The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 19, 1946 Page: 1 of 8
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owing
> ship
Date
.. the
FRIDAY, JANUARY j.
ins
(1 ft re-1
to Ei>-
P three
omohile
•from
latbush
’ho has
base-
'Urges Friendliness
Less Strain In
church.
" "Let the -p’ihhf i,«
b‘‘ a ‘good Christian*
a lo», of fsBin^
cage audience'
rsSS&S
make #
tress
church and
weloi
“The
relaxed and pt tease
H movie hor?
'ter," he. said
h‘Kh-cS
CtEE
REPAIR Xu MAKES
PROM ! 'T S t'i ,Y K’g;
: CALL FOR
ID DELIVER
IN RADIO CO.
hone 1500
mmmmmaamammwm
irtsWiploiidv and colder tonight
rlR'". . crohably rain. Maximum
*uml»,'
degree^; minimum last
ill degrees.
28 NO. 185
Q0)t Sniln Sun
—
LATE NEWS BULLETIN
DO N DON—CP.)—Iran's
United Nation* assembly
that it had decided to charge j
next meeting of the security
Interference in Iranian internal affairs.
GOOSE.CREEK, TEXAS, SATURDAY. JANUARY 19, 1946
FIVE CENTS COPY
fortable, where nroZ'S*!
relaxed •.. ..a PTOP«wiaa
IT-AMD m\
VE CAN GIVE YOU
REPAIR SERV^E?
To Escape
Deportation
10 Kill Selves Rather
Than Be Returned To
Soviet Occupation Zone
Steel Plants Closing Dawn
As Weikers Begin Walken1
A.NK DESTROYER PUTS NEW YORKERS
THE RUN—Alert Cameraman eatehes rufi-
New Yorkers raeing away as a 45-ton
destroyer skids out of control on ley pave-
ment while rolling off Manhattan bridge. The
crouds alaeritcy in getting out of the way saved
injuries when the giant crashed against side-'
uam. (Intel
(International)
mce Way Turn If s Funny
rican Mandates Strike, But
er To UNO
Lot Of Fun
Moscow Report
Indicates New
Iran Uprising
- FRANKFURT. Jan,, 19. —
(U.P.)—Ten Russian na-
tionals, some of them for-
mer conscripts in the Ger-
man army, committed sui-
cide in the Dachau detention
camp today to avoid beinsj
1 in g deported from the Amer-
ican occupation zone to the
Soviet union.
Official dispatches from
Dachau said the suicides oc-
curred during a wild demon-
stration by about 300 Rus-
sians who battled American
guards trying to get them
aboard a Russia-bound rail-
way train.
Some of the Russians
slashed their- throats and
throats and others hanged
' theipselves in their bar-
racks.
i lie Americans were forc-
ed to throw tear-gas jjren-
ades into the mob before
they were able to break up
the demonstration and shep-
herd the repatriates to the
train.
They finally put 271 Rus-
sians aboard the train and
.removed, 21 -others, who
’were injured tn the melee, to
the camp hospital.
FEPC Backers Ponder Strategy
Southern Senators Blast Away At Bill
WASHINGTON. Jan. 19. -0)
Supporters of .1 permanent Fair
Employment, iVactlrc™ oomrmsv
slon today urged round-the-clock
oetiate sessions to break down a
.Southern Democratic fiiibustc.
against the legislation.
• “We will just have to wear them
down ami that * the only way to
do it ' said Sen Wayne C Morse,
fR.-Orei. He added that if the
public understood the situation, it
would “demand an end tfj. minor-
ity rule in the U. S. senate. ’
The Southern Dt-moerat*. quoted
from the Bible and orated against
"carpct-bdggers" as they turned
their drawling wrath’against the
adrni n 1st r aU.o.n-supportcd hiII-
which, would outlaw "discrimina-
tion' against employes;because of.
race or religion,
Opponents of the bill conceded
that it would pass if the issue -
were decided with votes instead of
verbs They predicted, however,
that sponsors of the measure
would admit defeat after a few
more days of ''debate." >
Sen. Dennis Chavez, (D-N.M.i,
sponsor of the mensure, said he
would let the filibuster roil until
next week. Then, he said, he will
take up the question of limiting
debate.
His best weapon would lie to re-
sort to the cloture. This is a rare-
ly-used device to limit debate to
one hour by each member. A two-
thuds -majority would be neces-
sary to Invoke that rule, however, •
and It was. uneerfain whether
EEPC-supporters had that much
strength, ;
Morse conended that the fill-
hustering senators already1 hftd
put the senate In the position of
not even twllty, able to vptr nn
limiting debate by demanding
"correction ' on tti# journal. The
journal is the official record of
the senate.
In this way, they tan force the
senate to take up and vole on any
change in the journal suggested
by FEPC opponent* Sen. John
H Overton. (D.-La,).' suggested
the first change an amendment
to the chaplain's prayer.
Parliamentary clerks said a mo-
tion was limiting debate could not
be considered until the entire
journal was ''corrected' except
with unanimous senate consent.
The Southern senators were in no
mood to consent .to anything as
they stormed through their second
day. ’ ~ ,
. hev argued that such legisla-
tion, if considered at all should
be on a state basis so that Smith-
750,000 Hen
Due To Be
Idle Monday
Quick Settlement Of
Meat Strike Balked At
Conferees Deadlock
Kimmel Wanted
Pacific Fleet
Free For Attack
Admiral Opposed Being
Tied To Pearl Harbor
Steel, Packinghouse
And Milk Strikes Now
Threaten Gulf Coast
fault Criticizes .... -
ults In UNO Charter
i-#wt.-49i il'R) Foreign
bister* GentBidault an-
■need today that France was
rican mandates under UNO
lip, but.failed to make an
Shi offer of trusteeship.
jMault gave', the United Nations
sibly only qualified Frenah ae-
FORT WOPlTH. Jan. 19: UX>
They were still shaking their
heads here today oyer a new
wrinkle in labor controversies.
Restcrday approximately 700
managers and atrikipg union
members of the Fort Worth
stockyards laid aside their'dif
Bahtiaria Tribesmen
Protest Government
Texas Governors
Race Starts Slow
LONDON, Jan 19 —<t'.Pt A Mos-’
cow broadcast said today that
tribesmen of Bahtiaria in south -
ferences "andMtendeiT a^barbecue Tehran a*ainst'their Provlnd»!
and square dance in honor of their government, hinting at an armed
Rainey Expected To
Announce Candidacy
AUSTIN, Jan. Candid-
ates for
for governor of Texas were
still backward about formal all-
iance of proposals that nations
ling old League of Nations
ate* should turn thefn over
IUN'0 trusteeship. Britain, New
gland and Australia have
idy offered to surrender their
Mates.
mamlgteyt jfl, Africa
r rvnch (am croon and
ich Toj,rofam|, both fornivr
colonies on tin* West
Rrican roast which were hand-
‘ l« France as ( lass B Man-
1 in 1824,
new boss, W. L. Pier.
Pickets, who parked their plac-
ards outside, and company of-
ficials introduced a touch of
Texas in the national strike
scene when they gathered In a
body at the livestock exchange:
building to welcome tjie new murf-
ager of the yard.
Striking .livestock handlers ad-
government,’ hintisg at an armed
uprising against, it
forces."
The broadcast by X CBS ctor-
respondent, (pioling the official
Soviet news agency .Tass, was
the first sign that, the govern-
ment of Iran already plagued
by tlie autonomous movement
in Azerbaijan, might face ait-
crislv '
nounesnenU, though reports w'ere
current in Austin today that the
'with all our candidacy of Dr. Homer P. Rainey,
■ former president of the Uifiversity
of Texas, will be launched next
week.
E. J. Blackeft of Victoria, fo.rr(
mei- state senator and former re-'
gent of the University of Texas,
who-was here this week predicted
some development within a week,
tlrontff Dr~Rsihey^ lit week-end
l^rtnoh policy
French government is
' ~ daily terms of an agree-
*t that will define this.regime
weeshipi in the ta9e 0f Togo,
aoZi FLam< roons' jt being un-
F«ood that it. will not result lor
LTbitant* in reduction of
fnjhts they already enjoy from
PC integration into the French,
ft ‘bat these agrec-
fc,“. *lil b& submitted for np-
P « of representative organs of
‘Populations,"
[hu,s perdition sim-
« me, .0,JSo,,u! A*r»«a, whir
‘-bat it wishes to
XnXf"- 1 s Southwest Africa
iMate mu, If„, uhion of South
milted it- Was *‘w funny strike,-brrtr
better than if someoiie was get-' other crisis. . rtiif w««~rtl»rt’o£L,* TL "2iT.
ting hurt." The Bahtiaria tribesmen alreidy ■ W.** s‘'ent about the race.
Several Qf the wives of strikers hav^ent to Tehran a blunt pro* stHtement frpm Gpv. Coke K
brought toddlers to watch the against their governor. Mor- Stesc.nso.ij_that he either chooses
square ' dance. pickets packerix'B'z. Kulikhan Sam Sam, tlie broad- ■ * run or -not to be a candidate
c_-wuuit~-q*urt<Kl-TM8--a«HHjyfilg*u — ......
Tlfe- news agency said the
tribesmen, -in a ^message to the
government, contended they should
not be considered rebels "If they
defend their lives and property
with all forces ";
ployers and strikers mixe,
laughed and joked.
freely.
ge\'t
Men
Fog And Drizzle
Sweep Oyer State
.Jiiag.'JKnitcd. ala«L Pnaamre-- for the-
.'Crnor to make an announce^
continued. If he does hot
run he is expected to practice law
in Austin at the end of hia term.
E'ormcr Attyi On. William Me-
Craw of Dallas was silent .on the
BY UNITED PRESS
Light rairrs, drizzle, fog or
cloudine** .prevailed over Texas
today except in .the Pecos valley
and South Plains of VV'cst Texas.
Fog was reported in the central
Democrats To Provide
Soldier Vote Affidavits
governor's race-on a quick trip, to
due to leave Wte
wqth light rains or drizzle .occur-
ring.’ •, ■' -^'r
Precipitation wad reported this
^■ •SPNed foVwithdrawal mor“‘nK «t DalJas, Fort Worth,
Lenrh and British troonv G»lvcston. Corpus Christ!, Bcau-
Syna and monl, Houston, Bro
We ft,I,u, it spoke, the Le-
Gelegalo, Hamid Bey
Christi,
3rownsville, Gain-
:'n<1 British troops
b"'r‘M are.fornier French Mam- CSVi[,e and DeJ Ri<?’
■g* Temperatures were near frees
■ the nvAr'’imperfections''Tng^Tait'nTgHt' in the Panhandle
dk U\'n u " ' lmP®rfectl*ns mg , last night in the Panhandle
„ '“Srtcr and predicted t,u‘ remained considerably above
Page i)
*0UND TOWN
, l:,,b .G»8'
[&ne‘*V0W '
, of
for a week-
ke’s the sec-
eUCwhere, Lowest reading was
at Amarillo with, 3|. Other low,
temperatures were 32 at. Guade-
lupe Pass. .33 at Pampa, 35 at
Clarendon, at . .Lubbock, „t
Lufkin and -39 ’ at Beaumont
Highest reading was at Brownr
villc with a recorded 60 degrees.
AUSTIN. Jan. 19. f|j,P) Officer*'
conducting the Democratic pri-
maries thin year will be supulied
printed affidavits to be' fHed hy
soldier* voting under the new pro-
vision that give* .thorn & vote
without a poll tax receipt. .
The.plan wks . announced by.
Democratic state chalrmun Harry
Seqy of Dallas at- a- meeting With
Democratic leaders from CentHfl
Texas here yesterday.,
Seay arso issued a. warning to
.persons voting on over age ex-
Vmption certificates that the-for-
mer .continuing certificates must
be renewed this- year *—q-f—
Two prospective candidalps for
governor atrended a "young Dcre-
oerata” dinner givten in connection
with the meeting .They wete Dr.
Homer P. Rainey, former presi-
dent of the University of Texas,
and Robert W.-Calvjrf of MilU-
brfl-o, (brroer speaker of the house
of representatives. < - - . — ,
Dallas. He
army soon,
Former house speaker Lee Sat-
terwhite announced gs a candidate
for the house. Sattcrwhite now
lives in Austin, If he is . elected
he will have the distinction of
having represented four separate
districts in the house. When elect-
ed before he lived «t Fairfield.
Panhandle and Odessa. He was
candidate for Lieutenant governor
last time, lacing a few votes of
forcing p run-ofi.
WASHINGTON, Jan 19 •UP*
Arlm. Husband ,E.. Kinimcl today
admitted he'objected to using ele-
ments of the Pacific.fleet for the.
defense of .Pearl Harbor.
The former commander of the
Pacific fleet told the Pearl'flar-
bor committee he- .considered his
primary mission in the Pacific
was offensive action in the event
of war.
He felt that ,the 14th’Naval dis-
trict and army forces in Hawaii
should have all the mean’s neces-
sary for defense, regardless; of
whether his fleet was in or oul q(
port.
Kiniinel said that, despite his
conviction that the Pacific fleet
strength should lie conserved *>r
offensive artlon, he made plan*
“to use ever, navy facility (hat
happened to be in Pearl Harbor
for the defense of Peart Har-
bor.’’
Kimmel pointed out that the
14th Naval district was under.
.under command of Rear ^,im.
Claude .0? Bloch, and that the
annjrrforws wrrb^orTfmaMci by
Lt. Gen. Walter C Short.
Kimmel argued that the com-
mander-in-chlef of- the Pacific
fleet, although concerned abo.ut
the. safet>’ of his. home bast,
"should not be concerned 'inimedi-
ately with the’ Hawaiian coastal
frontier.”
Rep John W. Murphy (D.-Pa.l
asked Kimmel about • intercepted
Japanese messages between the
Japanese consulate . in -Honolulu
By UNITED PRESS .
The Texas-labor pieture today boasted both dull and
bright spots. -
Despite the settlement in sight of oil labor differences
among Gulf coast plantB, more strike troubles were brew-
ing in the sfate. ° -
In Dallas, union employes of the Mosher Steel com-
pany waited for a vote count 6n whether they would j6in
in thy nationwide United Steel workers strike, and mem-
bers of the United Paper
LJC Semester To
Open On Monday
workers (ClOi served ulti-
matums on two firms.
The Fort Worth stockyard* re-
mained without animals today due
By UNITED PRESS
Steel mills over the coun-
try began banking furnaces
and laying off thousands of
workers today in prepara-
tion for the greatest strike
in the nation’s historv — a
mass walkout of 750,000
steelworkers.
A work, stoppage tn tbfe, baste
Industry appeared a certainty late
yerte-rdity when UIO President
Philip Murray said he "had no
choice" but to call the strike on
schedule at 12:01 a' m. Monday.
Elsewhere on the stormy re-
conversion scene:
.1 Steelworkers jumped the gun
In Pittsburgh, pa., and Pittsburgh,
Calif., walking off, their Jobs 52
hours ahead of the strike, dead-
line.
2. Hope for quick settlement of
the meat strike faded as govern-
ment-sponsored conferences end-
ed in a deadlock. A fact-finding
board prepared to begin public
hearings in Chicago
3. No attampt at negotiation was
reported m the five-day strike Of
200,900 CIO cjcctvlcal worker*
against General Electric. Westing-
house and General Motors' appll-
ance'dl vision.
4. Picket line skirmishes Were re-
ported between strikers snd non-
tlriker* in Kansas City, Ken., Las
Angeles and New Y'ork clty-
Adminlstration hopes for labor
peace were blasted yesterday
when the CIO accepted but the
iSee, Hterl Plant*. Page 2)
New Courjes, Activities
Will Mark New Session
in the continued strike of the
United Packinghouse workers
•CIO) and the strike, threatened
to spread to the coastal• area
2 Police Left
The spring semester at Lee Ju-
nior-college. L ginning Monday,
January .21, will be marked by-
special course offerings to" meet
the needs of Incoming students,
the resumption of many activi-
ties that war-time students could
Two For, Worth packing plant, WltHoUt AlT,
find no time for. and n
....... ~ Vri snlpmustr,.
and Tokyo prjor to the Dec
i.Ser Kimmel Wanted, Page 21
Promoter, In Jail,
Awaits His Bail
1 'HmlKon-Logiin
BILL >WKAW LEAVES
STAND UNDECIDED
DALI^A.S. .fan. 19. (I'.Ri— C'6|
W|lliam (Bill) McCraw, one-time
football star and former attorney
general of Texas, breezed out of
Dallas tsd«y after Breezing lif
Friday afternoon, refusing to
comment on-reports that he will'
-run for .governor upon release
from the 'army.
"You can't ever tell what will
happen in this, cotton-picking
country.” McCraw laughed. "I'm
counting nothing oqj and I'm
counting nothing in
r
BEVERLY HILLS, Cailf. Jan.'19
iUR»—Albert Devcrich, 26-yrar-old
promoter, waited In‘his Jail cell
today for his IJ-ycar-old heiress
•bride_tp bail him out on grand
theft and bogus .check charges.
Deverich surrendered .at—tbc
Beverly Hills police stale yester-
tftjts in ai
.Pre-medical, pre-law, pre-engi-
neering. business admipistrstion.
and liberal art, students all will
be able to' register for a full sche-
dule of Beginning courses requir-
ed’for their degrees . ■
- TEc Dranin course, which serv-
es also as the workshop for the.
Lee Curtain club, will be resumed
umjer the tutelage of Mr*. Lynn
O'Hagan, wiio has produced many
fine plays in the past, Pre-regis-
tration interest indicates a he;tvy
enrollment
Art, offered for, Ihe first time
sit' the beginning of. the fall se-
. mester, har proved so popular
that nine courses, instead of the
^orfflnal IJiree, JVill. be Scheduled.
In addition to freehand drawing,,
drawing and painting, and ’dd-
. sign, previously ' given advanced
(See Uf‘, Semester, ,l*ge 2)
were closed by pickets." but
were operating at slightly below
normal production ,
1 In Houston. M. M. Moore,
branch manager of the Swift and
Co. plant said AFL nmnlguumted
meat cutlets and butchers work-
men had notified him, they would
r"wt, «*uiver*es
after .Monday morning.
( .The ’ Lohghorh Roofing Prod-
’ nets; Inc, and the American
Paper Stock company were., the
paper firm* involved in the Dal-
las disputes over discharge of alx
men ■
A.strike of 15,800 Texas roast
slrelworkers loomed for Sunday
midnight and a “milk strike''
;Sec, Gulf ( nasi. Page 2) ...
Keys Or Clue
The mystery of the missing key
or who let tha air out of the
•ilt.e.xjiLr. tifca- ■ is-.oceupylwa-
Kaiser, Steel
Workers Agree
Pelly Gets S1.411
From Housing Body
day and was promptly booked on
the grand theft charge.
wi„n, „,U, WillWm» favors
,h«"L'l'oh ,,f "renames
o„rrtv T of T’dly has the
Mary
r ^ »°?nMh,n>f
r,,r«y to
‘ Kibor fi£
" t» r;;.h,n«f,,r Hnd «e“ie«
| Henry LV'"r *f rH'v oyalers
h 1* ud thr nl*ht
■'•Od is the ,1, , u lin* h*» «’«y
P""in" di, ’'*H‘ • ... "Frank-
'*0* rooftrr m»*
1 Lmnbin, p,h t, h“'' u’rr,,r-
miimJ’ urU' wcfll on
»ihe , . to<l“>’ «nd will go
•J Mr, J* '"hiorrow . . . Caut.
'1,111 bs - 7 ^Hord of Hous-
I *«rvile, h,lnd f°r the carv-
i»ting j.|L . ; a>'(i Gould tells
Othman Reviews Washington News Week
CPA Declares Rayon Nightgowns Are Non-Essential
brought
By Mrs. Lois Hendricks.
Mrs. Hendricks, also 26, said
Deverich borrowed f4,000 from
her of) the understanding they
would be mprried. But he eloped
last week with pretty Marilyn
Ga rlirnd. 16; heiress to a $2,500,000
real estale fortune.
Bail , wn* set yt $2,500. Another
34,0(10 bail was added on charg
iubiA*-.
gtiliir
- | 'go*'
that Deverich cashed * several ' tribution to the ejty
. A check for. «1,411.13
. h:i. ted do the Polly eftV
aiqn Friday night at,a rogi
meeting hy R. L. I/mg, execii-.
live secretory of the Polly'hous-
ing nnWroTtty,' as a rontribution
.to the cl|y In lieu of taxes which.,
the city *:ouM receive from prop-
erty utillwd for the housing pro-
jects. :
■ Jr .In the custom Qf the housing
authority to hiako qn annual con-
AMIUNtJTON, Jan. It__H P)—
Henry J. Kaiser, west roast in-
dustrialist and operator of (he
Fontana, Calif., *(M plant, to-
day signed a wage agreement
with the I nited Steel Worker*
i(IOl.
Kaiser annnunrrd his action
after he had CHVY President
Philip Murray eonferred at the'
White House with President
Truman. ,
Hr said he had accepted Mr.
Truman'* proposal for a steel
wage increase el rents an ‘
hour, which was rejeeled yestrr-
<|ay bj tkP Uflited Usaten Rfeel
< orp. ’.
the entire city- police department
today. Including CHy Marshal Ed,
Dickens, the patrolmen, the police
commissioner and any odd special
officers available.
• The police ear t* In operation
again wlth ’frcah air. In the tire*,
and the officers are not telling
this story today:
— Sometime after midnight, the
police ear was "tfut Of service" at
• Park's cafe. Police Officers Ray
Johnson and John Gray sal jupt
inside the cafe drinking coffee.
There wks a quiet' hissing sound
outside’ the building but nobody
paid attention
When the off Hers returned to
the car, the. Urea were flat and
the keys were missing Stymied,
they sat on the running board,
scratched their heads and told in-
terested spectators they needed no
help in worrying. They called the
police chief He joined them He
I'allcd the city superintendent. He
came down. Hg. called a mechanic.
Tlie niechanic phaned his wife.
After a few more telephone calls,
the car was back on patrol and
khe officers back on duly.
The keys Still are missing. The
17 spectators at the cafe dc-
acribed 17 different people, rang-
ing from a 10-year-otd negro boy
to an Irate drunk*.woman, letting
the air out of the tire*. One saw
the keys taken.
Stocks Close Today
WASHINGTON, Jan. 19. TP)
My special survey department in-
dicates today thHt In all Wash-
ington only two men are refrain-
ing from, snarling about some-
thing. *
The ailent ones are the senate
and house reading clerks, but
don't get the idea they're happy.
They're keeping their mouths
closed, (except when spraying
same with soothing unguents! 'so
their tonsils will be rested for
Monday’s ordeal.
Thar's "xvtfdit ’’tfrey "(mist read
live in Chevy Chase, Mo!, Where
(they even orate on the subjects
»l their dinner tables. They should
know better -'■<■
The eighth grade pupils of the
s'chool.
Chevy Chase
ed nbout the facts of eronbmic
ving learn-
life from their fathers, went on
strike for a Jk) per cent Increase
In their noon cejess tVorklrig con-
ditions otherwise, they told Ihe
school principal, were okayr
The capital's phone girls went
hack to work after a week's
Each one, he added as a kind of
afterthought, would last 30 days
That's what he said: 30 days.
Then there Is the subject called
"Inflation.” Washington Is getting
red-faced about that. Marrlner
Eceles, the big banking man, or-
dered Wall Street speculators to
pay cash for their slock begin
nlng Monday. He said cut tin.
off their credit might soften
Ijoom ■ ,
The eapital's home shortage,
long critical,
■worthless checks at Big Bear,
Cqlif. He will be arraigned Mon-
day, , .
'"Deverich thinks he's going to
Be balled out right away, but so
far no one ha* shown up with any
money." Police Chief Clinton H.
Anderson said.
ting
the
Big Crowd Looms At
Trade Groups Dinner
me commission called for bid*
on various equipment end mate-
rials and Approved e [Kill of prop-
erty owners to determine ,how
many are ready to sign paving
contracts for hard - surfacing
Streets fronting their property.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor F.<l Cleveland. Coihmisslon-
ers Andrei Vinson. A 0. Barber,,
O. O. Dorris. L D. William' »"d
George Dabney, City .Secretary
Naydene Bolmanskle and’City At-
torney-Shannon Morris.
his 'tiw.j f. • ’. Vic Oovia- ajoud History'* first combined
n l8rt he hniJ '! V. budget and statc-of-thr-unloh mm-
'*• when ‘9 Nash hia cage. This document by Presi-
dent Truman is expected to run
about 25000 word* or half the
length of a novel and If the
clerks sHp'jtny of It they do so
at their own [lerll,
It I* pleasant to listen to the
silence while they say nothing
whatever;' everybody else Is yelp-
ing. Take strike*. Tlie govern-
mental bias* hats are talking
about little else by day and by
plain. Many of these gentlemrp
|^.,?i,'“‘1 ,#8 his Ek*cx
>INr,D* in the
l ,or ,h" ,1(>'w
l"* * f«'*' hn<l »o
b«t thr Mr.0
*•' rfts,ri,' «*«in
“"T, who h». k. Mr*' Doyd M.
il u , " been in the Ito*-
k home nut at
getting bet-
argued at both end* of Pennsyl-
vania avenue. TH* airplane pi-
lots demanded ..flt'-'W « year for
flying airplanes aero** weans
Il even looked like the senate
had un (j)voluntary, strike on II*
hands, though Southern senators
insisted they were not filibuster-
ing against the 'President's Fair
Employment Practice bill. Sen.
Theodore G Bilbo, of Mi**., for
instance, said he had only two
speeches to make on Ihe subject.
The Joint chamber of commerce
was listed a* do*- dinner at San Jacinto Inn at 8
■ ifoflMiigr 'iiffeffSSfw;vyfir^»rwwo'y''Tr;dtfirRr^^
The Civil Production agemgL. at the laxgestfrauds ever to ad-
brought on howl* by declaring tend a meeting of that kind in
HLNABOR.
ayon nightgowns non essential
It announced later thHt night-
gown? mnybe were necessary, but
that they aeedn't beb uilt of
rayon.
The navy said It would spend
nbout $100,000,000 to atomllr *ome
battlosblp* next summer The
Atom Electric Co., opened for
business not far away from the
navy yard, > Hamburger went to
$t a pound In the new black mar-
(See Othman Review*—Page t) F.
this area,
At least 400 person* are expect-
ed to attend as every business-
man In the area I* invited.
It was announced that County-
Commissioner Hugh May'wd|l pro-
vide two ferry boat* at Lynch-
burg Monday night to help han-
dle traffic ex per ft'(I at, the din-
ner. - - . ;.
It will start «t 6 pm, and res-
eryptions may be made until 9
n,m Monday.
A ponny mv# J
ain't a penny
earned ihsio
days, uniats
you kin find
tom# way io
hid* if from
fht fas collec-
tor.
Amer Rolling Mills
.Allied'Stores . .,
American Ttatliato/ ;
American Telephone
Anaconda Copper
Amer. Maracaibrr
Berkley and Gay
Bethlehem Steel . ,
Chrysler Motors
Cities Service :........
Commercial Solvent
Consolidated Aircraft ..
Curtlsi-W right . ......
Du Pont ................
Fciton
Electric Bond and Share
.. ............ . licnctHL. Electric —........
By Glin Miller General Motor*
Graham Paige .. j).
Greyhound ...
Gulf Oil
Ho, LI. and Power Cb. ..
Houston Oil .....
Hudson Motor* ...,,.,.
Humble Oil .....
Jones and I/tughlin .......
Kroger Grocery .........
Louisiana Land
I/imbcrt ..................
Loriliard .........
Murray Corporation
^ -M'.
.Still
. iftv
191S
47'-.
Courtesy Citizen* Valional Rank t Trust Co.
Naaft. Kclvinator. ........23'4
National Dairy ............ Sfl
North American Aviation list
Ohio Oil ........... ... . K't
Packard Motors ______, Jl'i
Pure Oil . ............>.-23'*
Republic Steel . .............33%
Simrpt and Dohme ........23%
Sinclair ......- ...... . 20 »
Southern Pacific .... . 62%,
Sperry Corporation .........3C,
Standard Brands 40
Standard Oil of Indiana .. 43'i
•Standard Oil of New Jersey 67
Sunray Oil .......... * 9
Texas Corporation
24%
32
. 6%
169
21"
-Xid*w*ur..<kjr.|«0!r»tki«-
...4»
76
13%
33’.'
(U%
67
31%
50
47%
47%
hH
55
31%
20
T-P. Liiod vind Tfust
, T-P Coal and Oil
United -Aircraft ,..
United Corporation ..
United Gas ..........
United .States Steel ..
Walworth ..........
Western Union
White Motors .....,.
Wilson Company .
Cotton...............
Hayes .......!,
Premier
8t. Regia ............
i m
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 19, 1946, newspaper, January 19, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1099971/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.