The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 79, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 20, 1941 Page: 8 of 8
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f A6I EIGHT
**----
loss of Kiev Heavy Blow to Russia
Moscow Counting on Winter To Slow Germans
THE DAILY SUf
-......i-*~-—-i
CREEK. TEXAS
1 (By United Press)
The current German successes
1 In the Kiev area and in the
southern Ukraine, „iven their
1 froncr value, at-;-a heavy blow
to the defense of Rusria.
They do not mean, however,
fritei the Russian army has been
knocked cut, nor that an early
• "d of the war on the eastern
front is in prospect. There al-
w.ys is the remote nossibiiity of
;an unexpected Russian collapse
* but there has not been the slight-
est sign of it
Russia is counting on the start
cf winter in another month to im-
mobilize a great stretch of thft
fighting lines in the center and
north To throw in the sponge
now would be to sacrifice a valu-
able ally in nature The Rus-
estimated in London, the drain European Russia would have to
has been proportionately as great be abandoned.
•aians undoubtedly reaeon that if
they can hold out into winter,
they will be able to carry on to
spring, by which time United
| States and British aid may be
*■ coming through in sufficient
quantities to change the outlook.
That Russia is preparing for a
.long war is shown by the decl-
fsion to call up all males between
116 and SO for military training.
| Russia may have suffered 3,-
000, casualties in the war to date,
lie London estimates assert, but
I there are millions more to re-
’ place them. Also, If the Germans
suffered 3,000,000 casualties, as
natelj
or greater, in comparison with
relative manpower, : -
Berlin disputes the London
casualty figures, placing German
losses at fewer than 400,000 and
Russian losses st 3,600,000 in kill-
ed,, wounded and prisoners.
For the Russians, it is not so
much a question of man;»wer
as of equipment. They have lost
heavily in tanks, airplanes, ar-
titiery.truckB and other military
'Stores. •
British-American aid on a vast
seeks will be essential. German
military successes have been
valuable not so much In terms
of land occupied and men killed
as in the loss of Russia of vital
industries, and the grave threat
to the remaining industrial areas
cf European Russia.
The industries beyond thejfrsls
are palpably inadequate to keep
Russia fighting for any length
of time except in and around
those mountains. In, other words,
However, that seems at present
to be a long range pepspect. The
Cermans still have to mop up
Leningrad, the Smolensk area in
tHe center. Kiev and Odessa. The
capture of Leningrad, Odessa and
nerhap* iatsr C.vastapol would
Just about put the Russian navy
out cf action in the Black Sea as
well as the Baltic.
Kiev apparently is doomed, if the
Ge men mgh con. vmd's announ-
cement is correct
Tbj fact that the German high
command issued a specific com-
muniaue on the Kiev operation
probably means that the opera-
tion has been completed, since it
is the high command's custom to
withhold announcements until the
end of eny phase of the cam- '
paign, ‘pence K may mean Jg
pause and the mopping up of,
Kiev before the aavsneq towards
the important Junctipn of Khar-
kov and the Don basin is resum-
ed c
' . . . ....... *
Aid-foChildren
Applications To
Be Taken Here
Highlands Hews
By Mr*. R. A. Hooper
AIT WilCHT OKI ZQUN0
sUNSer
if
COFFEE
■
SUNSET
COFFEE
You’ll Eaiey It!
PTA MEMBER DRIVE
WILL CLOSE OCT. 9
Highlands Parent-Teacher asso-
ciation held the first meeting of
the year in the school gymna-
sium, with the president, Mrs.
H. A. Barnwell, ir, charge.
Announcement was made bv
Mrs. O. F. Keefer, membership
chairman, that the membership
drive would end on Oct. 9, and
urged that each parent join the
organization.
Mrs. M. L. Doss, library ser-
vice chairman, explained the ser-
vice the school library is doing
for the school children, and the
organization agreed to cooperate
in furnishing supp.es for the li-
brarian.
Plana for a traffic light at the
intersection of Wallisville Road
and Crosby-Lynchburg road were
descussed by Mrs, I; G. Treat,
safety chairman, who pointed out
the traffic hazard at this corn-
» «v
chairman of the civic committee,
fallowing the resignation of Jtra.
kelson, and gave.«
H. E. Nelson, and gave, a report
that mapping of the community
(« almost completed, a large num-
ber of residences and business
houses have been numbered ac-
cording to streets, and other num-
bers will be sold as soon as they
can be secured!
Mr*. Adams, chairman of the
Highlands exhibit tor the fall
flower show to be sponsored by
the East Harris County Garden
Club Federation, explained plans
for the show and urged that mem-
bers plant now flowers suitable to
exhibit in Mexican arrangements.
Applications for aid to depend-
ent children under, the new state
program will be accepted from
East Harris county residents
Thursday and Friday. September
25 and 26 at the Pelly city hall
and Monday and Tuesday, Sep-
tember 29 and 30 at the La Porte
court hot*}, Mrs. Martha Chal-
oupkj, state sedial worker in this
area, said today. ,
Parents or relatives of the
children should discuss with the
welfare workers who will ex-
plain in full the eligibility re-
quirements and assist in filing
the application. It )s not neces-
sary that the children bo brought
io the office as Mrs. Chaloupka
* will later make a visit to the
home. ^ '
To be eligible for aid -Under
the state laws, the child:
1. Must be a citizen of the
United States.
„ 2. Must have resided in Texas
for at least one year preceding
the date of application; or must
have been born within the itate
within one year preceding the
date of application provided ttft
child's mother had resided in
Texas at least one year before the
child's birth. <■ - — -
3. Must be under the age of 14.
■ <*t Must be without parental
support, or care, by reason of
one of the following factors: <a>
death of parent, (bl continued
absence from borne on part of a
parent, (c> physical or mental in-
capacity of a parent.
8. Must be living with his
father, mother, grandfather,
grandmother, brother sister, step-
father, step-mether, step-brother,
step-slstef, uncle or aunt In a
place of residence maintained by
EPTEMBER 20
Bond Purchase
Plan "Proposed
San Antonio
Dtny Gambling Dn
SKY-HIGH ROMANCE, with Honja Henie and John Payne, above,
romancing to the rhythms of Glenn Miller and his orchestra* it
found in "Sun Valley Serenade," which opens a three-day run Sun-
day at the Arcadia.
Caught Twixt Rooster, Hen
Use Court Aid Against Wife, Bantam
1 A defense bond buying plan has
been submitted to the Humble
Oil and Refining company by Lo-
cal 333, Oil Workers International
union, in a letter addressed to
H. C. Weiss, president.
The union proposes that the
company buy a defense bond for
, each bond purchased by an em-
ploye and that all bonds be turn-
ed over to a committee on which
there would be both company and
employe representatives.
The bonds would be held in a
pool five years or until the end
of the emergency, “whichever is
shorter,’’ and then would be re-
turned to the original purchaser*.
If an employe died during the
time the bond pool was being
maintained his estate would re-
ceive proceeds of the sal- of bonds
he purchased and of -the bonds
purchased by the'sompuny to
match his purchase.
x Men leaving employment of the
company would receive their
bonds at that time and the com-
pany would receive bonds it had
bought to match his purchases.
SAN ANTONro sent
City and county offl «
described charges of 0WJ
Antonio.
1;ng in Sap
Austin^
•nation of State Sen
Henderson, as to "
gambling and it was b«
Best would ceme her“|
Sheriff Owen Ki]<ja, j
no raids on gaming he.
“there is . less
Anton,o today than at i
in my memory."
■rttere are about 126,400 miles of
oil pipeline in the UJS.
The club voted to pay one year*
subscription to the Gulf Coast
one or more such relatives as his
or her home.
Gardener for each paid up mem-
quaiify as a l
„ ’ _ J . miniature arrangements, first
Mrs. F. P. Noland, president of place WM won by Mrs. A. V/
6. Must be in need. This is de-
fined as not having sufficient in-
come or other resources to pro-
vide a living with health and de-
-
| ■No more than *16 can be
Mrs. M. G. Donald spoke on for one child in an
“Mass Arrangements,” and in the iy, an<j no more tban
CHICAGO, Sept. 20. (UPJ-A ban-
tom rooster named “Joe” kept
Adolf Jozalis out of his chbken
coop and his wife, Anna, kept
him out of his House and barn.
Jozalis found that the law was
mere effective in overriding his
wife’s action than that of the
rooster and obtained a court or-
der requiring her to admit him
to his honMk
His attorney, Victor Frohlich,
told Judge Rudolph Desort that
Mrs. Jozalis had evicted her hus-
band troth their home on the
southwest edge of: Chicago al-|
though he had hem
ily man” for 30
lis’ have 11
*< Travail- t.
and Mrs. Jozalis persuaded her
husband to move into the barn.
“He has since doubted her sin-
cerity for in his absence his wife
moved her mother into the house
as a permanent resident," Frolich
said. "My client shared the barn
with three cows. The first night
one cow, named Baby,* calved.
So deep and ail-inclusive is my
client’s respect for motherhood
that he stayed up ail night assist-
ing the delivery."
The attorney said a second cow
was expecting but that Mrs. Joza-
"vreaTfam <4* feared her husband would dis-
?he Joza- «*ure ,the. calf a"d him
THERE M NO SUCH
m THING AS A .
BAD MOTHER
PORT THEATRE
• Last day.
“Missing EvideanH
“Hands Across^]
ALAMO
■Mend 16c i
SUNDAY and M0XDA1
ginger rooe*s j
in—
"The Prii
Path"
-AND.
ROY ROGERS
. —in-
"Bad Man
Deadwc
mm
from the barn.
LAST TIMES TODAY!
her in order
her of the Houston Federation of
Garden Clube.
“Jozalis was
Cleveland Coffee Co.—Houston
the Tri-Cities P.-T. A. Council,
announced the school of instruc-
tion to be held at Baytown op
September 24th, and asked the
cooperation of the local unit in
the school.
An outline of the years pro-
gram based on the theme of "De-
fense of Childhood and Youth,”
-■was given by 'Mrs. G. H. Swen-
son, program chairman.
The resignation of Mrs. F. L.
McGown »s corresponding secre-
tary was accepted, and in an ex-
ecutive meeting following the re,
gular meeting, hDsa Ev*4mk Ed-
mond* was elected to fill the va-
Thirty-one were present with
Miss Burwell and Mrs. Oliphantfs
rooms having the largest repre-
sentation at mother* present.
| was won by Mrs. A.
Jones, sscond-'-ov Mrs. M, L.
D«*s. and third by Mrs. Adams.
The October meeting will be
held In the home of Mrs. W. F.
Jones and Mm. H. E. Nelson and
Mrs. Hooper will speak on
Thanksgivingand Christmas table
BBB|H *
present were Mesdames
*>' J* ’
> can be given
eligible fami-
an $24 can be
more children
the arrival of eaeh hew addition
teethe family that with his own
Theaters
Hooper, Adams, Doss, Gaiumel, A.
V. Jones, W. F. Jones, Kersh,
McDonald, C. D Thompson,
Treat, andT
Mrs. E. L.
«e new
Masterson.
Mm WELCH HONORED *
nr STORK SHOWER # ,
Mr*. R. V. Welch, of Houston,
formerly of Highlands, was com-
plimented with a stork shower
M ti&bamt of Mrs. Miles Wor-
, V fill.;
given for two or more ■
in an riigihls family. TfifSin.
stltutlonal amendment also re-
stricts the total expenditure of
state funds for • “ -
no,- more than
which means J81 w
amount available,'Eluding .fed-
eral. matching funW wIKfe
ceed $3,000,000 yearly,f ’ ,
The ajd to dependent children
program is a part of the social
security act, dealing with indig-
ent children. It 5 the first time
the state has token-pashin euch
a program.
----
hands he constructed a room for
the newcomer,’’ Frolich said. “The
house now has 11 rooms and my
client still has hi* tools."
The lawyer said the children
wanted to have a party recently
“The only other place he can go
is the chicken coop,” Frolich con-
tinued. “It is commodious and he
would irtiMflii willingly, but hie
entrance is disputed by a bantam
rooster named Joe, who is un-
friendly toward him"
Jozalis left the chamber armed
with his court order.
MERLE OBBBON
MELVYN DOUGLAS
•THAT
UNCERTAIN
Femur* '•1
DONALD WOODS
SALLY FILERS
T WAS A
PRISONER ONj
DEVIL’S \SLAh
MID-NITE SHOW—SAT. 11:30 P.M.
SHOWING SUNDAY—
TEXAN - Midnight preview-
.'■? "Siib Valley Serenade” with
Wgm Henie, John 1’ayne, and
* ’Tm Lena The Ballerina" serves
as a novelty nttstber for come-
dienne Joan Davis, who with Mil-
ton Berle
provides the comedy in
.•vmr.
PEXAN - -Lady Be Good" with
Ann Sothern, Robert Young, and
EkwaorFowett.Jf’v' h
the fflin. "(3w$t*nooga Oloo
Choo" is used by the Nicholaa
Brotilers in
of danchot
their unusual
11 :
Child
Cy-Kology
Old Cy
Knew How-
Instead of order-
ing his children
to do this or that
. . . Cy set the
* * a Hip I e him*
*elf...
SO . , . as you
want your chil-
dren to BE well,
LOOK well and
DO well . . , let
them s e a y o tt
drink a good
glass of Phenix
Milk yourself, ..
GARDEN CLUB PLANS
ELECTION OF OFFICERS
- Ma. J. W. Gammel was award-
ed the prize for the highest num-
ber of point* scored In flower
arrangement during the past four
months, when the ^Highlands Gar-
den club met in the home of Mrs.
F, P. Noland.
Mrs. R. A. Hooper, president,
conducted the meeting, and the
tfef,
-'•KefiNdWSeeV’ilf iced punch and
the foil
Stevenson Mas
Full Schedule
ARCADIA—"RLn VUBey Ben-naiD"
, 'fW8cn|a Henie, John Payne,
and Glenn Miller ahd Ms orckes-
.. ‘ -d'*'
BjPrccted by H. Bruce Humbcr-
stone, “Run Valley Serenade^ was
h^'
cake umre
ihg gueMs: Mesdanw* Jess Tan-
■ L L. V I
: served to
C Mesdames
HWL, Wrick, w. wM
R. E. Welch, e E. Sherman,
W. Lee, W. ft Avey, J. 0.
men, E. ft, Hunger, F, L. I
R, H. Hunger, Rercy Portls, Oar-
Tyler, C. E. DuBose, G. S.
JM Valliy Serenade," 20th
Century*-,- Fox'* pew entertrin-
mgot inepirayon starring Sonja
~ tie- and fea-
rhythms of
orchestra is
IlfOduced by Milton . Sperling.
Robert Ellis end Helen Logan
wrote the screen play from a
story by Art Arthur and Robert
Harari. Hermea Pan staged the
dances.
Monday night, he h** » tenia-
most
sunny,
nominating committee, composed
MMgMh. Wt».
P’Brien, tlve date to address an American «i-th* surni
i.i&sn * sl’S1
Of Mm. J. E. Kresh, Ifit
Jones. Mra Harry K.
Mun**r, A. M.; Worwick, W, X
Hutchins, and Misses Valda Mae
Carter, Mary Ellen VaughSw,
Tuesday he Is
sicana fair; and
the com festival at
its midnight
luing through
scenes set
snowy slopes of
vacation^
i Arcadia,
of the *<
Valley, Serenade" Is
a gay, romantic musical with new
surprise*.
skate and ski
Br1Vn iA.m. .mt tfr.’ Carter’ Mary EU*n VkugMfW, The governor wUl go to the Sonja is featured in two new
Gammei; wa2elec«dm8Aned mm-' Mary Taylor, and Christine Vann. fna“;« TZ^ahTtu ^“'ziven'
mittee will report at the October
meeting, when new offl trie wlll|
be elected.
Mr*, t G. Treat wse named co-
A camera used by the U S. coast
survey photograph*. 530 square
miles in one exposure.
day morning he will be in Pampa
* 54
- er
The happy point
i* this;
You too will feel
st-
ut-
ter as a parent.
better, look
ter and DO
ill
tfillr
and Saturday afternoon at
to attend exercises honoring Presi-
dent David M. Warren of the Tex-
a* Press Association., He wlff re-
turn to Amarillo to open the Tri-
State fair there Mondhy. ;
'i ■
TOY FLEET BLITZED
CAMDEN, N. J. iWb—Twenty-
four aircraft carrier* with their
MrihMSt 4 Wf * :hundreds - of
planes and large quantities of
ammunition were destroyed by
fire at Camden—but no navy suf-
fered. The fire swept a carton of
toys off a railroad platform—
ruining the small vessel* and <e
«pMlty Of cap pistol ammuni-
tion. • : ,4 • .
ing routines. She is again given
the opportunity io show the mas-
tery on ice which won her re-
knowft as the World and Olympic
Figure Skating Champion.
The happy comedy starts when
John Payne, piano player tor
Glenn Miller’s band, finds that the
"little refugee he Mu offered to
care for Is really Sonja.- He tries
to duck out of the agreement, but
Sonja keeps after Mm to his dis-
comfort and to the annoyance of
his fiancee, Lynn Bari.
ENDS TONITE!
’ DIVE BOMBER"
■ ■ ~~.......ms.......
'—STARTS SUNDAY-
THERE IS NO MUCH THING
AS A BAD MOTHER
GREER GARSON
"Blossoms
III The
Dusl"
’
S0NM R0MAHCI* TO GUNN MHtU’J ■
:W 1
SUNDAY—MONDAY-TUESDAY
liiMH »‘>Sf2S J
NEWS
Miniature
iSti:"""
CARTOON
This gay romance is helped to
its unusual climax by the popu-
lar rhythms of America’s num-
ber one band. Glenn Miller and his
Orchestra. In addition to playing
During July, 1941. an average
of 5JW0 new small homes a week
were started under FHA financ-
ing, as compared With an aver-
age of 5,100 during June.
;
Let Us Put Your Savings
To Work tor You!
Shares in .this savings and loan organi-
zation are-the ideal investment for per-
DANCE
With
seven new tunes by Mack Gordon
and Harry Warren, Gienn and the
boys handle acting roles. They al-
so present their already famous
arrangement of "I# The Mood."
which has sold over half a mil-
lion records. This Is the band’s
first feature plcturf appearance.
The new Gordon, and Warren
tunes, played in the inimitable
Glenn Miller style,, sad preview
audiences humming and whistling
Written especially fdr "Sun Valley
.Serenade." th»y ire1’! Know Whv
And So Do You,” "At I^st,” “It
Happen»d In Sun Valley," "Chatt-
anooga Choo Choo." The World Is
~ tg To Waltz Again." Tm
The Ballerina” and “The
>oika."
—
sons who desire to receive maximum re-
turns and at the same time be
that their investment is a perfectly
one. Shares of this assoc
attractive dividend (currently 4
Shares
for drt
' "
Told Supply
It Ample
/>■
| "Bad
$>AY
“Bad Man if Dead w ood”
"DOUBLE ALIBI
rood” I
sl
• PALACE #
Double Program JEvery pay
SUNDAY—MONDAY
DOUBLE PROGRAM
America’s Favorite
Public Cowboy No. 1
GENE
AUTRY
"RIDING ON
A RAINBOW"
-With-
SMILEY BURNETTE
-AND-—
*u-v*v to-
ol building
Fa^SalSs
fee
* w W« on
mill sto-k*
m, flfAXT. THZ09S I THHUit
TWO
, #vli
rtlie
itte
Relax ...!
mMSA
— 3 BIG DAYS —
STARTING SUNDAY
Box Office Opens 12:45 p.m
’’ROOKIES
ON PARADE"
Day!
(RINGING YOU
NIW HEATH*
TAKING THRILLS
AND SURPRISES!
A
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 79, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 20, 1941, newspaper, September 20, 1941; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1029396/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.