The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 147, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1936 Page: 2 of 16
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*Q
—
*»,;■&» 8.7^S)--Th* lift glory of Acapulfo-
•dw of tlis’rity the clearing port between the old1
I taring the Sixteenth 'Centurf-i. of last returning,
of Acspulce is Industrial, mechanical and modern. The
SJK*«SJT2
r napping for four centuries
hay. Mexiean auib this
(»rt on toe North Ameffoto
coast today stirred, rubbed
vend awok$ to a new dpy.
resa has laid its awaken-
and beckhn-
TODAY^
to better days, .f------
like Rip Van Winkle of
■ legend. Acapulco Is learning that
to awake in a tow WorM eaiis for
| n«w, up-to-tte-irtimife dree*,
i The modem clothing for Acapul-
; eo is taking many forms. She is
airs,” . and leifnitlfc to accustom
herself to wwl automobiles
| crossing the cobbled streets which
wiU be the only standards by which
material submitted for publication'
win be Judged,’/ McCulloch aaid.
"We will welcome contributions,
from on student# of the college,
but work of others also #01 be ac-
cepted. j, ■i:.,
during the sehoof year at intervals j ]
(Continued from Page 1)
fertile land from the owners, dis-
tributing it among 30,000 persons
that were working on the soil.
Without warning, the 300 hacien-
dados, ranches U)ft owned and de-
veloped the land, were put out.
George A. Ban <»•««• A. TomBnsoa
With the death of Oris P. Van Swertngsn. Cleveland railroad mag-
nate, control of the vast Van Sweringen railroad empire and its
allied interests passes into the hands of George A. Ball, left, MUncie,
Ind., glass Jar manufacturer and George A. Tomlinson, right, Cleve-
i1
"We hope to publish three issues
of sissat three month*. , ~. t -- -, •
A business manager is yet to be
appointed and several suggested
names for the publication are un-
der consideration, McCulloch said.,
ers, however. So she was told, to An outline of plans.tot the pub j
. , 0,I wn,fc lication says short stories, infor-
stay at home. But all other work- .j eggay8 rej,U[ar an<i free verse,!
ers stayed away too. They struck humoroua an<J satirical sketches,
in sympathy. And now the whole Blgniflcant articles on timely topics,
town is tom by a bitter dispute revleW8 of new book* and original
as to whether or not trousers sire j drawlng1 Mg. cartoons win corn-
suitable wear for women. I prise the contents,
Some well-known society women I -1'' ‘ 'M -1 :ii.
are appearing in public in trousers FLEET N SINGAFORR- ,
today as a sign that they support gING*po!.K -The official
the young woman who lost her ^ thR Kagt Indies fleet
job. , to Singapore ha# revived rumors
One argument advanced by ? alcurrent among British and putch
newspaper in her favor is that as residents of aa Anglo-Dutch
man in SontlflYlH W#»flP “fikirt#/* ***^*±1. .Infan/sa nnH/'lf
; * In her re-buiiding program.the
■^"'Tfty fif taking the example of Cal-
iforiiia cities on her north.
V Plans are under way for a new,
six hundred-foot pier to accommo-
date the luxury liners of the Pan-
i" ama Pacific Steamship Company,
which only in the last year has
made Acapulco their port of cal!
on the west Mexican coast. Aea-
pnlco Is the only deep water har-
bor on this coast.
Naval and commercial shipping
; experts have been consulted on the
pier corisCfueffbfc. Theft vMwS
?; havp been placed before President
|y Gerdenas, who ,is reported in hear-
ty accord with the renaissance
movement under way in his old
coast dtp-
To look back on Acapulco’s past
i$ to view a four-hundred-year
I story of buccaneers, gold and con-
quest. When Maghellanes discov-
TOYLMD
OPENS M ILFREVS
—Central Tree*
assignats, worthless money, the
rich lands owned by the church.
- Mexico may find that confisca-
tion will not end with tracts of
lpnd, for as the French say, “ap-
petite comes with eating.”
MOSCOW, Dec. 3. —(UP)—A mill
girl who insisted on wearing trous-
ers has been responsible for a
| Os* group Mil
frill, olloman.-j
Ifia cannot affl
[a second scIliJ
It, I variety oil
Tomorrow, Toy land opens at Ilfrey’s in ill it* glory.
We open with the most complete stock of fine toy* in our
history. Toy* priced to fit each lend every pocketbook.
Just everything you might want for the boy* and girl*
... and you should make your selection early to get the
pick.
» Bycicles'
JmrAjim # Tri‘Cycles
atwgf^lli Velocipedes
'b'\ Scooters
not permit Mr^. HarknCss, an Am-
erican, to take out of China, a
baby panda, captured alive at a
cost of $20,000. Once China pun-
ished with death anybody trying to
take silk worms or their eggs but
of the country; that did not pre-
vent the establishment of the
great silk industry in France.
The panda is a email mammal,
about as big as a cat; the five
weeks’ old Harkness baby panda,
as big as a kitten, seems hardly
with the attention of a nation of
400,000,000.
COMBTH1NG as queer as the
baby panda is Misri Lalji, priest
of the Jiin abet of India. Last
April hb began a fast to force 82
branches of the Jain Met td Untie;
promising to Starve until Novem-
ber 23, *nd then die, unless they
unite, On November 28, he port-
Strike and for dividing a whole
town into heated “pro” and “anti”
trouser factions.
The foreman at the factory
where the girl was working—at
Bielostock, in Poland, according to
the Russian paper—objected to the
young woman’s turning fup in
trousers.
i.* “They distract other workers
from their work,” he complained,
T The girl went on wearing trous-
|A third showil
SOtumiri* »W
| Sharply fer qul
efed the Philippine Islands and
Montetuma's studded stronghold
in the Valley of Mexico fell, and
the yeah 1520 had been written in
red, Acapulco emerged as the
logical port between “New Spain”
Wagons
Baby Buggies
Automobiles
of traders, slavers, whalers and
merchantmen! who have passed
through Acapulco*, eomesa new set
of men—the industrialists.
They are sending tractors over
'.'Streets, and—of all things—plot-
ting sub-divisions, exactly as
Southern California has done.
New hotels are being erected,
AS* existing ones are being en-
Ppfiitod to-accommodate the influx
t poned the death date to last Sun-
day, November 28, and on that apt
g-n.
life-
pointed day changed hw mind aifd
ate breakfast having shrunk from
140 to lew than 70 pounds. He
says mysterious “yoga” powers en-
abled him to fast since lost April.
Science say* the gentleman is mW-
tpken about the fast.
ttmm-linrd in
Swell bailt to gi'
Yes. «H kinds of wheel
goods . . . painted M
r nappy red, green, blue,
grey and other, attrat-,
tive colors.
This county has no 7000 planes,
or great army Of war tanks,, dot- jj
ting the country in groups of 1000, f
In fact, it has no defensive war 1
thousand six hundred and J
■' toWiSnow ;ffyou
wish . . . they are priced especially low.
OUR LAY-AWAY DEPARTMENT!
ted in December, when the
xican Government grants a 20-
- vacation to employes,
t hbtel, to emulate fit style hos-
■ies of Honolulu, will take its
ce on a high bluff above Caleta
ich. Capitalists from the Unit-
States who have fallen under
charm of the nun-baked town,
I gee its bright future, are
ldtog Imposing homes. | ■,
b rand boom has seen the sale
ently of more than six hundred
rifty-fiye million dollars, six of
these “sources” being taxed also ]
by the national government, which 1
collected more than two thousand I
two hundred asid seventy-one mil- ;
Hon dollars, and that is only part \
of the total. _____ *3
Games I
Of All Kinds |
for Young *
And Old! t
STUFFY HEAD
Dolls!
Shirley Tempi*
.
A ftw drops Up each j
nostril reduces
swollen membranes, j
clears away clog- ^ .1
. PW- They are
[,M toll bearing
».* trial value j
-FOR GIRLS—
ging mucus, brings
welcome reUet.
I COWBOY SUITS rl 5q cyj4g
ft brightly colored 9 I =±±11=
SI REAL COWBOY SUITS I ■
1 DAISY . if.* -
| AIR RIFLES T™T
[skates St
I TRAINS
> Foot Balls
•*
rn^s dolts for tltt youngsters
Gift Jiems For
7 W* offer Tn our ^trge-gift depj
11* IPS
mm :#r
w> nr
(Y PLAN. * ...
ft i ■ ‘
1 '-A
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 147, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1936, newspaper, December 3, 1936; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095691/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.