The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 27, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
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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TUBBAY. jlOWMty a- , ■ }
Yean
I From Pa*r ))
|« C. Marshall at
Divers Search
For School Bus
And 45 Victims
Si.
i .
as V. S.
of staff hat requested
release from headquarters
Bf tX «**: WglW Il Wfftt,
hit chief of staff throughout the
campaign in Western Europe
Maj, Gen H R. BuU deputy
chief of ttaff here, will replace
Smith in about three week*. Me-
Xarney mid in disclosing Eisen-
hower'* request. |
Maj. (ft*. »lifer White will he-
come deputy chief of staff. White
accompanied McNarney here
from Washington. They arrived by
plane yesterday.
McNarney said he had. no sym-
pathy for Nazi* of any sort, whe-
ther they Were active party mem-
bers or “joined the party through
the neceaeitv of feeding their
• indite* a* the bus {
in the lake and .tank
ing momentarily.
"f c*n still hear the helpless
cries and screaming of those chil-
dren. Mrs. Brovin said a* she lay
proatrat# from her experience
^Donnie Mack. 13, said {hat he
nearly fainted" when the bus
catapulted down the 16-foot cliff
into the water
“But the cold water brought me
to and I headed dor the first
broken Window.' he said. “I got
Yamashita Against Extensive DonaHon-
- ““ Aggression; Tojo |------------
Hated General
FORT WORTH, Nov. 27 CP>
The Salvation army i* accustomed
to receiving fust about everything
V
out bmre the water started ctmi
tog m /*,** ",hut wh*B. 1 -•‘“w my
the necessity of
wives and children
“1 have not forgotten who start-
ed the war," he said. ‘The Ger-
man people must realise that they
were responsible, and their debt
has not been paid-'’
Forecasting an occupation of at
least a decade. McNarney saw a
likelihood of it lasting much
REV. WOODROW PHELPS,
for three years an army chap-
lain. b eondurting a youth re-
vival at First Kapli-I church of
floo-M- ( reek. Rev. Pbefp* con-
ducts an early morning *ervlee
at <.'IS a. in. for young people
who can not attend church later
in the day:. Breakfast is Served
to the early church-goers.
ftonltnued From Page I)
recovery of Their chlUfeeti’*
bodies, i sharper grief assailed
the bereaved couples. Authori-
ses soul (bat the ill-ftted Ihh
and lt» lifeless toad might have
Mink -o deep Into the almost „7 „ li.7~ w"' “ 1 *’!W my
bottomless take that ft might A ' <ir°£n' 1 *1*he<> * «'»fi
never be found ,"*™ m were He can’t swim you
Four dier-e re„ c ..i . ' fN®" an“ he headed ®U* into the
iour dura from Seattle andI; lake instead of into shore."
uranil Coulee dam were forced last Donna cried
"'gh,t *° si>andon their searth un- -Diver*, operating from a lake
today •beca.iae tcnijkr.uuies barge floated over the mot whore
hL0»>^nd"tvn?u^o‘at^f'WhilT ^ hl* disaPl4eJ,re<!/ thought
nith wttto and lack of suf.tcient one* that they had located the
v.
my
rhtinz
which is making a study 'of stra-
tegy in the second world war.
Boatmen and divei
one body, however. It waa that of
13-year-old Henry Davis.
Ronnie Ayer*. 18. drow ned as be
straggled toward shore In the
frigid water. The other 14 victims,
including Jack Randall. «. the butt
wfllt. wire believed still trapped
in the, bus.
There were seven survivors.
hampered sUnkan vehicles tto 55-f^t"le\eT
But pfi.r.t and broken glass on a
overed Wge at the 144-fwH level led them
that of to believe the bus had dropped
■ even deeper.
iCantinued From Rage 1)
a! reputation is that of high mor-
als and deep sympathy. His per-
sonal reputation fs that of friend-
ship and high character."
-An NBC broadcast said Yaml-
shita had revealed in a conversa-
tion that his title “tiger of Mala-
ya" was won on a bluff that con-
tributed to the fall of Singapore
'During negotiations for the
surrender of Singapore Fob. IS,
1*42. Yamashita was quoted as-
saying he was "terrified " to learn
his forces in Malaya were out-
numbered by the British 5 to T,
»o he presented an ultimatum to
the British
the bundles ft collect*:
had to turn over a recently dona-
ted paper -bag to the city detec-
tive bureau.
The bag. mixed In with suits and
dresses, contained engraving plate*
for printing currency.
Hurley Denounces
Foreign Service
_fi!eto reorganization „f ,mr
muking machi,:, rj, i^j ‘"’''T-l
the Imvpi* , n,*l
Goering Ordered
Much Poison Gas
(Continued From Page 1)
in hand. In this war there can
only be a fight to the end.
''Capitulation is the and of the
nation and of Germany, Italy Suf-
fered not only a mild defeat but
(YaniashlU's interpreter fumbl- * mor*1 de/eat Stv oro,t'' down
i ------ -e- - - internally. The result has not been
commander.
He said be strortgly
mitting families ■#
weed per-
occopat ion
Hihciod of it lasting much long- .room to loin the men a% Wwn ot !if* *** lowered because
in order to give the Germans DOS,;i>le but added that -t parents were driving tbei:
«e to establish themaelre* afcng v cc i;d n,{ ^ {>Jis wtr,.' ‘ * drea to schools through the
aocrstic hues and with a self- ' . . _ tT’- storm "
•: 1
Washington state highway pobee
said. Had the schoolbmmd bus
cpinpleted its efreuit, It would
have been carrying tip to SO Loss
of life was lowered because man*
their bhil-
__________________...j snow-
storm.
, ,eaj The victims were students in
- 1 * rtvi.san the high school, junior high school
McNarney ^ he had no plan, h*^ fa Sfe ""who ^"rdH ^'bus
for Gen. George S. Patton except ■—— to ta t tabu
to permit him to finish bis job as **
.roro-mader of the Sfefe army. - TRY SUN CLASSIFIED ADS -by pualff Zm SgilS
Hull Raps Army
Board Report
those
democratic lines and with a self
sttPOorting’ economic -progrtel
He predicted i long, hard P»R ^ub^"for ’fhJ'llt
Ht+mutedtiu
man now ta '
Continued From Page I)
at what was going on in
"!a« 10. 12. or U days” before
Pearl Harbor, would know “what
the Jap* were doing," Hull said. '
Then he added:
The Japs were off on the at-
tack and nothing would stop them
unless we had laid down like cow-
ards . and we would have been
cowards,"
ed the answers 'Finally in des mU‘rna,1F The result has not been
peration. I said I-must have a res the Psce ?he e*P<'ctcd f,ut tf’r0l,Kh
or m- answer,” Yamashita was «o'*'ardice of these criminal trait-
quoted. aa ors a fate a thousand times bard-
* From (hi. kh.fr .. „ , er than the continuation of the
interview grew the legend of the 1 ■ I,a a Pw>P,f
"Tiger of Malaya Ihose only u ',odi reml«* tlm :TilIpr had
terms were yes or no, ' the broad- ,
cast said.)
(Continued From Page I)
. eer men who were opposing ilie
American policy in the Chinese
theater of war. (They) were re-
turned lb Washington and pnt'rfil
in the Chinese and Far Eastern
division of the state department-
as my superiors. Some have been
assigned as advisers to the su-
preme commander in Asia."
Hurley sai# the weakness of
American foreign policy 'lias
backed us into two world wars."
The answer. Hui iey f aid, lie* in
t#o directions. First he said, the
"secrecy which has Shrouded the
actions of the state department”
must be.etlheinated in order to
give the American people correct
basic information on which to !
form judgments.
Secondly, there must be “a com-
thc- lower official fc
dinate the nution's
dipiomaUc pojlgjni a
and intelligent impu
the nation * internat
* ^IV'C 1
mcmationTflj
laid down by its top ienrt^licyi
\ociety~
Our land U our Jivjn»
MIKE FRANSSEN
[Melderts
rimenfed
STATE RESERVE LIFE
"See Me Before You D|«»
Fhone 268
Unniversary
,!ri Mr* I-oui* yan Meldert
I9,^.-Dlimcnted on their
LifUi wedding anniversary
P when their
Come inland Try
Zenith Hearing Aid
Cone’s Pharmacy
Admiral Dealers '
West Texas at oSU
City Officials, Employes
Guests M Dinner
JBWHpT'. . - m
to attark in the west in
1939 after the end of the Polish
campaign but bad weather and a
shortage of armaments delayed the
attack.
"Meantime,” he saW. “we were
confronted by yet another prob-
lem which had to be settled prom-
■ ptfe The occupation of Norway -
and Denmark. First, there was
danger that Britain would- seize
KELLT’S BEAUTY SHOP
403 IV, Texas Rhone 18,10
HOLIDAY SPECIALS
*•
asrLi
6oosc Creek city officiakTand
°f °' M etniMin would seize
Twenty-three people, including of ir°n and nickel.
‘1'*yo’’ ^ Alexander. Commis- "Second, there was 'he realiza-
■ n ru '' 8 ~ty Atty- Er* tion bt onr °'*-n maritime nccessi-
' F]o»ers and City Manager ties which made it imperative for
*■ E' Hllflter attended the dinner, us to secure free access to the
The.. regular city commission Atlantic.
sch*d“Kd tor 6:30 p.m.. 'The question now arose’whe-
.fonday was postponed until later ther or not we should cam- the
" l"e. wetk becau« of the war Into Britain by landing s •
commissioners were unable to at. grand scale. Furthermore, in view
to j'« a*ffr-£ toSrz s f-rass^rts s
to a list of Japanese demands illness, Commissioner Jack Ward ---------- —- -
presented six days previously. It is at Fort Worth with his father
was the Japanese note of Nbv. 20. who is seriously ill, and Commis-
he has declared which was the swner M. W. Geisendorff is on
real ultimatum ih the case, night shift
His reply, Hull said, was merely
a statement of principles on which Uf , _
this nation had stood for many W00<fclieil TO M* _______________ .
Hull’s denunciation of the army Fjftltf |JaW li—L - naVal
board report Wound up his third ™vW rlClliDcrS strength,
one-hotir appearance before the _. , J°d! referred bit ter! v to Italy's
was
me.”
“I strove to Cooperate with
the army and navy board with-
out Mice. ,* and then I was
gratuitously btought into the
picture,? he auM-rted, "apparent-
ly on the theory that Hitler and
Tojo were not cooperating for
aggression but that this gov-
ernment forced innocent Tojo
and his bandits into war."
Hull’s Nov. 25 note was a reply
$!5 Cold Waves $10.00
$10 Machine
Waves ........ $7.50
$6.50 Machine
Waves ................$5.00
ALL BEAUTY AIDS
Mar chit a Griffin Nell Davis
Always A Double r," tl^
XQM SHOWivr.
bring on
the girls
With
SONNY Tl p-rs
HIGH POWERED
"afternoon when their
. _ Missea Aline and
[Sid opes house at their
I Baytown.
^.covered serving .table
'Ij with an arrange-
[ pink and white carna-
U diver foliage, flanked
'tapers IS silver holders.
t wedding cake embossed
! pink, and silver and the
bunch service were placed
If nd The silver theme
^ out in decoration*
the house.
fit
Inunch service, ana Mrs. K.
Hfj, at the cake. Mrs.
Ec Donnelly and Miss
IVebber assisted in serving.
L, gonis Rhodes presided
JhSnMhWy-four guests
ifdag the sfPQii^d hours.
Starring
ROBERT LOWERV
Community Sing
Doom Open f, p j|
I^VVedding and
Commercial
otography Only"
Photo Studio
r. Pear** Phohe 1S05-J
Call 661 For
Schedule
necessary to take into considera-
tion the orciip&tibn of t mimb
of advanced support points in ti.„
Atlantic, for instance Iceland and
the Azores,"
Jodi said the attack on Britain
and occupation of the Atlantic
SHOWING -2 FEATURES 2
FIRST FEAT! RE
Vm
A HOWL OF A HONEYMOON!
OFFICE
Supplies
AT MAKE FOR
islands was rejected because the
““ *1 9nd " '
ficiency
committee.
II
Vi
Earlier in the session:
.... —tiffed that: . ----—
1. He thought Japanese emia- W» here at 7:30 p, ---------, .......... ... ,wuc „„
saries Ktchisabuw Nomura and^" edncsdaF. partner and also keep the British,
Saburo Kurusa ‘-’must have been are Morris N. Hall. J L Jfom getting a foothold m Greece
rnor,,!.. .u„:. ------- Wells, and A. E. Bollinger all re- irom which 10 menace the Roman-
turning war veterans, ind Un oil fields.
sjjstirajfc sg|as£»®g
■m
■ HIS new Army Retirement Plan doesn't
cast me a penny, and yet I can retire after
20 year* of service with a good monthly
, income as long as 1 live. And remember-
!’li still be under 40!
"Why, if 1 wanted to PAY for a plan
that would give me the same retirement
income that t will get as a Master Ser-
grant, it would take just about $S4 out of
my pay envelope every month.
"And think what it will mean to us.
We’ll be able to do the things most people-
cart never afford to do. Travel. Go places.
Do things. But most important, well
|feve financial Security. ’
"In the meantime. III have a good job
in the Army that will pay me well. I’fl be
getting fine training in a good trade.
You’ll get a family allowance, too.
morally certain" their govern-
ment would go ahead with ag-
gression in the Pacific but may
not have known just when and
where the attack would come.
2. He bawled them out in un-
diplomatic language in their last
conversation at 1 p. m. Dee. 1.
1941, even though he didn't have
confirmation at that hour
f\
Pearl Harbor had been at
He had, howeOer^Mjf^
"Not a bad proposition, is k, honey?
Aren't you gJaff ydttYfe ^ M
Army man?”
...... _ .. afi-
confirmed report which
gsffc-va ra .
^rnrBoys He K
■£- Ms Money In Bank
DESK
Calendars
Complete
$400
The initiate!” w!nU^nfeted at „rhitX|ante''is ** considering jz '
111
The ability to retire at half pay at any
' sendee, arid on up
lime after 20 years of .
to three-quarters pay after 30 years, is
only one of many important privileges
offered in the new Armed Three* Recruit-
ment Act of 19*1 Read all the high-
lights of this new Act. Find out why thou-
sands of men are enlisting in Uncle Sam’s
new peacetime Regular Army. Better still,
stop at your nearest Army Recruiting
Station and get the whole stott-
mm
3- The fact that Japan might * Y W A' Slag,e- Manteris says he leaves ail-cash
wtderteke a aurprise attack had B . ,
Background Music-
prior to Pearl Harbor.
4. AH information at the state
SANTA FjR, N. M.. Not. 27. CD--
Now it can be'told!
World-renowned scfentisU wait-
d (td»nsip»?v la cf TltYxr naa* IU» At
.’tensely Jwk July near the Ah
‘atomic
drawers, boxe*, and cabinets open
and unlocked to indicate that there
is no money around, yet Rebel Inn
ha* been ransacked more time*
than he can remember by burg-
lars in search of monev.
The- last burglary occurred this
week end when a money box from
s nickelodeon was taken. Manter-
ST0RIK.C00KS0N
fMnt
JUDGE
lor thr t*xnlnRiVin JBxaa mm a -
----JESSThe speaker*’ voice
Japat, for some time prior to the
Pre-Christmas Revival
At Trinity Tabernacle
PILES Hurt Like
Sin! But Now I Grin
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NEW ENLISTMENT ACT
1. EnH*tment« for 12 or 3 yeans. (On*,
year enlistments permitted for men noW; i„
the A.my with at least 0 mferths’ service.)
2. F.r.i1.'mc„iv,.f,„„1 H to'!4'years in^or
stve. except tor men now in the ArmjvWhn m*F
roenlmt at any age, and forforme! sewicd men, •
depending on length of service.
M. Reserve ami. A.f.S. commtRsioned offi-
cers released from active doty may he enlisted
m Grade 1 (Master or 1st Sergeant) and still
commissions. ■>
mg
i droned
-- ........ public rddiegg
system: .}
“Minus ten, minus nine - ”
At that moment, the silver* ----------- - Hl
-s& i&ssrstZt
furnishing a background J the i ^
announcer continued: ' 5 t«e«{
A pre-Christmas revival is now “Minus eignt. minus seven—"
in- n'torur«Nyklr> • '%& *|SiHfel, ffka fiat>w«i.ttt w—askatti**-^..--
will
**! *wa aruS stores everywh
SFJOYD I FATl ftp;
5he's The BeH of The Board Walk
BETTY GRABLE
—in—
"CONEY ISLAND"
—with— t ;
FILMED IN GLOlUOl S TELHNK OIJiR
,“A Tf) tOb"—A Speaking Animal Cartoon
LLENDAR
tEFILLS
No. 85
T
vas announced t
O. Saveli, pastor.
Evangelist' A. I, Parker- of
Houston IS guest -speaker.
Mont Belvieu News
rep, i.jiwi.
4. The -tost pay scale, medical .-are, food.
. to,flrtPI's aifd ajothtng in the history of om- Army,
1 An increase in the roenli.rtmcnt bonus to
U0 for each year of getitw since stKfj
bonus .WW last paid, or since la«.#ntTy into
service.
PAT PER MONTH-ENLISTED MEN
Is Addition It r«C Lodging. Clothes M Met,cl gar.
-'"V-
S/ertle,
SOM fay
fat
Wonti,
MOM
am*
Yhcomi
4. Up to 99 days’ paid furlough, depending
or. length of .service, with..furlough travel paid
to home ami return, for men now in the Army
Who reenlist.
I. A 30-day fflrlough every year at full pay.
i. Mustering-out pay (based npon ieiigth of
service j to all men who at e discharged to reerili^t.
t. Option to 'cure at half pay for life after
26 yegrs’ service or threc-qtiartcia pay after 30
years’ service. Afl.previous active federal mili-
tary service counts toward reth-ement.'
U. Benefits Mder the GI Bill of Hights.
II. Fftfttilv iiilnYSnfoe f/sr- ^».i:
Ma-fer Sergeant or Month
Turn Sgrgeam . ..iua.00
Technical Sergeant 114.00
Swff Sergesm . . . Ofi.OO
Scrgeam . . . 7S.00
fcbrportrt , , . .
Private First Oast , 54.00
Private . ... 50.00
H. Family oBowanees % the tenn of enlist-
men wiio enlist or recn-
trtent for dependents rtf
list Wore July 1,1946.
12.- Citoice of hranch of service and overseas
totebteT ID thE Air, Gpotind or Scrvic# Forces on
1. Privilege of benefits of National Sendee
inEiiYinpA
r. ----
MEN NOW IN THE ARMY
who reenlfet
before February 1 will be reenlisted in their
present grade. Men who have been honor-
ran raxmiief nrilt.1. OA
* , f * ” wren Iiunor-
aWy discharged can reenlist within 20 (fey*
after discharge in the grade they held at the
f'mC F bd iTy8^6’ provide<1 thpy rf‘enll!,t be-
• ; ;t -■ 1
[ reenustnowittobrnkrest
B- i- ARMY RECRUITING STATION
404 RUSK BLDG.
Houston, Texas
f ■ .
A By Mrs. P. H. Bowdoin
UNION THANKSGIVING
SERVICES WEDNESDAY NIGHT
A Union Thanksgiving service
wit! be held at the Mont Belvieu
Baptist church at 7 p.m. VVcdnes-
}riaRev. S. P. Wright, pastor of the
Methodist church, will deliver the
Thanksgiving sermon. He will be
1 assisted by other local pastors.
G. B. Jordan will conduct the
choir of singers from the various
churches irf town. (
The people of Wont Belvieu are
j invited to this service in observ-
. nnee of the first peace-time
Thanksgiving in four years.
HILL P-TA GJUIl'P WILL
MEET ON WEDNESDAY
the Bathers Hilt Parent-Teaeh-
j er Association will hold the regu-
lar November meeting at 3 p.m.
Wednesday in the elementary
school music room. This meet-
ing was postponed from last week
due to the holiday* and the bail
game played "here.
'\ Mrs. Jack Crumpler, president,
j urges a good attendance at this
meeting. Mrs. M. E, Smith will
have charge of the program.
REBERAH C HRISTMAS
! bazaar To be dec. «
The Mont Belvieu Rebekah lodge
will hold their annual Christmas
bazaar on Dec. 8 in the Lions club
hail in Mont Belvieu.
Mrs. Grayee turner 1* general
chairman of the bazaar, assisted by
i Mrs. W. Carroll Smith and Mfrs.
j W. R, Jamison,
Chili, coffee, cake, pies, etc., will
ENDS TONITE .
, "AFFAIRS OF*
WEDNESDAY
XtHROUGH
SATURDAY
. . ’
IARKING
’ENCILS
ue or Red, Dozen
$|80
__
STARTS WEDNESDAY
. flint' THURSDAY
other articles are to he sold dure
iSIwS- |L_S
'
Wheref very
Man and His
Girl are
Young Again!
x
RMIB’S FiinniEST U(F 8N0U
HOLLYWOOD’S TOP STARS AS GUESTS!
*■* f
DESK
ITRAYS
Dale Iff letter lit*
1400
• --
li
it - \
RING
iINDERS
A
As low as
tin
. *i*
■
m
'iSkS?mmKl m
UOR MOORE MANORS REYNOLDS ■ BARRY SULLIVAN
i will bt token for
[tow Remington
“ 1 Typewriters
h
Cmihw
MOORf
TAUO
ALSO
NEWS OF THE DAY"
“MUSICAL MEXICO"
LOR
OwH«,
ORAPIWIN
COtONNA
Feel
WHltlMAN
1
f
BlBi!Tcd'\t<idi* Bre‘k" Robert Benchley
^ :'c°0!by ®°V‘' Co‘> Dole/ y
g_ Cordova • Brlen DonUvy
1°^ G°dd0,d ^S-MuHon
- & ' v#,onico Lot* ■ Alan Lodd
Dorothy tamour • Sonny Tuhi
. itoSr
r
fy other items thfft
been "missing"
. our shelves for
Fnt are again in
u^r,v,B1
"Y Event*
■toaajf
........ •. ^
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 27, 1945, newspaper, November 27, 1945; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028758/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=0: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.