The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
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T. 1
Tfll DAILY SUN—<30081 CRKBK, TIXAS
Sun
Slants
THE DAILY SUN
MUiM tfwy week day iftmooa, by Peoples Printing Company
m Wrat, Oocm CM, Tuu.
IIS Weet faarc#
W. L. PINDWGRAJFT.
ROBIRT MATHERNE
Editor and Pubh.her
—Butina— Manager
PARI-MUTUEL betting at
aaaaad horn me track* in Texas
: has bam —yaalad at a eodt of
*190,000 to the people bamuw the
tot#r«d — tacond cla— matter at tba Goom Creak, Tazaa, poat-
affl— under tba act of Concrete March I, 1897.
tenet# refuted to act on the mea-
eure duging tba recuiar session.
Mot only did the pro-rncing ten-
aten can— this additional expense,
but they blocked other needed leg-
islation in their bitter-end fight
to stare off S direct vote on the
race repeal iesue. *•
Since it was evident the bill
would be enacted when the upper
hoaee eventually did) vote on it,
and since the senate knew there
wouid.be no possible way to avoid
a direct vote in a special session
balled for that purpose, it was dtf
ficuit to understand juit what the
pro-racing crowd hoped to gain,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
*6.00 Year; *2.76 For « Month.; 60e Month
Payable in Advance an Mail Subscription.
THE PATH 0^ TRUTH: Teach m# thy way. O Lord; 1 will
walk ia thy truth; unite my heart to fear thy name.—Pealma 86:11.
Swing The Successful
£
It may have been that those sen
ators favorable to the racing lob-
by were so out of touch with pub-
lic sentiment they did not believe
the special session would be called.
Possibly they thought , Governor
Allred was hluffing, but three
years of experience with him
should have taught them better
than* that. ■*
Also, tWy have have believed
they could saddle blame for the
expense of, the special session on
th governor. If this was their
idea it will prove a delusion and a
snare come next election time.
OF COURSE, delaying the vote
until the special session did ac-
complish one thing—it postponed
the date when repeal goes into ef-
fect and will permit holding at
least one additional meet, at Ar-
lington Downs near Dallas and
Fort Worth.
That one meet will cost the
people of Texas $100,000, plus the
aura spent at the meet.
Successful artists continue to be defenseless against suits brought
with the sole object of embarrassing or annoying the person sued to
the point where he ia willing to pay aomething to escape the unwelcome
publicity. There is brought to mind the case of the author of a play
that was phenomenally successful, but who was forced to spend the
entire royalties to defend suite, all of which he won.
This is not likely to be the fate of the author of “Gone With the
Wind", but the press records the filing of>a suit against her by an ob-
scure woman author who claims passages in the now famous volume
of the South were lifted from her history of the Ku Klux Klan. The
author of "Gone With the Wind" disavows ever having seen the book
about the Ku Kluxers.
In the complaint, consisting of more than 400 pages, are alleged
parallels in the text of the two books, including mostly sequences of
several words, such as “Stonewall Jackson wag dead". Of course he
was. He still is. The plaintiff wants $5,000 damages for every copy
of “Gone With the Wind" sold, a total of about $7,000,000,000. With-
out presuming to pass upon the merits of the case, if she gets the
money it will be enough to make Rockefeller turn over in his grave.
GIVE THIS LITTLE GIRL A GREAT BIG HAND!
What’s What
IN WASHINGTON
By CHARLES P. STEWART
WORDS AND THEIR meanings
always arc an interesting study.
Often the generally accepted mean-
ing of a word in common usage
is not the meaning given first
place by the dictionary.
Take the famous instance of
"transpire.” The meaning most
often sought to be conveyed by the
use of this word is “to happen”
or “to come about.’ WhHe the
dictionary gives this meaning it
is number four in the list of def-
initions. Number one is “to send
off through the excretory organs
as of the skin and lungs; cause
to pass off as insensible perspira-
tion.”
WASHINGTON, D. C.-Henry Ford ia like the Old Guard.
He may die, but he never will surrender. I know Ford as not
many newspapermen do. As I have remarked before, I visited with
him constantly about 10 hours a day for two weeks on his celebrated
peace cruise. It was no mere series of formal interviews; it was an
acquaintanceship. V
At first the flivver magnate liked me; then he did not, because
I didn’t altogether agree with him. I saw both sides of him. ..I knew
Dean S. S. Marquis, originally his pastor and subsequently chief of his
industrial relations bureau; the dean Wrote a book about him. Ulti-
mately he turned hostile to the dean, as they say he finally does with
almost everyyone with whom he has been in close contact,
1 was quite intimate with the late Gaston Planteff, once Ford’s
New York sales manager and fiscal director of his peace expedition
1 had a newspaper acquaintance with the late Senator James Couzens,
who started in business life with him—and we often discussed Ford’s
peculiarities.
I am trying to qualify myself as a competent witness as to the
Fordian philosophy.
BARCLAY
ON BRIDGE
WRITTEN FOR CENTRAL PRESS
By Shepard Barclay
“The Authority on Authorities”
SHOOTING OF CCC
WORKER ISPROBED
MAJOR SUITS PREFERRED
HANDS ON .WHICH four-odd
can be made at either of two suite
are quitp frequent, whereas those
on which five-odd can be made are
relatively much rater. That is why
game la made at a major suit ap-
proximately four times as often as
at a minor suit. It is also the main
reason why fine players will strain
to find a major suit fit, even at a
bit of added risk. Still another
reason Is the fact that a major suit
i game counts more and, In tourna-
‘ ment play, can mean the difference
between a top and a bottom,
4 J 9 8 6 4 '
V 7 .*
♦ K 7 6 6 4 2
During the recent Memorial Day
ceremony objection was voiced to
the use of "celebration” in connec-
tion with the observance.
Slants began to wonder whether
the objection was well founded.
He recalled that Catholics speak
of "celebrating” solemn high mass
and wondered if the word was not
a synonym for "observe.”
_ A . study of. the - New . Standard
dictionary reveals that the word
mean,*;
“Rejoicing because of or in me-
mory of,” which seems to make it
especially fitting for use in con-
nection with Memorial Day. We
do rejoice in the memory of our
heroic dead. Their noble deeds
and sacrifices stir us to live right
and brave lives ourselves.
But to give the full No. 1 def-
inition:
"To make a demonstration of
respect or rejoiemg because of or
in memory of; commemorate or re-
joice over, especially by ceremon-
ies or observance; observe; as to
celebrate an important anniver-
sary; to celebrate a victory.”
Add definition No. 3 even more
•trongly supports the use of
"celebrate" in connection with Me-
morial Day. It says:
U “To perform or observe with sol-
emn ntes.”
If: In the list of synonyms "Ob-
serve" is the third one given and
in the list of synonyms for ob
serve "celebrate” also is given.
AN OBSESSION
It is not a philosophy, for that matter, it is a prejudice.
Prejudice is too mild a term, too; it is an obsession—virtually a
nutty one.
Forad, believe me, is convinced (and, I am sure, in all sincerity)
that he has socio-economics by the tail, and that only enemies of
the human race disagree with him.
He is a “bug” against labor unionization.
Other captains of industry have selfish reasons for fighting union-
ism. They may pretend otherwise, but they arc quite aware that, real-
ly, they are capitalistically selfish.
Ford, I am positive, does not think so; his honest-to-goodnes.-
”belief" is that he is a God-given benevolent despot.
A PRO-WORKER PARTNER
I believe he will stand pat on that proposition.
Back in 1915 he gained a reputation as a higher-pay advocate.
The late Senator Couzens always said that he was the one who fought
for that principle—not Ford.
He did giva Fordcredii-for acquiescSng in- it, but not for origin-
ating it.
"Ruthlessncss” was the Couzens’ diagnosis of the Ford program.
Couzens’ son, as mayor of Detroit, perhaps has seemed to be pro-
industrial, but his father was not. I talked with him many a time; he
was prodabor. In his early years he himself was a blacksmith, nat-
urally he was pro-worker.
4 Q 10 5 2
*8 5
4 J
4K Q 10
7 8 2
4AT
fK 6 432
4Q8
4»8« »
4 K 3
4 A Q J 10 9
4 A 10 9 3
4 A J
JASPER, June 5 (C.E) An In-
quest verdlet In the dpath of R. L.
Chapman, 22, CCC enrollee and
bridegroom of Jwo weeks, was
withheld today as officers sought
to determine whether he shot him-
self or waa murdered.
His wife, Deana, told officers
that Chapman shot himself Thurs-
day night while she was in a near-
by room of her mother’s hotel.
I Chapman was alone, she said.
| When she heard a shot, she ran
into her husband’s room and found
him unconscious, a pistol laying
at his side.
Mrs. Belle Smith, Mrs. Chap-
man's mother, was In the hotel
yard when the shot was fired, she
told officers. Chapman h;ii been
employed 13 months at the Jasper
CCC camp, and had returned home
for a five-day visit.
Mrs. Chapman said her husband
hadkthreatened to commit suicide.
The fatal bullet entered the top of
the head on the right side and
ranged downward to the left jaw.
Officer?- said there were no pow-
der turns from the gun.
INEVITABLE?
But Ford, senior.
He stood off the A. F. of L.
The A. F. of L. did not-go to the mat with him. John L. Lewis’
C.I.O. is doing so.
The steel and automotive industries in general are beginning to
recognize the C.I.O.'s inevitability.
Ford does not see it.
(Dealer: East, North-South vul-
nerable).
After a pass by East, South
opened the bidding on this deal
with 1-Heart, West called 2-Cluhs,
North passed, as did East, and
South bid 2-Hearts. North now put
In a bid of 2-Spades and South re-
bid his hearts. Still fearful of the
contract in that suit, North Otffhi*
diamonds and, tnstead of assisting
them, South went to 4-Hearts,
which East was delighted to double.
South's reason for not taking the
contract to 6-Diamonds was that
with West’s overcall he placed the
spade A In that hand and was
afraid a game in' diamonds could
not be made, whereas there was a
Chance for the heart game.
West led the singleton diamond J,
Which declarer won in the dummy
with the diamond K, so as to take
the heart finesse. On this diamond
he was very careful to drop the
diamond 9. Had he failed to do
this, his contract would not have
been made. Declarer now finessed
the heart 9, laid down the heart A
and then gave a trick to East with
the heart K. The spade A was now
cashed and a club returned, so that
the declarer made five, doubled.
SHOWING SUNDAY
PORT: “When You’re in Love,"
J with Grace Moore.
: TEXAN: “Marked Woman,” with
Bette Davie.
DE LUXE: “Little Miss Marker,”
with Shirley Temple, : v
ARCADIA: “Swing High, Swing
Low,” with Carole Lombard.
TOO CONSPICUOUS
Ford’s weakness is that his strikes are so conspicuous.
Any other strike is a strike so-and-so, anywhere.
A Ford strike is a FORD STRIKE—in a main plant or an assem-
bly plant or any old place. T
So Ford is under fire anyway.
Tomorrow’s Problem
WHILE THIS PROVES the
man jrhd objected to "celebrate"
wns technically wrong, there is an-
other aide to the matter.
BkfrA In common usage "celebrate”
» ,. does mean a joyful and happy ob-
servance. Under this definition
the word is not suitable for use
with memorial rites for they arc
solemn and tinged with Sadness,
despite the felling of rejoicing
’ that we have had such noble fore-
**** _
Will Vitit at
tailoring Firm Plant
... nlth manager of the
i Tailors, and Mrs. Smith, will
Monday for a ten-day visit
Mr. Smith win inspect the fac-
tory and take apodal courses on
SsSSr™
ter recommend materi
tings to his customer.
The Club Tailor shop, or uoose
Creek, ia representative in this
area for the (Robe Tailoring com-
PHYCHOLOGY
You can't get up much ginger again|t "General Motors”~that is
a general term. “
But you can get gore against an individual—Henry Ford.
4«32
4Q
4 A Q J
10 5
4Q10 5 4
4 Q 10 9 4
9 10 6 4 3
4742
49 6
44
9 A K 9 8
762
498
V"
„ One-Minute Test, ...
What does "S. W. O. C.” signify? ..........
What states of the United States border oh the St Lawrence
4 A X J 7
* 4 J
4 K 6 3
* A K J 2
(Dealer: South. Both sides vul-
nerable),
Agamat South’s 4-Spade con-
tract West led the heart Q, which
held, and then the Club 4. How
should South play to make his «m-
***”’ __
Week-end Bills Tops
Along with the change in man-
agers this week-end in local cin-
ema houses are biiis that will fill
the bill.
Carole Lombard and Fred Mac-
Mu r ray are co-starring in the fea-
tured picture at the Arcadia Sun-
day and again Monday after a de-
but today. “Swing High, Swing
Low,” ia the name of this popular
tunester/and it . lives up to its
name in every detail.
Another tuneful picture is
carded at the Port in La Porte.
When Grace Moore’s name is link-
ed with a picturf put it down in
your notebook accent will be on
melody. (She's starring across the
channel in “When You're in Love.”
Cary Grant gives her support.
What navies fought in thfe Battle of Jutland?
' Hints on Etiquette
At silver and golden wedding anniversary celebrations, it is prop-
er to invite relatives, friend* and members of the original wedding
party if possible.
mm
—
TIRADE COSTS *100
NORWALK, O. (03?)—An out"
burst over the telephone, by which
L. H. Giilett sought to tell state
highway patrolmen Just what he
thought of them, cost him a *100
fine and log* of the telephone.
fitlf
Words of Wisdom
Some are bom great; some achieve greatness, and some
greatness thrust upon them.—Shakespeare.
T<*iay’s~Horoscope
Skepticism is an attribute of persons whose birthday
Many of them do brilliant literary works.
Horoscope for Sunday
If You# birthday is tettortow you i
of justice and. fighter for democmtic-
i'v; ' * ... _ * ,
One-Minute Test J
% Steal Workers'
, a lover
m
y New York state.
! navies of Great Britain and
\
Shirley’s Comeback
Shirley Temple’s first role—one
in which she stole the show, and
one in which many say she has
never been able to surpass-^!* re-
turning to the be Luxe Sunday.
"Little Miss Marker,” showed
little Shirley at her best as a sing-
er and dancer. Adolpne Menjou
and the lamented Dorothy Dell,
Bette Davis has a starring role
in the week-end Texan billing,
"Marked Woman,"
WILBURN BROS.
GET NEW TRUCKS
Wilburn Brothers, distributors
in this area of International
■ucks, tractors and farm imple-
lents, today announced the ar-
val of a new line of International
Ticks, for commercial use.
These new trucl^s are designed
for beauty as well as service, and
in a variety <* rises. They1
”•
Now, according to Theo.
muAumgrcturrsAUiuasASSocuTiow
VIRGINIA SCALLON
IIICAD THIS FIRST:
Kandy tod Man ia mat quite by acci-
dent near the home of the xlrl’a arand-
moUiei in aoutharn California. 1!* la
an edvertlates executive who haa prat
eatabllahed hie own firm and she i* a
talented commercial artist. Both are
on vac*Uom_ A week later It’s romance
and lora. ■
____ _ PSjL
When they go to tell Grand-
........ ft, Marcia la
ma of their engagement. Mat —
her office hah been- trying to» reach
Sandy la hurt when ahe call* Los
Angeles before telling her grandmother
of thair lov*.
NOW GO ON WITH ’HE STORY:
CHAPTER 7
"LET ME kiss you, Sai*y,”
Grandma said promptly on hearing
the news of the'engagement "I'm
proud that we’re to have you In
our family. I couldn’t have chosen
better myselfl” She smiled mis-
chievously as they both recalled
that events had, Indeed, been In her
own hands up until that time. "But
what’s the trouble? You're not
jealous of Marcia’s job, already?
You know that’s been her only love’
for so long, it’s going to be hard
to wean her away from it. Pa-
tience, It takes—and a heart full
of love.”
If Marcia had stepped Into her
role properly at that moment, the
clouds would have passed. But
when she bounded out into the lit-
tle sun .porch;' her eyes .were flam-
ing with excitement, her head high
in pride.
"Old Abe Is trying to land a big
account and he wants me to rush
back and work up the art and even
supervise copy. I’m to plan the
campaign from start to finish, and
I begin right away,” she cried,
happily. "Why, Sandy, I can go
k
e>
back with you
She turned joyfully to the man,
then stopped as If she’d been hit.
“What is it—aren’t you glad for
meT Isn’t everybody glad on this
beautiful day? I get a real plum
of an assignment, and find the
Only Man ... all in one after-
noon, It’s too-—"
"Yes, it’s too. too divine,” he
minced In a sarcastic tone. “Your
job, then me. Is it always to be
like that, Marcia? Because I’m a
Jealous cuss, and anything that
comes between you and me—well,
If it were a man I'd know what to
4o. But this--—”
He spread his hands helplessly,
ihen dropped his voice to a tone
of pleading, "Come along, honey.
Call up the old buzzard, and tell
him you need this time to your-
self, to gel ready for our wedding
flay.”
"But, Sandy, I can't. Why, this
ts the chance I’ve been waiting for.
It means everything-
"EVERYTHING, eh?” He lashed
out at that, pacing the room ner-
vously. "So that's the way it
he continued, working himself Into'
e frenzy.
"Marcia, you don't know any-
thing about love except' what you
put in your gosh-xlarned ads." he
blurted Inelegantly You just
turn It on when «:<l Abe says
‘allure’ or ’romance You're prob-
“Why, Sandy, I can go back with you."
should forfeit It now.
my Idea of love, real love.”
Marcia, still In her riding clofhes,
was seated on the window seat, her
hands nervously rumpling her
bronze locks. Her grandmother,
watching her lovingly, shook her
head In despair.
“Love very often ts demanding,
my dear. You have to sacrifice
something In order to keep It. for
Cupid is a fickle fellow. He flies
out the window just as fast as be
flies in. Maybe faster."
“But, Grandma. I wouldn’t mind
sacrificing something if it were
necessary. But this isn't. Sandy
is jtist selfish, or jealous, and
neither is a worthy emotion.”
Marcia didn't stop to think that
her own ambitions weren't exactly
unselfish. She wouldn’t need the
money, nor would the glory do her
any special good, once she was
married. It was the new problem
of home versus the adventuresome
exciting life of business, and Mar-
cia wasn't yet ready to settle
down.
Observing that her grandmother
was seriously upset over the trend
of events, Marcia walked slowly
upst%fn= and decided to call a truce
— to go* to see Sandy and tease
churned up the dust as It r&c^ti
ward the boulevard. "
might—no, to be honest, I don’t
think I would have given un this
chance to handle that ChSt-Ming
account. I'Ve had my eye ontt for, deliberately, undecided whethal
a year, and there’s no reason I- give, way to the sense of I
That isn’t
"And that's tbat"_Msrc»i
ably the one who thought up the . him qflf of his stubborn mood,
idea that ‘He wes-fascinat'd until j Whistling through her teeth, she
she opened her mouth’ and-----" turned on the shower and stepped
"And that’s about enough from! gingerly beneath the cold spray,
you. You opened your mouth too j The immersion seemed to dear her
tar that time, my fine feathered j brain of the turmoii of the sudden
friend. You’d better fly heme, be- j quarrel, and she vigorously
fore 1 get George’s shot gun gnd
puncture yoirr ego!” ,-----------
■ Sandy grabbed his hat and with-
out a backward glance stalked out
of the bright little room and then
started on a fast dogtrot down the
roadway.
“Sandy behaved like a school-
boy,” Marcia said a minute later,
after she could collect her wits.
"If he’d Just held on for a minute
we would have straightened the
whole thing out. He can’t expect
me to fall into his arms like an
over-ripe apple. .JVhy, dozens of
girls keep on working after they’re
married.”
“Yes, but Sandy hasn’t loved any
of the dozens he has met,’’ Grand-
ma said sensibly. 9He wants just
one special womai^to fit his par-
ticular ideals of a’ wife.”
"Well, he can’t put me up on a
pedestal with a lot of old fogies.
What a ’bust’ I’d be!” Marcia
punned rather feebly. "If he’d
waited to talk it over sensibly, I
scrubbed her t^ck with the long
handled brush while' she formu-
lated her "armistice address".
"Now, my husband-to-be, we
mustn't be hasty. Give little
Marcia her fling and—No.
Not a fling. It was something
more serious than that, she real-
ized when she tried to analyze her
emotions. She’d spent a lifetime
preparing to win her spurs in ad-
vertising: It wasn’t just a game
or a. pleasant pastime. It was a
profession, something that held
serious Ideals and offered her a real
chance to express herself. With
her thoughts marshaled in neat lit-
tle lines, Marcia dressed carefully
then headed the Imaginary proces-
sion for the camp where Sandy
was Quartered.
Rounding the corner where the
makeshift camp was established,
she heard a screeching of brakes
afid yipping of frightened dogs.
Then the low-slung gray roadster
tore" out of the clearing and
break or to bitter anger,
break was so futile, so detea
and Marcia at heart was a f
She raised her head high __
on her heel and raced back is j
bungalow. Its peaceful beauty*
a sort of mockery, and ouicklyd
resolved to surrr.se old Abe |
her promptness r.ru’ to go back j
the city that nigh’
"I’m disappointed, out rm i
surprised," said Grandma.
Marcia told her her plans to lea
immediately. "Of course,
nothing more to do here, and |
broken heart will do as well in l
Angeles."
"Broken? That’s
Why-” Marcta began
false bravado, until tears blur
her eyes. Then abruotty, "You*
all right. Grandma And 11
have work to keep me busy i
town, so busy that maybe I’ll t
get Sandy "
Well, they say you can’t i
your cake anti have it too', tat*
don’t know." sa:d the lithe |
lady. “In this case J almost ^
lieve you should take your
ness while you cjd get
like any other sweet thing. i«ti
to get stale or be stolen If)
leave it too long on the shelf."!
think twice. Marcia, before 11
that nice young man slip itl
from me. When you finally |
around to wanting him. it ma;j|
too late.’
“Maybe,” said Marcia, ’bull
going to try it my way. Anfl|
for wanting him -why 1 wantM
right now, but not the W|
wants it to be."
Quickly, she rushed upatainS
packed her ciothes
movie star style, throwing:
silk underthings into her
bag with no thought for i
or order. It was time that i
tered, for she did not want tog
many more hours in the cniiistl
tie house that had so many r-
ories. Pushing aside the
marquisette curtains, she
out into the yard at Dammit, p
ing so unconcernedly with a ir
You darned fool,” she mi
softly. “You haven’t enough
to be unhappy. Just eat and
chase a few cats or a few
excitement . . what a life
most as boring as being
she said bitterly »The#
into a paroxym ol weeping,
flung herself on the bed ami
a neat little puddle of tears os
fine linen pillow slip
(To Be Continued)
'rOUR HU58WS
CHWaN ME- UJ&NT6
TO POT ME 8ftCK
IN OWL m1 1 (DON'T.
LET HIM
-•vV"’
rV'
7 CALM VOURSELE.
m INVITED MR.POPE'/E
to have dinner.
UMTH OS ^
yoove (watm
I
-rr
(UJW4T YOU TOJ
KNOUJ THAT
HJOON’T SET
AT THE TABLE
UJITH ft
^ftl SRO m
LCOORSE
k
l PUT HIS PLftCE
NEXT TO YOURS, PftW-
HE 5WD HE DIDN'T
MIND
_■;
a«f;
m'
1
S- L
ARf
I Kiss Doroth|
n, Johnson ■
noon at
i by K«v-|
, ceremony
,„u of boll
|jjt« bride
and Mrs. I
Hill and I
, of Mr. anl
■ of C’rosby.|
flbe bride
-y suit f°r ll1
[in addition t|
attended
>. Cherry,I
gobbie Jei|
I sisters of
j Vernon Jolj
of the
mbo, Lot>is
„tt, E. T. U|
lie Haydens.
| He. Johnson I
i Humble Oil I
my. The yotf
I home at 316
Lily to He Hi
L Zone WM#
[Members of HI
Ionian’s Missiof
, hosts Wedncl
gly meeting of J
'non district
, Kelley, zone
meed.
[Delegates will I
Goose CreT
Bayou,
lety having
hte.
[opening at lfl
will contin
incheon will bq
lurch at noon.
■Members and fl
sty in the zone |
bd
.-T.A. Council
eting Called I
[Members of theT
| of Parent-Teaq
|ve been urged
| meeting of thd
| m, Tuesday at
W. B. Irons|
unced.
[The meeting is I
completing an
summer recq
jonsored by the i
Cowan Ell
jebakah Lodgel
[JJrs. Sue Cowans
grand of the \
mrsday at the
f the group at tl
Ella Goodml
i grand.
[The lodge will
■emonies June ll
|ve been urged t|
1 next meeting
[Plans are being
■ Friday of nexfl
i Beach. Those)
I are asked to '
I the I.0.0.F, hall|
Oliic Mae
(week of friend
DR. G. C.
Chiropr;
Carver Gr:
ffice Over Peopl
Baytoc
Residence 411V
I'Hloose C
[ A* discomf
^ heretofore h
With 8
‘•'fitery protectio
IV-• deodorant
ggCE
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 1937, newspaper, June 5, 1937; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095455/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.