The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 133, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1944 Page: 1 of 8
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THURSDAY,
, * •
N0VEM3ER |t ,
®sHear
to thf Red
ties
ssday
yceo-ottcs, rit a
'ucsdny n'ght,
Hi War aolivi-
ne .Jane', Vico PrcsidnU wild,
•man in charge ——
Cww to-
ihn nitty h(junta's °
^ -r-)- - tty (1 Gotjftl, vip-
was- appointed Sit!
man, end will
bier o'
War
*oii ■ ■ r-
' '
ITHER
Mu'
pointed
■•csiCS?
Mfmbership 1
new
TEXAS: Considerable cloudineSa
K1 ofi-Mional rain till, afternoon, to-
l*;,t „„l Saturday. Not much change In
*raturr. ;
, ■'> ' ;
(JfieB
'? i I
'j :‘-
V
27 NO. 133
K«vc 51 hours
at the Hod
in the Pruett
uer reported,
if workers for
fek atHhc Red
sings room tn
start a group
i week at the
nett atre,>£.■•.
as asked to
rds or table
general ;neet-
will be given
mind Youth Give* o*J
.Hsffia «p
cic—blind Since birth ,
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS BRIDAY. NOVEMBER IT, 1M4
tion exercises at \VtaT*
youthful
student, includes m hjs:
ed rtpcjtojre the work .,1
BccthovcA, -.^jj
1,500,000 Men drive into r
Mozart,
Handel.
..... ■ ■
~ ■
Sr-1M
’i-itS
,
f
tern Ante
gins Slow Drive On Ornoc M Ja^SjgM*.
tt-Cand I
<>m
! Doll houses, tor-
es and toys for tots, M
Idren's furniture!
lari Haroor
»sts Loss
Jap Ships
M %K
nerican Force Traps
00 Japanese Troops
non Battle Sector *
! Shop early for big
nd Lay Away!
Come in! Brina the Kiddies!
Many Values like These!
INVASION
VSTIC BARGE
- 69'
HAMMER *
PEG TABU
- *• 1*
Plastic
i Cup
GR5IJ9
Genuine
THERMOS
PRE-WAR
QUALITY!
Attracti’
five metal,
sc. Glass filler
bbei-.uoun.ed.
lied headquar-
, Philippines,' Nov. 17.
flJ.P.) — Tropical down-
slowed the American
'ensive on Leyte today,
other invasion troops
’“miles to the southeast
;pleted the occupation of
lone of the principal Mapiu
ids off New Guinea and were
ling up enemy remnants on
ither.
Pear! Harbor communique
mneed that a recapitulation
•ed 16 Japanese ships, in-
iing.a.Jjght .cruiser ,and tour
iroyefs. had been sunk by
rican carrier planes in the
nila bay area Sunday. An
"v announcement had listed
two destroyers as definitely
|k.
in. Douglas MacArthur re-
ad in a supplement to. his
llippines communique that
•rican troops crushed the last
itance on Pegutt island in the
ia group yesterday, less than
lours a'fter landing in the tiny
lipelago^ 14S miles northwest
ak. - ■ j ■
Eliminated
[eranants of the Japanese gar-
in on nearby Bra* island were
eliminated.*- MacArthur
European War
, Entire Western Front.
Allkm# As Tanks And •
..Infantry Pu*h Ahead
PifelS, Nov. 17. —ffJfu-The *
American First and Ninth
•pmies. spearheading 1,WO,-
000 allied troops in a su-
preme offensive to crush ,
1 Germany, smashed on
•through burning villages on
» 20 mile front inside the
Reich toward toward Dusscidorf,
the north-centra! Sector of the-
dCO-rnlie offensive front already
Oologne and the Rhine
With eight hurdle* behind thJm and only two-
separating them from the finish, tb* Robert ft. Lee
Ganders stood potted for trap No, 9 at S p m to-
day on the Elm* field turf they like to feel under
their cleat*.
The past two we*k* hive been rocky one* on for-
eign soil for the lighting Lee eleven, but before a
home crowd the Ganders expect to return 40 mid-
season form at the expense of an age old rival, the
Beaumont Royal Purple.....
The Ganders have ail but fallen to pieces, but
even to the taee of such adversity they have kept
alive their 1MI Winning streak It was the defense
that faltered at Orange, and a week later it was
th# offense that failed.
WUl Be Different ft
But that was a week and two week* ago, To-
night the lads have vowed it wtil be different
Oi
The team I* in fine physical condition for this
tote in toe senacm ^Thc same eleven that hasetert-
be ready to answer the' referee's whistle ton
The Ganders have been working ail week
locked doors, and Monday night they all
meeting with their coaches Nothing to
about what they have been doing in secrecy on the
field nor what was said within their own quarters
s» the Monday night meeting.
Plenty llnppened
There is evidence toot plenty has been taking
place in both spots for the tads were never In a
bet tar frame of mind They seem to be In high
spirits Even the coache*. though uaually RtfeS
with gloom on game day«, were sent to ante.
Boaumoni has a fine looking team which toua
<Ree Lee Ganders, Pngs X)
« /?:•
Russian Andes Jap Mistreatment Of
EnSSte”1 British Prisoners Told
III WlfC LONDON, Nov. 16. -(U.P.)-War Minister Sir Jam«g
Grigg told commonis today that at least one of every five
British prisoners, captured in Singapore and Java, died un-
der horrible conditions in Siam's jungles while construct*
ONE OF GERMANY’S SECRET WEAPONS, the
V-2 rocket bomb, inflicted this wreckage some-
where in England when it struek with a terrific
explosion. The V-2 is said to travel about 1,000
miles an hour and to soar from 60 to to toll**
into the stratosphere during Its flight.
•Mgn».___________...
,fne two American armies in
told overrun « dozen or ‘ more
town* of up to two mile* in the
fi#vt 12 hours of their attack.
:3t> the north, the British Sec-
ond army in southeast Holland
buried the Germans back serosa
the Maas river along a six-mile
/font, capturing Buggcnum and
Weaken on the west bank and
fUSftiiTg' to wTtRin T* mW of' tfie
r-asl hunk fortress of Itoermond.
Shetl German Reieh
British vanguards were within
three and a half miles of the Qer-
ngay border and long-tom aftli-
tofy .along with medium guns, al-
ready were shelling- enemy Strong
points inside the Reich. Rooftops
(Se<^ IJSflO.OOO Men, Ihage 2)
Newsmen Inspect Nazis May Robot Bomb U. S. Petty Man Scores
Baytown Plants Carrier Subs May Lau"ch Weapons City Merger Plan
Pistol-Crip
HACK
SAW
All-metal. Eas
Keg, 27c
ily chang
7 Vi“ blade.-
ed1
The two' islands fed been
i by the Japanese to flash
Lungs to Halmahera, that
Bippincs and possibly the
|ch East Indies that American
bombers from the New
nea area were heading in their
iction.' ^
*ricah landing parties on
| islands were small, , and atily
fct opposition was.-encountered.
WiArthiir1 Skid the; American
|Uyte were '‘tightdn|ng their
and First cavalry divisions
on perhaps 3.0Q0 Japanese
|ps in the Lemon area of
hwest Leyte in tihe.' cental
lippines, an indication that en-
pement of a reinforced enemy
cent had been completed;
I was beiieved that advance
ents of the two •„ divisions,
ping doivn either side of the
Rains Snow, Page 2)
Writers Will Go To
Houston This Afternoon
What's happening at Baytown'
.industrial plants was told and
shown toddy to SO visiting news-
papermen who,^“within the next
few days, will tell millions of
readers about it.
These eastern, and northern
newspapermen, and a few Texas
writers, were guests tpday of the
liutoble Oil and Refining ^eom-
LGNDON, Nov. 17. Cfit —A Stockholm ekspatcb to the fendon Daily
Mail said today that the Germans were concentrating submarines and
surface shipf^edttipped-' with- robot bomb Jafechlng platfortos in JN°ri
way preparatory “to attempting raids on the United States.
, The dispatch quoted “"high neutral sources” assaying that the,
Germans planned to launch their jet-propelled V-t robot bombs from
the decks of the vessels “against sueh targets as New York, Philadel-
phia or towns farther inland.” * *
A joint U. S. army-navy statement issued in Washington earlier
this month warned that, some such submarine or ship-based attacks
might be,,aUempted;by a desperate Germany.
The Daily Mai! dispatch said it was known “bevond dispute” that
tho Gertoana have concentrated “very considerable" numbers of sub-
marines and othetF vessels in harbors at Narvik, Trondheim and Ber-
gen or the west coast of Norway. . f'r • a'/
Bergen was believed to be toe German headquarters, the dispatch
said, with a crack submarine commander, formerly in charge of tm-
Lorlent h»
Dr. Russell Says Plan
W3I Be Beneficial
The people of Peliy will not vote,
for consolidation with the City of
Goose Oeek because they feel
that Goose Creek has “again be-
trayed, them, Claude Foster, of
Peliy told an astonished group of
proponents of the merger, at
meeting $t Horace Mann Junion
pany< .and, visited the Jfumbie
plants .of tbe General Tire and
Rubber plant at Baytown before .derseas attacks on allied shipping, front bases at Brest and
they were entertained at lunch- ”——->—• *>-------»—
Complete set!
3-ply bats.
Table Tennis m ^ 4
$?.89§29 Aqain
o ksOver
p Island
eon today by Tri-Cities business
men at San Jacinto Inr.
Arriving here at 11 o'clock, un-
der the guidance of W. H.- vBiU”
Mason. General Tire public rela-
tions director who arranged the
tour of jTcxas industr.al plants
for the visiting" newsmen, the
' grelip'iSK* yfclcfmied to '.he TH-'
Clties by H. C. Wicss, president
of thw Humble company, • and
Gordon F*rfted. superintendent of
plant^>here, and theA>Jmmediate-
lj’ went- to See and fear about
Humble's war aetivitirs.
France,..assigned the task of directing the new offensive. - .• »* • »'■
Large numbers of spetiaiiy-trained submarine staff officers
5” Thin-Nose PUERS
Drop-forged steel!
Slip' joint. sMdied
teeth: wire
i; wire cutter.
Keg. 5gc
Single Cut
HB4208
Precision-tooth
qunliiy temper
»te«t. Square.
pP
Mill BasMri i
FILE
Il’MTED PRESS
[ Japanese domestic broadcast
I a lope American B-29 Super-
frss made'a reconnaissance
►t over western Kyushu,
bernmost of the main Jap-
* home islands, about 10 a. m.
’ (8 P- m. Thursday CWT.i
f was the sixth time this
P the Japanese have report-
puperfortressea over Japan
kr orf reconnaissance, pre-
P'y.in preparation for large
raids on the enemy home-
Rrg. 16c
Superfortresses also made
I .ra*t_to)L,Kyu*hu, attacking
[industrial center df Omura
11. . *
broadcast reporting the
reconnaissance flight wa*
Ned by FCC monitors.
■ : .l' - •
l/4"x4"
rocks Close Today
reached Norway recently, toe dispatch added, while naval attaches re-
turning?’to Berlin wei*e quoted as saying: . ! y* ‘ .'jsfi.'
-? <“Look, out for our new submarine offensives. They’D be super*
offensives that will take everyone by surprise.” '
Though only a small number of submarines’so far have been
equipped to launch robot bombs, the dispatch said, the substantia!
number of missiles which they could fire would make the hazardous
trans-Attahtic voyage•WoftbwjiSlf—........
The dispatch. Said the submarines and ships v/ould operate a con-
siderable distance offshore. The V-l bombs used by the Germans
against Britain were believed to pave an,extreme range of 200 to 250
miles, but this could be increased by enlarging the fuel capacity. They
carry a ton of explosives. '4' . '
The Rtockhoim correspondent .claimed to have “first hand knowl-
edge” that the Germans had fitted vessels of the Westfalen- class to
HL«£). Wilde, manager of (jre a large number of robot bombs. a •
technical research, made a sho t (Lloyd's register of shipping Itota the Westfalien as a S.S9T ton
talk to the newsmen-at the Com- **girp!tnc service ship”) . f 'tJ, I -
n.unity House before the tour - - ‘ '
of jte plapto begfe' , -f - *111/
Cold Wave
SS■rt.’SsTL.’aK Maytndure
members qf the Tri-Cities Junior ; * . _
chamber 6t commerce. Baytov/n A nrsrnOkt 11/Tfl/
and Goose',Creek chambers of /tflUlIlt?/ L/UV
(yeo Newsmen Inspect, Page 2)
------- Byd MTED PRESS .
The season's first touch of dis-
BOARE CARTER DIES \ agreebie weather refused to re-
*■6^* linquish its grip on Texas today
Harold T. H. iBoako) Carter, 66, ... ,_ fhnt residents
who rose from a $26 a week re- *'“h P>-c*P“» that residents
porter to-become one of the ha- would have at least another day
Ron’s top -news commentators, of cold, rain or snow.
Light snow was falling this
morning at Guadalpnc Pass, Lub-
bock and Sait Flat in West Texas
and at Clovis in New Mexico.
Only one place. in Texas
High schpol ' Thursday night,
Pbllv was “betrayed.” Foster
said, when (Sopae Creek decided-
to vote rfhendmenta to its charter
which would "increase" our taxes
without giving- us a chance to
vote on it.” tft
Foster referred t*> two propos-
ed amendments, one of which
would. increase the allowable
bonded indebtedness to 15 prf
cent of the tax valuations. The
other amendment would permit
the —eity council to Increase the
city manager's salary.
The (lection to amend the
charter of Goose CrecR has beeh
Pincers Attack Made
For City's Surrender
MOSCOW, Nov. 17. - -dipt--Soviet
armored forces thrust to Within
■ r m» Bif,.-;---1------T • - "fc'--*-1-- *-*-* - *
21 miles of the Danube river
north of Budapest today in'a wide
flanking* drive around the. east-
ern side of the capital which-also
threatened to cut off enemy
.troop in northeastern Hungary. -
The pincers attack on .thj Strife-
torn capita! spearheaded the
Soviet offensive along a 100 mile
front stretching into northeastern
Hungary, where Red Army troops
rapidly were encircling Miskolc,
the country's fifth city. _______
• Near the center pf the ffilf
garlan frolft, two columns of jpar-
shal Rodion Y. Mahnovsky's Sec-
ond Ukrainian uriny were con-
verging on the big rail and high-
way junction of Hat ran, 22 miles
northeast of Budapest
At the same time another Rus-
sian force threatened the impor-
tant communications center of
Eger- from Tard, 10 miles to the
east: and apparently was attempt-
ing to cut toe last rail escape
route, of the Germans and Hun*
garians in the Miskojtc area.
In the encircling drive around
Budapest*, Malinovsky’s forces
established a 30-mile siege front
through the capital's south and
•astern outskirts. Hip line wa»
achorcd in the west at the Dan-
ube below Budapest and in the
east at the village of Dany, which
the Soviets captured to bring*-
their forces only 21 miles from
the river north of the capital.
IM
ing railroads for the Japanese.
' eased -o
HisLatatement waa based oii information furnished by -
prisoners who survived the sinking of a Japanese troop
transport and subsequently reached Britain.
urn WONT
About 1,800 British em-
StototoMrfai
o” 10
piro prisoners were aboard
the snip which left Sings-
anest deliberately picked up,(
^apanww suyvlwiraleaving
were drowhad,1
said, 15
- m*mt itoatwt
The strongest possible protaat
tots been sent to Japan timqmm
prutteting power, fe etplalned,
the war dBr
J T -
_____ 0{’t°n
1—~~ -Mi
«?t for the same day air fhe elec-
tion.'’do dissolve the corporation
Standard Oil Co.
Officials Here
CAPWRING Mount ( »tabsrsn,
n 2300-foot peak dominating the
roadway to Ormoc, American
forces tightened their squeeze
against reniforred Japanese
troop* In western Iwyte island,
A three-mile advance wo* re-
ported near the northern and of
the Omioe eoHdor, (Inlernatton-
m- J ||j -
•tcung ;
added . ... ,< *
“It IS necessary that the Jap-
anese should know that wa know
how they havq been behaving and
that we intend to hold' them re-
'Ipwsihto."
Grigg praised V, S. submarine
crews who risked their own safety
to rescue the British priaonora
from the sea after the Jtymm
ship sank. The care and «■».
tlon the Americans gave the sur-
vivors to enabling nearly’ all thf"
rescued men to recover, he sold.
Survivors reported, Of!** ex-
plained.' that the great majority i
(See Jap Mistreatment, Page !)
r;.
British Advance
On Bologna Road
American Troop* Gain
Mila In Serchio Araa
*
laroest Court Martial
of T^jr for the: purpose. of con-
solidation with Goose Creek.
Do NOt Boost Haves
Shannon Morris, city attorney
of Felly and one of the strongest.
soSfe Gallagher, chairman of the board,
crease, tagCs, and that the char*
“ A group of approximately 35 of-
ficials Of the Standard Oil com-
pany of New Jersey today Visited
the Raytown properties; Of Hum-
ble Oil and Refining company.
The visitors - Included R. W.
Paasildv} To
Head Finns'
New Cabinet
Company, and Chester Smith,
Of War Starts Monday
The
lal of
died last night of a cerebral )*cn-
r.iorrhage, 12 hours after his daily
radio broadcast.
f* kvf.
f '
SEATTLE, Nov. 17. <m
army's largest court mart!
the war. in ’ which a Houston
negro soldier and 42 others plead-
ed not guilty to! charges of riot-
ing and the murder of an Italian
service unit, member, wlU jbe re-
«u*rcd Monday. ,
The ten-man court erapfed the
request yesterday of Maj. WOMm
T. Beeks for a continuance after
h? said that charges were served
an)y nine days, ago and he had
not had time to prepare hto coses.
The trial to the aftesmato of
the Auguat riot, when the bar-
tacks of a sleeping Kalian aervico
company were- raided, Kalians
beaten and one- of them. Pvt.
date aa Peily’s election so that
"Peliy would not be left out In
the ooid for a while if it dissolves
its corporation."
The' first proposed* amendment
to the dikrter would increase toe
(Nee Pdly Man, Page *)
o«iTen ana on«- oi uiem, jrvw
Oua^une Pass -reported a sub- QugMmo lh-otto, was haftfed
SCREW DRIVER
i
Stores ..... m
Incan Telephone ., ..'..tfl»
Courtesy Citizen* Natfonal Bonk A Trust Co.
PORT WORTH HAN'T
TO WOS NEW B-32e £
FORT WORTH, Nov. J7, <CJ!m-
Oonsolldstod Vulter’s aircraft
plant in Fort Worth Is at the be-
ginning of a three-year produc-
tion program, Including ontput
of the flew B-32 Domlnator
bomber, and will not be affected
by the end of the war in Europe,
division manager Commdr, Ro-
land G. Mayer said today.
Standard of New Jersey.
The visitors were here early,
held a jneeting with Humble ex-
ecutives, and then went for in-
spection trips of the various
plants
; “We now are planning next
year'# actlvitlta,"' aaid Holman,
“and this visit to Texas and to the
Humble propertiea to in line with
this work. Aa you know. Humble
supplies us with a great deal of
crude supplies and crude pro-
ducts, and our visit here fora few
days to to review‘the properties
and make n general inspection."
Unofficially, Mr, Holman ex-
plained bf was a native Texan
and he never needed much urging
to make a return trip herd file
was with iiumhie for many year*
(See Standard OR Page •*> '
HELSINKI. Nov. IT.
now Finnish cattnet fas beth
former under toe premlerehlp of
Jubo Paasikivi, former premier
and leader of Finland'* peace ne-
gotiation* with Russia after the
winter far of 199M0, it was an-
nounced today. —
The new government replaced
tost of Ehm Costren, who in
September succeeded Antti Hack-
Mil. who became ftl in Miscow
WhMc negotiating . the present
peace between Finland and Rus-
ROHE, Nov. 17, -“ilPi-Etatoth
army troope. despite heavy Ger-
man artillery fire, made smalt ad-
vances in the drive along the
Bologna highway to Farensa, It
was announced today, although
allied movement# virtually were
halted in the Adriatic sector when
the enemy blew pp toe Unitt
river banks and flooded a targe
moving steadily north toward
Faenia,.J key junction of the 'P#T
volley's main road, 30 mile* east
of Bologna. • , -V-.
The Indian forces occupied
Karl Enctfett,,: former foreign
minister, was refurned:-to4he post.
Gon. Karl Rudolf Walden, former
war minister, was ntuned min-
ister of defenac..
. sbt.......
west Mm
troop* captured ConVeraelle, six k
miles aouthwwt of Forit, and en-
gaged sirong enemy forces on
Mount Caateltacclo just north of
the village.
On the tut' flank of_the Fifth
army front below Bologna, Amer-
ican troops made gaini up to one
mOe In the Sereblo valley. The
operations in that sector were
Tough
Pyralin handle.
--
Reg. 58c
reap*
mm
v3c.
m
hem Steel :K,;: 61L
Motors ............87%
Service .................
erctal Solvent ........ 15%
ȣLAirc:aft ...... I8H
ftt ••••■• ............105
iS' ^nd and Share 'It
" Power and Ught .. S%
1 Sulphur.......32
'SKS
re ss
»*
jgr* S
Dairy
Packard Motors ............ S‘4-
Premier .........*.......... I-
Purc Oil ............j... MXD
Reed Roller Bit---------TT...
Republic &toel.
Rhotp and Dohme
Germans
Dow Plant Previews World Of Tomorrow 9?^5' ^!frs
hampered by fMeilng weather at
night, whei
.... 2314
.... tVA
, 12%’.
Sinclair ........*». - •....... 1314
Skelly ............... 37*4
Southern Pncjflc j...... 3t^;
.Hpcrry Corporation m*v*‘» :
PtandaM-’ Hesndi> .
Standard
'RtnaiBB
Sun OR ..:*i-’. -*.. . .,
Sun ray Oil ..............
freeting mercury reading this from B euy wire
morning. / .
Minimum tempe rat urea 1 n
Texas Included 29 at Guadniure
pass. 34 at Lubbock and Salt
Vitil War Materials Taken From Waters Of Gulf
at San Angelo. 44 at Austin. 45 at
San Antonio. Waco and Dallas 46
at Texarkana and Sulphur
JW: TS22 && s*» “ -ore-re,
qnd UrowiisvUle,
When toe temperature
pad to toe low 20's.
AROUND TOWN
into Battle
By LY1K C, WILSON ;
FREEPORT.' Nov: 17. (UP—Dr,
Dutch Beutel operates a plant
down here sprawled over 1,000 or
sea water around with
4y
•*.' ’ oyster sheils and hydrochloric
“ * t, arid to get pure magnesium me-
Texas-Gulf Sulphur ......... 35*
PORT KNOX, Nov. it Chemical <Jb, w
..............
Thg feurtmartiei-conviitcd killer.
was at large today after ttmS^lrtcity. Doi
Of, Midland. Mich.,
wlum about
w«s to jrtee-
HHSH-iEs* ^'“sjr-asiSre ?5r-sat.":tsar:
. Utt
.moil
rnitort Aircraft ...
United Corporation
■ZXJSt
United Gas
United States Steel
toi”.
chemical
Pvt. SOis Hamm. 30. of MBon, mfc signii
was convicted by a eosirt- fftoaifly
They make tons of magnesium
h< rc and every ounce ef it actu-
ally comes ftom toe sen. The
cooked oyster shells im8 the hy-
drochloric odd are merely chemi-
cal agent* In the process of.,ex-
tracting the mineral from the wa-
ter at the Gulf of. Mexico which
is pumped into the plant in a
vast and 3>d1<ta stream
A croup of New York and
Washington newspaper man Visit-
ed the Z)ow plant hew for an «-
tonishlng preview of what some of
the postwar world is going to b<>
like.
of raw materials and as a rich
and almost boundltas new econo-
mic frontier and then In the
woods of Samuel Crovtoer III of
the DOw company, exclaim. “We
wonder why our politicians keep
ft) to 100 pears behind toe prog-
ress of science."
Magnesium, which is onfy one
of the raw Materials present in
sea water, is toe tightest struct-
ural metal. Aluminum is 50
cent heavier. And magnesium' te
strong, The Dow
LONDON. Nov. 17. rUJ’i-Ger-
mkny, her worships and planre
virtually wiped out, wa* reported
rushing sailors and airmen into
the front line* as infantry today
to bolster hrr faltering armies
against what may be toe final
MOB the weet.
In toe TrLCItMa: All toe hu
shot blouse makers and dreivi
don’t have a thing on M-r
what
Allied offensi
European dispatches
Reich appeared fo be
gravest military crisis oi
at a time when civilian morale .
____ „ was ebbing to a new low as re- J™
art be- »ult of Adolf Hitler's prolonged
automobile rilence increasing evidence
S’
Dimple White's suptr work . .
^ ren^Wy of town ;
Dr. Herbert Duke sports a
ensemble with a to
. . . Kathrynelle i
Saturday
»
wheels* for°in*ta!lS thri are“«ie Outapa chtaf Helnrtch
Ga.,
martial
.........
Walworth
Western Union
Hollia Hetad°tertlfi<fd
it he killed his
trial that ■HPRI
Harris tn sell defense
is the big styrene plant
of the Monsanto Chemical Cb.,
^':rn2srJi;.°r
.•sstefirssns &“*«:"»£! ssir-’’"'*
MMMutao -III be « major part Rapana ballavml railabl. .«cb-
of tbe Structure of post war au- ed Madrid that Gestapo agents
toinobiles. if and when cnodj^i were arresting hundreds, i ‘
magnesium Is produced to pro- toousands, of army office
m
Vice-President Henry A. Wallace
whom they regard a* men who
is to
my Hag
tfey re*,
that our
!/ matured
and now must.
I
SS .iSTnl .......
_
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 133, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1944, newspaper, November 17, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1029418/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.