slightly to the left just as
the man hit. Or he may have pre-
viously moved the bed out, <ti*od
on the left of it and afterwards
moved the bed kick."
“Not very bkely -that last.”
“Perhaps not, but it might have
happened, I've had some expe-
rience In these things and I can
tell you. my hoy, deducing that a
murderous blow was struck left
handed Is full of pitfall*!"
■Detective Sergeant Junes from
c,l£ yoi.rself^S I
Bailie shook bis head. J
“Oh, no, no. I'm a simni. ____!
Like to believe the thing isl^Jl
my eyes. She was hit with Jl4
thing heavy - that’s heavy in**
blood and hair on it, therefor, '
sumubly her blood arri hiir tL |
- that was the weapon useih’’
Leach asked: ^ "
“Was she awake or asl,fp ,
she was hit?" v
"In my opinion, awake, iwl
astonishment on her face ra/1
—this is just a private pij
opinion-that she didn't
what was going to happen T|JL
no sign of any attempt to fiahr I
and no horror or, fear. I'd . 1
hand that either ahe hadJ
waked up from sleep and wu t,
and didn’t take things in-or i
she recognized her assailant
someone who could not
wish to harm her."
‘The bedside lamp was on,
nothing else,” said Leach
fully,
“Yes that cuts either way
may have turned it op when 11
was suddenly waked up by some*]
entering her room. Or it may2I
been on already.” 1 ?!
Detective Sergeant Jones row hi
attvriy!" H*
"Lovely set of prints on
club/ he said. “Clear as
thing!”
Leach gave a deep sigh. ' a
"That ought to simplify thma'i
“Obliging chap,” said Dr.T®
far nmjecutlv* Inse
I #l»i««H" ••■•••*
I or i1** "ur4
(ftp, I”*........
[ftp, re* ' ''™
Iftp’ (mwlli) per word
' Ads Musi Be In By P
PHONES 52C-52
Lrd of thank
leave his-visiting card!”
“It might be,” said Suu„.„_
ent Battle, “that he j„« k-.
head. Some do.”
The doctor nodded
“True enough. Well. I mint i
and look after my other patient* 1
"What patient?” Battle sounfti]
suddenly Interested. „ I
“I was sent for by the butler J
fore this was discovered, u*l
Tressiiian's maid was found *3
coma thia morning *
“What was wrong with hwr
“Heavily doped with one of tft]
barbiturates. She's prniy batS
1
“The maid?" said Battle
rather ox-like eyes went he*v%J
the big belt pull, the tsAMl S
Which rested on tlm pillow near t
dead woman's hand. 1
-JliFto express o
s and appreciatl
friends who were
Ming our recent be
,]8o to thank then
jtiful floral offering
in Allic Nunan
and Mrs. J. J. Ni
and Mrs. B. E. B
III RENT
jtled business bu
'corner location on i
id, Lsndscape, plent
Excellent oppor
growing communit)
nnclview Nurseries
Road.___________
jom with kit
rges. Couple only. Bi
Cedar Bayou school
bouio Kelley.
with”kiSSST
1266-W. 601 E. Fn
,,‘ferred.
IroOpi. 301 Neal" Str
,o»‘ «8’W'__
frge bedroom for
i, Private entrance, «
1 Apply 400 Michigan
JR SALE OR TRA
pSde 8 year old 6*
k marc, child broki
el trailer with.iirai»
letter Grocery, Busch
mordsuY
room house in go
in Baytown or Go<
,ne 682-J.
“is, irons, and fam
i of condition. Masse;
ESeaandtricycle
a of condition. Will
rgjll's General Repair
rth Gooee Creek Stre
lOM^noddeJ
m
DON'T SAY “IMPOSSIBLE"
IF YOl) play duplicate contract
and like to took over the score
slips to see what others did with
the hands, you will encounter
plenty of surprises, gverv once in
a white you will be inclined to say:
■Why. that score's certainly
wrong: it's impossible." But if you
get hold of the people who played
the hand, together with their op-
into 6-Spades and made- the con-
[tract.
When Edwin N. Moore, his de-
voted psychic bidding partner in
the North, opened with i-Ciub and
East overcalled, Me. Meyer saw
the danger of a vulnerable spade
game for the opponents impend-
ing So he bid that siiit himself. •
Later he tried twice to get out of
spades into No Trumps, and the
ing a mistake. We want to be ab- HBBHHIHHMPHI
soiutely sure of our man -or have belonged to the man who used
“* '->"->■* ” _ u It was, a man, I suppose,, doc-
ponents. 'you may find that the ; only reason he didn't also try 6-
“take” would be staggering even to an opti
mistic chamber of commerce booster.
So, jvhen you compile your personal list
of the7assets of our community be sure and
members of the tribe of water in-
habitants and alongside them include an
honor roll for the commercial fishemeh
who realize thousands of dollars annually
from nature’s resources brought in by
floods and tides to our very door.
score Is correct, that something
very understandable occurred, but
which you could not imagine until
It was explained to you.
♦ K 6 3 2
V*
JjW
A»
4AKQ96
e J 8 6 4 3 VV E
+ 10 8 7 5
Under The Dome At Austin
•4L
+Q765 l
f J 10 7 0
4 32
♦ KQ
4 Nona
No Trumps was his fear that Mr.
Moore would put him into 7-
Spades,
West led the heart 9 to the A.
The spade 2 brought the S. A and
; 9. then the 4 was led to the 10,
K and 8. The spade 3 was ex-
trdeted from dummy and East de-
cided to use the Q. which dropped
woman, of couriifrH
Battle nodded. He understood
quite welt that there was some-
II.ing Iwlilnd ih>- words
■Thinks tie knows who did It." he
said to himself. "And doesn't relish
the , prospect. Somebody well
known and popular or I II eat mv
boots!” ’
Battle and Leach stood in the
doorway of the well furnished
handsome bedroom. On tpe door in
front of them a police officer was
carefully testing for fingerprints
"Exactly. That's (he first 1
L»dY Trcssilian would hair dostjl
she'd cause to feci alarm -pullfti
hell and summon !!> maid, w|
•Still, it mayn't she could have pulled it till all if
' Due. The nut ni wouldn’t
heard.”
"That was taken care of, •
it ?” said Battle. “You're ami
that? She wasn't iti tire habit4
taking sleeping draughts?'' ;
liet voice: room. And I’ve found out Bur
it.
'fiif............
. “Not necessarily Tf the Weapon
was that heavy niblick a woman
could have lanoeil a terrible swipe
with it."
:t
sture and motor i
I hour service. Massey
«y. Phone 248.
nerciai and domesd
in service. Strait I
i Company, 309 Minnet
Phone 1384.
riter * and aiding
lirnr. Reliable i
r 66R-J after 5 p. m.
[Sty of beer to go.
be, Eddie Cox, Baytoi
f Phone 866.
quiet voice: ■
"But you couldn't swear
......— -. — that
that was the weapon, could you,
quick in-
Lazenby gave him
terested glance.
"No. I can only swear that it
the handle of a golf club—a heavy might have been the weapon, and
niblick. The head of the dub was that presumably it was the weapon.
the J, making the dummy's 8 high.
The heart J was returned to the
bloodstained and had one or two
white hairs sticking to it.
- By the bed Dr. Lazenby, who was
police surgeon for the district, was
bending over the body of Lady
TmftiUan.
. By Gordon K. Shearer and Ted Read
^
NfW AUSTIN GAME
AUSTIN-Texas staU* capitol visitors have a
the picture represent no particular, individual. Two
•fictitious figures show an elderly frontiersman hold-
sport. It is searching for relatives in the painting ing his wife’s hand as they Walk away, in apparent
...... — ' " disapproval of Texas giving up its separate govern*
wisswpniiw w giyiug up us separaie go
ment to become a state of the United States.
state S^r^fhaml'cr7'’*8* 0" dl*l,rteT in thc
HZ /”’«•» “*1-*A
painting, many people pick out a^n ancuBtor wfio wah
Paul Mallon i« ill, and his column will not reap-
pear until be is -iblo to resume writing it.
____L, _ • ,.. . ’ Z a 1 “ •' - fv..
at the Annexation Factually 40 of the 170 persons
are depicted by likenesses taken from old daguer-
reotypes or portraits.
In one ease, a descendant was used as a model
to paint the presence of a participant in the an-
nexation ceremonies for whom no photograph could
be found. George Mcnefee of Austin posed for the
portrait.of Francis Menefee White of Jackson coun-
ty, member of the= first, legislature.
Attending the Ceremony held February 17, 1846
Ifflrn Aneok I,.1..-a ! J» .. r .i i-, ,
i..
. ... ■■■■■■.....— Con-'
Republic: .'mil members of the first
Texas state, legislature together with First Tegas
Governor James Pinckney Henderson. Past Presi-
dents of the Republic Dnvid G. Burnet and Mira-
beau B. Lamar are shown among the special guests.
Sam Houston did not attend and’Stephen F. Aus-
"tin had died before the annexation.
Austin appears in the painting: however, in a re-
production of his portrait shown as part of the dee-
' t of the old capital' verandah where the ex-
: were held. Site of the building was near
present Austin City Hall.,
product!
oration
ereises <
the pres.
oes not ap-
I was due to
strange drcuitettanecs Albert V. Horton had been
elected lieutenant governor but the early count
showed an opponent to be the winner. It was not
until the complete count was made later that Hor-
ton took office. -
Despite his absence from his painting, Hortoffis
to be honored in Centennial of Statehood year by
having his picture hung in the gallery ot governors.
He had been excluded from that group through the
years on the belief that he was "just a lieutenant
governor." Recently the state legislature decided by '
resolution that Horton and Fletcher S. Stockdale
Were entitled to rank a* governors instead of lieu-
tenant governors.
The painting on display in the state Senate cham-
ber as a part of the observance of the Centennial
of Statehood pictures the scene when the United
States flag was raised over the state capitol on Feb.
19, 1846. It shows the Lone Star flag of Texas just
as it had been run down and is being carefully fold-
ed.- .
As part of the state observance of the Centennial
of Statehood a pageant of the same incident is be-
ing prepared. It will probably be presented in many
parts of the state during the year.
A A 4
*KH
4 107 5 *
4 J 4 3 2— .v-
lDealer: South, East-WeSt vul-
nerable.) .
Soiith West North East
Pass ~ Pass 1* If
14 Paw 3 4 Paw
3 NT / Pass 54 Paw
8 NT Pa** 64
Alter the evening's tournament.
Q and then follow ed the spade 8,
a club to the J, the heart K for
discard of the diamond 9, four
more clubs and finally the dia-
mond A. —
Players who said it was "im-
possible” for South to get into
i^He straightened up with a sigh.
I ll analyze the blood on it, make
sure that it's the same blood group
-also tbe hairs.” /
TYes," said Battle approvingly.
“It's always as well to be thor-
ough.”
Lazenby asked curiously:
Looking At Life
room. _And I've found out h
was given to her, Senna pod*. I
drank off a brew of senna p
every night. The stuff was in t
Superintendent Battle,
his chin
- “H'm,” he said. ".Someone l
all about this lum.- You kid
doctor, this is a very «id sort iw
murder.”
"Well,” said 'Lazenby. Tfitll
your busiaew,”
"He’s a good man, our 1
said Leach when Lazenby had)
the room.
(To Be/Conllnued)
moved from La
iwn Avenue, Busch
in • ipen daily
-are-for children in
I tbe hour, day, or eve
1 *, Hunnicutt. Phone 1
1B.P.O. 1
' 1649, Sp
meeting
8 P. M.
ular m
Nov. 29.
.....By Erich Ur
J -
■ Tri^itieg Chapt
der of DeMoiay
Sunday, Novemb
2:00 P, M. at
Hall. All membei
to attend.
I. C. Albright,
i '!’,apt*r Dad
many years, I haven't the slightest idea «W|
carburetor is for or how tbmndiffcrcn'.ial fu
______#1". -11 ...1
To be successful find out first of all. wh»t
want .more than anything else in the world
cesna,-—.......-
Your Week-End Question - cause whcn jhey talk about success it is always Do you envy Iftlv Rons ori Uwrenee Tibbett'
When a declarer Hite nine cards material success money, power, fame never spir- you want-'to be a great singer .’ Ti t n fi«
of a suit between his own hand ll"*1 success, which can be attained by anyone who whether you iiavc that “God-given and
and tho dummy, but lacks four rc“yy wanU I1- . , m«mber that there is a reason for < in;- it 0
one aebre-studying addict insisted cards headed by the queen, how Wnat ia success. Webster defines it as ‘that given. ^ ’
that Henry C. Meyer III, the should he decide whether to fl- *n*™cs; "uti-omc, issue. Which I would con- Do you want to be wealthy? Tin .oquUWjl
Soft Hi oterer.-explain how he go* none or try to drop it? thing ymt set iut tl|)d”UCU‘“f'1 ouUome ft™*- . .wealth, too is a natural tabu
Baileys Barber i
Beauty Shop
for
PERMANENT WAVI
. SCALP TREATMENT
[ FOR MEN AND WOM
-22 Years Experience
k».‘&S.s^K£
DAILY
river .
16. Jewish
month
18. Roman
m'oney
20. Article of
furniture
-OF GUESTS
PROMINENT invited guests who appear
1 the painting are Thomas F McKinney, financial
t Of tbe Republic of Texak, nnd Gail Borden of
-l*“T and ranch fame.
publisher whose account of the annex-
encer” is widely quoted
ure with a copy of his La
' arm. The head on the fig-
terland Odalr, later Texas editor and
uf tiie Centennial of Statehood. No
i earner editor wns nvailubie to the
VI to those, who
You're Telling Me!
By WiHiom Rift
“Goering," reads a sentence in a news story,
“laughed long and uproariously." Maybe Hermann's
pretending he's “Lord Haw Haw" but that Won't
dojhim any ——1 -in-—
him any go.id either.
Zadok nijmkopf says that every time he sees a
flock of geeae flying south he's reminded what a
is to r
ACROSS
1. Crushing
snake
4. Marsh
7, Increased
.by
8. Measure of
: length
10. Detest
12. Earth
14. Taverns
15. Fight -
17. Spread
grass to dry
18. Warp-varn
19. Expression
20. God of
pleasure
21.Insect
22. Systems of
signals
. 25. Match
26. Hof and dry
27. Sick
28. Equip
29. Demand, as
payment
40.1/1,000 of
an inch
33. Disavows
35. Fish
36. Slipped ” - ~
CR05SWORr
4. Close to 21..Prinking
8. Malt kiln _ C#
6. Caves
7. CornbreadL
9. To make
thinne.
22. Combs,
as wool
23. Bay-
winner wWo.Wi
10. Ignited 24. Dicorum
It. Subsides ' SS.AVinnow
13'Undenvorld 27. Plant
29. From
; (prefix)
30. Form
In other words, to^x- successful in anything, you
mustvfirst set out to do something. Without a goal
no spcccss is possible. However, the goal alone is
not enough. t.
Only a few days ago a reader sent me a letter in
whieh she complained that she had always wanted
to bb a writer. That she had practiced and tried and
done overythjffg she could but that no publisher
itines.
wanted her ’writings.
She sent a few stories she had written, and I
could see at once that she would never be a writer.
She had po imagination, her interest was entirely
i herself, she had no command of the lanoimoo
ent of Acquisition. I know bjecuusP i have ti
and failed miserably, i *
The fundamental rule for success i first mJ
TO KUOW YOURSELF! The world Is full of Or
ures who did not know their limitations Jt
You can achieve anything you wish I’ROVBs
YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO WISH IT Abort «
success is Happiness. Without it ’’success' i»»
ure. Even if you gain success it is net wortt'
effort on the way to it, you have missed twfl
>R SALE. MISC.
»g co'rdA lamps, “V
Plugs Installed, tpi
lr,d- Massey Eteetrlc.
Sen plants. "Onions,
coilards. 220 E.
[teens.
saxophofie.
ill herself, she had no command ,of the- language. "
You cannot be successful in anything unless you
of living. * , ’ ,
Of'all the successful people’T have inti
not one of them haa been able to give in* tM .
mula. To sum it all up this ia what they *••*' j
31, Troubles
32. Confederate
general
34. Notion
Salurdty'. Antwer
35. Frozen rain '
38. Girl's name
40. Afternoon
(8bbr.)
arc fm-t 18 ymt * »»*“• To »um" it ail up this ia what they
are qualified for it bythature. I could never be sue- p knew what T wanted I went after it b" working
ccssful as a mechanic Tools are my born enemies I wanted I went after it o. ^ ^
and (although I have driven an automobiii
it. the best I know how—and here f »m-
isn’t it? - **
portrait of
1 face was used on the
goose he is to remain a slave to two shovels—snow
Now that a judge has advocated the use of a
spanking machine Junior is beginning to wonder
if the mechanical age is aU that it*, cracked up to
37. Manipulate
Stair
taken on an ex-
39. I
41. Female deer
(pi.)
42. Sweet potato
43. Hole-pierc-
ing too!
>WN
-
Vox Potjrl: m__■_______|__________I
----—--- reason for its existence is that it going to the dentist.
Letters From Readers' ** • That's what would WMF £
STO3L HAt ».‘5rr.^AV'
fttat alto
J alter 5 o'clock. ' ^
f tric Hawaiian steel gui’l
IPfifier. 305 Stewart, 1
TWte Call between 9 a,
ML
F" doubie iron beds, sprin
stresses, 1 iron cot, 1 coul
Mu, Phone’ 386.
f»*berry pbnt«. grape
kberry vines, fig trees
5 palms, weeping wlllb
. ',r'd shade trees Chsmi
Pricrlts, Market Street
community as a whole. -fiiat"E Fhat^L^atw'«w income*
vs sf; ^
To the Editor:
Throughout the struggle of the
Oil Workers Union to maintain the leaves at“thc 'factory“gates if”he if wagcs w®re cut 30 ^ v ,
take-home pay of its members, takes this put IN WAGES is mnn- And remember too, tha
was a\oid taking a cut in pay. We having a few extras for Sunday together,
also felt it was necessary to work dinner. The local bus,ness man Signed: W. D. T»1W
shorter hours » tST'uTtake ih7 ^
he iohs for returning 'veterans, takes, if wr are not
successful in
StZFtSJSrigvrzJS: 25 SEL2-RN * «•*
nwft
i»''beiriM, tl.50 per l'oo.
Nmas, , lemons, grapi
Araletek hydrangeas.
<ry, 111 Magnolia, Higl
Phone 2556^
eieas, camellias, ahd gian
[Plants. Nowlin FlorabCor
Defee.,
l*»ty volumes of Tiolden
f Idron’a books, publishc
-•Parslow. Good con
«lar price *50.65. Will s,
119 Hqfer. Phone 568
prosperity,
be done is
sustain .and
The only way this can’
, ‘ for every worker to
have a job, take borne with him
the same amount of money he has
been taking home, and work a
shorty workweek.
Government responsibility plus
unnecessary reduction in our
wages.
Take for example, a mdn with
Jaterr solidarity can keep factories ,llB8Pft mat there uw. u.-
vSe r® oornZ ?SBr7
■cedar BAYOU
MATTRESS FACTO
Old Dittman Pi*4*
Cedar Bayou .
R 8. Todhunter, 0—
WE CALL F08 i
DELHIm
Renovating and
* Phone &00-
We 8peciftlU*i*
One-Day BereK*
“no cabinet model radio
* condition. 1400 Nortl
!Cre«k. 1
*'ly Painted ~giri's _victoi
work in
Ih gdod working ordc
1 " 'sconrirr Street, Phone
-
Pair matched mules, 1
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 139, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 24, 1945, newspaper, November 24, 1945; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028651/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.