The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 10, 1946 Page: 1 of 10
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EATHER
, , t-rif N—Cloudy. oe«a«h>noI rota to-
Friday- Colder. Maximum
;!ItrrdV. "7 degrees; mlnlmum *»»»
'* ii degree*.
0J)e Bail!) 3un
DELIVERED DAILY
ANYWHERE IN THE TRCCITIES
FOR 75c PER MONTH
L: 28 NO. 177
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1946
FIVE CENTS COPY
lew Suspect Nabbed
s Chicago Officers
incover Fresh Clues
1CAGO. Jan. 10. —(U.P.)— Police arrested Prank Hol-
,d. 16. a dishwasher, early today when, they found him in
‘alley near Where Suzanne Degnan, 6, was kidnaped, slain
d her dismembered body hidden in four cesspools.
Holland was arrested, when he attempted to flee after
lice told him to halt. In his room, detectives found a
wspaper from which a picture of the slain girl had been
t Holland denied any connection with the case.
The arrest came as" police, „ , : '.
wn*.stolen some time., ago from
her home It hart been used by
roofers working on* the house.
tempted to fit a shiny new
or key into the complex
orU„.viit of clues in' the kidnap-
nvMtigfttort must find evi-
uifficient to place'charges
isin«t two janitor-suspects bc-
>c \ p. m: today or they will
by court order
State - Attorney William J.
M(ihy announced today that he
not have sufficient evidence
this time” to seek an in-
lc"lmcnt-of anyone now being
lil l>v pofiee.
"iolioe were seeking a former
of a nursery near the
grain home who had been an
natc oh a hospital for the In-
w search was started after
Margaret R, Perry, the ntn>s-
school operator, identified a
dcr which may have been used
the ki'tnap-slaying. She said
was sure It was one which
At the same time Mrs, Perry
vealed she had discharged a- male
employe of the . nursery about
three, years ago because he Mid-
questionable, habits. She said he
ortee-had been a mental patient"
at the Mantono, III,, state hospi-
tal but hail beon discharged as
cured.,
Detective Sgt. Jack Hattrahan
said the key unlocked the door to
tile laundry room of a northsidc
apartment building where the lit-
tle kidnap victim was cut t<j pieces
by a maniacal killer who fried to
rape her.
The body was.found in four parts
in as many cesspools. Only the"
arms were,, misstrig.
TJhe key. Hanrahan said, was
among 21 others in the possession
of Desere Smet, 35-ycar-old former
(See, Chicago Police, Page '!)
hinese Factions Give
ease-Fire Orders
ONE OF THE GREATEST MAX-HINTS—in
Chicago history is underway for the .kidnaper-.
slayer of six-year-old Stnaltne Degnan, shown,
above,, whose dismemb? ri-dhodv .was, found, in
•ewers near her home. The parents of the child,
Strike Tension Eases
As Settlements Loom
In Two Industries
Texas Phone Service
Curtailment Due To
Start Early Friday
Mr. ami Mrs. James K. Deguao. also are shown
above as is a picture of (he father as lie made a
dfcgnmtic radio appeal to the kidnaper 'before the.
. cJiitrtV-hody was Pmnrt, -efnfr mat in natHmTmt
photot. ■
»> UNITED PRKSN
. You had better not put of/ today's telephone calls un-
til tomorrow.
The way the telephone situation is"* shaping up in
Texas, there will be a heavy curtailment of phone service*
starting Friday when members of the Southwestern Tele-
phone Workers union start res|>ectmg the picket lines the
Association of Communications Equipment workers union
is expected to toss tip anmnd most of the major Texas ex-
changes of Southwestern
Bell Telephone Co.
Clyde L, Stewart. South-
western Beil's nprtheqst Texas
commercial Miperintendeht, said -
-jU—UaUivi fh it l>;s umiipiiny "rra—-
UNGKISG, Jan. 10. •
cessation of hostilities in
iaa's civil war was announced
'a?" by-communist and govern-,
at representatives after four
of peace conference with
George C. Marshall, Prcsi-
;-,t Truman's special envoy.
announcement, made jolnt-
by Gen. Chang Owing, govern-
representative, and com-
nlst Gen Chou En-Lai, was au-
rized hv Generalissimo Chiapg
(-Shek 'and .Mao Tsc-Tung,
-hiang Sets
ut Plan For
•bezaliiation
UNGKJNG,. Jan. 10. —<t.R> —
craliss.mo Chiang Kai-Shek
ay announced a four-point pro-
m for restoring China’s politi-
frecdoni. equalising political
tics and promoting democratic
•ernment. ,
% announcement was‘made at
opening of the political con-
ktive council between nation-
government and communist
i' representatives. • ......
e generalissimo’s program:
1 -People1* freedom-- For all
pie, (o enjoy all the freedoms,
inti-freedont laws- and regu-
>ns will be abolished or revis-
» All political parties shali bp
*rt and may conduct open ac-
tio* ivithm the limit of the
Sclf-goverhment shali be
Wotert from the bottom up.
prisoners, ex-
head of- the communist party' iri
China.
The order directed immediate
end of hostittties; stopping of
troop movement except south
of the Yangtze river and in
Manchuria areas ,nof involved
in the conflict; restoration of
communications; and the setting
up of a Commiinist-Xatirtnalist-
F. S. Commission to carry out
♦he peace terms.
Copies of the order were issued
Immediately to all units of the
regular army, militia and jrrpgu-
lar and guerilla , units of both
sides, It was expected, however,
there might be some delay in get-
ting the order to troops in remote
areas.
Marshall's committee had boon
in an apparent deadlock last night
and was hot scheduled to meet
again until late today. However, a
special meeting was called today
In advance of tjie opening Of the
poitUafl consultative codncil and
the Sjp-eement was reached.
The communists and the Kuom-
Jntang had been in conflict off
ahd on for nearly-19 years.
In 1927 Generalissimo Chiang
began a, purge of communists in
the Kuomintang afjcr moving the-
capifai to Nanking. A few months
later the • communists revolted
Thomas W. Moore Annexation
To Boss Banquet Injunctions
Are Granted
Ticket Sales Committee
Sets Meeting Tonight
Thomas W. Moore, a member <Tf
the-board‘of directors of the Tri-
CttieS Chamber of Commerce, has
accepted the assignment as- mast-
er of ceremonies at the joint din-
ner of,.the junior and senior qham-e
bi-rs of commerce at San Jacinto,
inh at 6:30 pan. Monday, January
21. ,
A program (hat will include inr
stillatioft of officers of the. sen*
ioi group, awards of the outstahdjA
ink young and “old" men's honors
tot 1945 and a talk by Frank (V
Smith, Houston public utility offi-
.cML. wiM naed,.,&master, of ...ccifc—.....
monies who can keep "the' ball LJ * I I I
roiling,'.; according to Manager ///Qf7/C7/705
Jack Jacobs, (and we though^ *
Moore was that man." ‘ ‘" A «
Moore had o^her ideas, but they f» / v I / * O»
xVere voted down, and the indus-
trial relations manager of tile Bay-
town .plant, of, the Humble Oil
and Refining company will wield
the-gavel'at the\ dinner that may
HOt STON, Jail. 10. d'.Hl — In-
junetions forbidding eitlier !*ei-/
(y or Goo# Creek to annex Hay-
iown and eyrtain adjacent areas
were granted today by District
Judge W, W. Moore.,
Attorneys for Belly and Goose
Creek said they would appeal.
The ease is. expected to prove a
test rtf tin- power of a home-rule
city to annex, without a Voti; of
the people, water districts which
exeiTbie many of the corporate-
powers of cities.^
Kidnaper
IliKh-
Foi- a period of eight years, they attract 300 residents of the “Iri
■.» i „ j ___i r'ifinJ amn and’ thpir wlws
maintained a red army" and
Soviet form of government in .sev-
eral north central China prov-
inces.
In. 1936 peace negotiations were
opened bctw*eon the;Kuomintang
and the communists and only
sporadic outbreaks occur red
thereafter.
Hostilities flared aflew after
Japan's surrender when Chinese
government forces began taking
over territory which the commun-.
ists had taken from the Japanese.
All political
i»“mTiS^mmedru^godv- Republican Scores U.S.
meBt action on the program _ .. , _ _ ,
Policy In Far East
the program
. urged the delegates to work
rtotvai
"toward the goal of achieving
tonal unity. /
Citlcii area and their wives
Jacobs announced that the tick-
et sales committee of I. J. Rie(er„
Don Shepherd, Walt * Baumbach,
Doli Brpnson, Dr. V. K. Rogan, E.
E. Wainseotk E; C. ClcVclund, and.
H. A. Goldstone will meet in the
chamber of , commerce office ' at
7:JO p m. today to plan a sales
drive.
The dinner wtjll be open to ev-
ery new member Of the Tri-CIU'dV
Chamber of Commerce, to every
former member of the Baytown
and Goose Creek Chambers of
Commerce, to—every, mtmber-of^
the junior chamber of commerce,
to every business man of the area
ana to every interested (iltizcn jn
the area.
The price of tickets Is the pf>iee '
W. Moore, Rage .
-0UND TOWN
■ Tri-Citira; Tho iBMWt wadt s
1 corrections made: The radio
(visor's salary is *180 and not
* month . . And the "exceyi-
noise clause ih the new anti*
law covers the shooting of
?p«kw* ... . If you tton'r tfe-
. tt yell , , . you know liptv
■n<1 out .... , i,
ty Marshal Ed Dickens has in
powussipn three girls' bicycles
'vert; recovered by city po-
■ Hed like for someone to
s;y and claim them . . . Wal-
must feel out of piaee
up the ,eoffee checks . . .
«alter Herickell make a
‘ reporter . . H. G. Bailey has
ron* ,n the fire than anv-
. Ik-puty Sheriff H. C.
* a jumpy without his
V"1' ■ Miss Carrie U.u
»trol|* across the street to
•ehool W. W, Hunt re-
Mibscribrtif oh the local
DALRAS, Jan. 10, -<r.P> Charg-
ing America's "slipshod" Asiatic (Nee Thomas
policy as almost an invitation for
Russia to dominate China, Dr. ■
.SSSAS5J»2S».C«I(* Wants To Know
tnsl withdrawing support from
nine
_______Pi iPPKfiifcH
close to losing the Var in Osin af-
China's -nationalist'"government
America stands itapge
n Os
rnimly
ter winning the war with Japan.
Dr." Judd told members of the
community course at MeFarlin
auditorium last night "We fought
Japan to prevent an outside na-
tion from dominating China." he
said. "ArcTvc now to shirk our In-
ternatianai duty, withdraw and
permit another nation Russia—
to dominate 450,000.000 Chine#?"
Legality Of Session
AUSTIN. Jan. fO. G'-JB Gov.
Coke R, Bteyenson aald J^d§yLtiiitt-.
If thc sfiitt' supreme court sbould «
declare, the session of the . Texas
Semite i.onvened ycste|dhy to be a,
legal session lie would submit his
appointees for confirmation by litc
Some lolks nut in the
lamls-Croshy area are looking
for a kidmqii r—,A dastardly fel-
low whh niies ehhlnrofomi to
ryider his vietiins , helpless be-
fore carting them' away.
To dale this fellow (|ierhaps
two) has carried off over . 100
anesthesUed individuals, birth
male and . female, without a
squawk ‘to sprrad tin- alarm
among the alert residents. Au-
thorities have been qnahie tq‘
recover any of the kidtiap vic-
tims, either dead nr alive . . .
and no one has reported reeeiv-
ing a raiisom note,
In fact, faemerw aqd poultry-
men are getting' mighty tirl-tl of
not being able to count their
rhiekens even after they, hatch,
let alone before . .. and they
are pondering methods to trap
this particularly euuuing thief
who seems to ■ know all ahold
all the secret alarm devices the.y
rig. up- to trap him in the hen-
hotisr. "One farmer has prone
ised the “chicken kidnaper" a
double load of"dtiek-shnt if he
eVer does get' liis "sights" lined
on him. '
Dr. Horeczy To
Head Humble Club
Olafson And Stark Are
Other New Officials
Dr, Joe Horeczy wn* elected
president of the Baytown Humble
club at the srpiuaQfclection'of of-
ficers held last night at the Hoy'-
toyvn Community* house.- He suc-
ceeds John Sylvester.
I,. D. Olafson ii the new vice
president, who succeeds W, Travis
Porter. , ' - .
A. R. Stark is the, new soefe*
tary-treaiurer He sueepa'ds Dr.
Horeczy, who held that [>ost last
■ ye#
fflommittee chairmen elected at
the meeting included Weldon H.
....Williams, -cjitetUiinoient; ^Dqc"
Mann, r'jathletics, Miss Jessie
Humphrey,*. hoti8e;‘" John—R.- Bald-
jvihi membtrship: J. R.“Barsa(bii.
by-law’s, pnd J. M. Manuel, ■ {fi-
nance. ' ,
Tribute was paid the out-going
president »and Ins iisstteiat;.-> ioi
their splendid'.work of the" past
year, particularly Tor the increase
in membership due principally to
the efforts of Baldw in. •
A called meeting will he Held in
the near- fiifUra.;4or map plans 1«*
the annual membership drive to
start February, 1. '' *
UNO Assembly In z;
First Meeting
Deleqafes Hope To
Finish Work In Month
'Brass' Muzzling
Army'Newspapers,
Soldiers Complain
Troops Hold Protest
Meetings Around ©lobe
ognlzes its* obligation , to,, provide
essential service;" He t-mphasin-d
that Bell J‘yvou1<S do everything
to" Miiimtui. that service ” .
Til* company has absolutely no
dispute vviUi.thc STWU, Stewart
»al<t
Ray Hackney, president of the
Texas ptanl division, N't'WV,
•aid there .wax .heaVy. s.viitpalhy
for the Wenleii* Eleeirin cm- ,
ployex' M EW; union. If wax
generally tieiieved no member of
five teiephone vvorkerx organir-
algoii' wiudii violate the At EW
piek.-t tlnex, wherever they arc
established.
Stewart released a list of pihcei
.affected-immediately fey the West-
ern Electric work stoppage, but'
• deciih'ed vto predict -how many
puke! lines would,he estublished.
From William M. Wallia, Fort
Worth. Texas rppr-heatannv ;pf dors not to print lettvrs or stories
Ihc striking ACKW tome thFmr-.. which criticized “anyone in Ml-
notineemcm that up|iroximatciy thority '
• 450, workers were affeetetl by the Protrut meeting* were report-'
Western Electric move in the ed front, all 'quarter* of. the
sl ate Ho said workers hod walk- K|n|lr, \ Vroitoxel’ wax made by
ed off lire juJ)"»rTtgTT5g"SKirA7r- • di-monxl ra1or*Td-
toniO " Houston, Austin T'oit American, oeetipa
1 to forn
By FMTED BRENS
Enlisted men on two Raetfic
etttlons of tiie arnu^JUbw-spapi-r
Star* and Strips * oWfHnnett'.tiv
day that they were being muzzled
in their coverage of the worldwide
soldier protest agninst denjohlUz-
filipn polictea ' '
' A formal,statement by the en-
listed personnel of the Tokyo
Star* and Stripes claimed that
'open preemre against them.by of-,
ficers had changed thy; paper into
a ''house organ for the war de-
partmcht'
The Honolulu Star* and Htrljics
■jBtuff said" they hitd received
Worth. QuanahT Victoria Waco,
•• Beaumont. Corpus Chriati. Galves-
ton. anil Amariliy. and ; •
,111- other smaller points where
they were installing exchange'
cquipiiiioit 4 - '
Other . eitie*- where' * Western
^Electric Wbrkers alreaVly had quit
or planned to quit included Iliils-
, boro, I'erreli. I Malta Waxah.iehlv..
Goliad. °l*ecOS. Odessa He
.steady. Freepdrt Abilene, Tempi
Paris, Sherman-. Laredo, MeAlle
Aransas Pass, Getting-* Selma,
Green Bayou, Santo and Kaufman.'.
S*.n Antonio may jump the gun
and establish picket lines today
Willis indicated but rotMit of the
picketing Wfasii t expected to begin i
until Friday.
rnrp-
Texas Senators
‘Marking Time'
I-ONPON. Jan 111 d I'i ‘ F|fty-
orie Linttoil Nirtious toduy formally
inaugurated man y latest attempt
and perhaps hid last opportunity
to prevent future wars in the,
Atomic World
-. At 4 |).m.' tfieTifsT U7TF> general
assembly meeting was called" to
order In Central hail near Weal-
mlnstci Abbey—Prime Minister 'yMti i*T
Clement Attlee delivered - the for- <jr, •«,, Tuesday, and .served nolle
m^l Opening address, - on tne governor that they were
iJmt night King George ‘VI told (n session
1 j,,,' Q,-li.y^f(.s »| ii regal pel,-mi^ *.....go*.i;innr. .U,s.,l4*~i to—rnfir*
' lanquet in ' Si Jnmrat paia
AUSTIN. Jan To, d'p. Texas,
senator^ waited in adjournment
tottay until they could reconvene
toxpas.x on the appolntrqcnta of
Coke R. Stevenson
to xp
Gov
senators achieved
Piy*. a/u-r having
mat
mwnfiKT-
Aineriean , oreti[i«liiiu forcex he
rejtrteted to forme/ enemy ter-
ritory;
High officer! of the European,
headquarters-,in Frankfurt called
a meeting of* Gi spol<c»men and
newspSper men to reread the
grlevanees aired by a crowd of
tnon- than B.OOO troop* which tried
to -torm Gen. Joseph T Me-
Narney's headquarter* Ijiat, night.
Thc’Tokyo Stars and Stripes
statement claimed that the paper
had b*-en forded "to delete, dis-
tort and play 'down news to serve
persona! an*l ptofcHsion.il interests
Of the army hferorehy; and in
nuiiv."instance* offtqers in* gen-
eral", "
Everywhere * the protesting
(See, Bra** Milizling. I'Mf'H.
French, Yank Soldiers
Clash In Marseille
I’ARIS; Jan 40. d I'' The French
,urc*s agency reported today that
80 French and American soldiers
battled with knives and* fists iri
MnTsctihs hurt flighty
The French dispatch said (he
‘.bailie started -when "k group" "(
nttseked a ,|fiviiuvn.., Trie r i
Boidiers dr^ended the civilian, and
» free-fpr-ftlt developed
Telephone
Tie-Up Is
Imminent
Meat Packing And Steel
Industries May Avert
Scheduled Walkouts
By i mted ntSM
Gave mine tit lubor offici-
als admitted new optimism
today in attempt to Avert
seheduled- walkouts in the
steel and meat packing in-
dustries but feared a nation-
wide telephone paralysis
within .the next 24 hours.
With .'’.69,000 V g. workers nl-.
-iTTtttr Idle And another 2,000.000
' threatening strike action, the ma-
jor tlevclopmcntb ihaped up «g
follows:
1. Striking installation workers -
said they jvould set up picket line*
tomorrow around T75 telephone
exchange* fronj coast to roast.
Members of the National Federa-
tion of Telephone Workers union
have pledged to respect the lines. '
2. (TO and I". N. Steel < orp.
. offieial* were In resume nego-
tiation* today after ike govern-
ment reportedly agreed to price
Increase* of *4- to *5 a ton to
help the corporation meet union
wage demand*. About 70IHKW.
xleelwoffcer* are slated to strike
Monday. ... . ,
An- uhunnounyjqfi pri.ee rcjjct,
offer wa* made latfo of tbc big,
meat porker* whie* government
offieial* hope will prevent a "strike
of .moeu AFI. and CIO meat-
workrtrs, , scheduled for Wednes-
day " ' • ,
4. Members pf the General, Mot-
or*'fact-finding panel expected to
submit, their recommendation* tv
President Truman today for set-.
tUng ».*trike-s»f 175,000 CIO aoto"
workers t ■ ■
- 5 Non-dial telephone- service
wa* »u*|a'nd*rd in Washington
when'3.000 operators quit work to
attend a "corttimiou* session.*"
■ meeting called by the Washington
Telephone Traffic itnion over loeal
grievance*
Federal conciliators worked fev-
erishly In lust-minute aUempta to
(Nee, National Strike, Bsge 2)
No Tie-Up Of
Local Phone
Service Seen
Tri-fittoo-telephone user* were
Teiiihltled todoy hy Tt. 44,111101,------
disetriet manager of Nouthuext-
ern Axsoelatrtl Telephone Co.-
that:
1. faxal phone xerviee i* not
expected ‘to la* Impaifed or rt‘-
strirted by tie-up* ill Houston
and other major exchange* " be-
ginning Friday.
2. I sing distance rail* w hieli
must ilear through thr Houston
exchange or other major ex-
change* wUl he taken and every
eftort made to. "clear ihem."
However, it is likely that only
“death" message* oml hi|h.j»tii.
—- rrrttVTKTls esn "he rleafej.ltirouKh
senate "within 10 mijiute*
Until:the KCKsmn
’Stovcnsoh indicated
shorhit the names."-
held talhl.
he will not
Carver School Bids Let
Project Will Cost About $300,000
The J. W, Bateson Construction
company of Houston today had
been awjtded a 'contract by the
hardR yvrobable Creek, Indc'p^d^ School district
KgiaiB0^|1y0UngHH°?- jlndor-senior hih"^'.c'h.ml "building m iumi' Nliienls
i»- * An automobile . . . He s Juniof mi ■ * , j I incoln with the building will be a com
^sarrft,r» • J -"«s **&-***»*
!"*!> <’»'• tilde**' she is alons The nrojcct. Including the land
public address system that will
hot be Installed.
The building will be of bre k
and tile constrtictlon. and will be
"a combined school for elementary
school, junior and f senior, high
I n connect Ion
Texas May Expect
Snow And Rain
proverbial crHnb^rrv will rrwft wbout thW 'W^fnes *■■■"* ■■■*•' Wodxff (:!oti^>rWeiitfter prevailcii
* cranb<,rry mer- avalhtblrt wtH ewst woo « * ^ nr*!, one* were hit rejected ' : ulav,.d havo.. ov,,r ' K of T-XBj, JLV. a|.
Winter Floods
Hit Southland
By I NITEI) I1 It ESS
ffteftef fyom incessant rains that
had forced river* in tlje Siuth out
of their banks and accounted f(>r
at least 22 dead and millions pf
dollars worth of property, crop and
livestock damage., was promised
Thursday with a forecast of deal -
ing’ skies and-cooler weather,
Flopd waters that had Inundated
thousand* of rich acre* of lowland
■were: receding in some serRnns..
but the death toll whs placed at
eight person* In Tennessee**!* )rf
Arkansas, six In Kentucky, Missi-
ssippi, and Georgia. They e*ti-
m<U-Hi that h( least *5d ’ families
were homeless in Tennessee, Guor-
and Mississippi.* and thut, sonu
.jtreat ppportun'-
■ice. He retalnd*
for world sefvte
them that their victorious; rm-
r»n*
t mjt (bey faced 'it •
it..
sition carried heavy obi
well a* rights."
Hvtul-Henri Npaak, jjmml faced
Belgian foreign mirfTsTiTF-klio nnft
,vvas a power in !lie YTcHguc nf .Nn-
tioq*, appeared a unnoiinpttt/pre-
meeting choice for election a*]o*-
seynbiy president Npaak. iepr#;
M-uting one qf the little nation*
sat\ prominently a't King George'e
leftv during the state banquet”
Dclegates hoped to coinpiete the
task* of e*tnblHhlng~UNl’) urgini-
zation* and machinery -wiihin
four weeks.
ment when presented wittj tile n>
tlee. ’■*
•The senntors decided to whit 10
days,before attempting to proceed
without formal submission of a
-list by Stevenson " Should the guv-
nor, noted ftp- hi* "calcvilftl ions,"
some requiring much time, change
bis mind and file The names' l.t.
Hov John Bert "Smith could reas-
semble < he hefy on 24 hours,1 no-
ttn ‘
D\k KILLED. THREE III ItT
IN ( Alt-TRl ( K < ItANlI
MOUNT VERNON, Jan 10. »t'.F
- Boh- Uoy I'ugh wit* killed In-.
Bluntly and Misses Margie Orurt
and Fay Gilbert, high school girls,
and tfuck Morris were surldusly
injured , when the car in widen
they were riding eollldtd with ant
army truck. The accident occur-',
red, Tuesday night. #
HI NABOR
_ -Several, FlTnciMBca-h
"t'ii Jiv kitives ant! duggera before J other rti-htwr*
poitr* At*rr«t*rt
Ifrtrrv
is id. It did . i
any -American*
the Blspatch
• stati
patch-
iet her
S. Istnu dlstatier call* In Cros-
by, Highland* and Mopl llel-
vieu wilt lie handled ft* usual.
Stocks Close Today
'Joiirtftsy Clilten* National Bank St Trust (4s
,Amer. Rolling Mills
. 31H .
Nash Krtlvintor ........:
Aiiled stores " 1 ,
. 50 ‘ »
National Dnirr ' .V.
r'i7\
American Radiator'
; **ft
North, American Aviation
14 Ik
American Taiephone
Ohio Oil
22 N
AHaeonda Copper *
47%
Packard Motor# ...
11 *t*
A mer Mnrirabo /
Pure Oil
23' i
Berkley .and Gay
." 5*i
Reed Roller Bit
33
Hethh.-hem Steel
.' 101 ' .
Republic'.Stenl .... .....
34 V
Chrysler Motor* •
13* L
Shaipe and Dohme .......
IS <4
Cities Service -...........
31
Sinclair .v,»
20'k
Commercial Solvent
24'.
Slteily
61
'FrmsnildiKed Airrraft- .
-33 j*
Southern Pacift**: 'v-un-i;;
60's
purtlsi!-Wright “ .
.Sperry Corporation
I'm P">*t '
t90R
Standard Brand* ..... —
46%
Eaton .
(Mi1*
Ktnmlard Git of Indiana
44%
Elei’tijc Rond and Bliary
,1,. XJ’.
Standard OU of New Jersey
6U
Elertrle Power and Light
iSH
Sunray Oil
. s'*
El Paso Natural Gb* !.
... to
Texas Corporation .......
. 61H
Fteeport Sulphur ..........
51
Texas Gulf Sulphur .......
wrik
By Olin MIHsr
ri p vJ'ftn,,nK pictures qf the
n . memorial exercises
, *,'t 'hem by leaving
1 lh' high school
< phone
( want tq hear, the Ruby,
-I i* ii,011 ,rl° »t I-ee High
Friday night, and don’t
ticket, you may be
'."J. one at thb ticket ex-
‘i. Lhr, B,k* Stall . . ■ But
' ^ *'< kr l sale. ,
The Bateson bid n» general con-
tractor was 1218,490 and was the
(low of seven. These bids ranged, a*
high as $2«7.|>O0.
An ’additional bid of *4.300 for
Sidewalks and $5,56* Urf fence was
- tdoed. ' j ■ ,
The Watson Plumbing company
of Houston wasv awarded the
plumbing on a low bid of $21.4 .1
The Gulf Elertrle company ot
Houston was awarded the electric
contract ,oT <10,457, Iras H,«W for "com pint,
because Of their excessive cost.
The board cut the size' of the pro-
ject to stay within, the projected
tont. /
Overall bld« Hfnduttt trr 12WA.278;
Land work, Including covering of
earthen tank* on the eampas, »nd
cost of the land will brie'
project to hear $300,000. I He
building should hr rt'ndy for tba
next school term Thc rontfactor
asked for, 230 working day* to
i. (he work.
Rising waters still played havoc
with communication* and- trans-
portation In the affected stoles.
DEMOBILIZATION PROBE
ORDERED BY COMMITTEE
WASHINGTON, Jan, to. d'.Ri ‘
The senate military affairs com-
mittee today appointed a subcom-
mittee to conduct a public inves-
tigation of the demobilization
* prTl loVr-rsy. „ / :
over qiueh of Texas today, nl-,.
though a few points along the-up-
per Red river reported clear skies
at dhybreak. / ;;
Winds were rcpor'.ed working
around to the northeast. A* a rule
northeasterly and easterly winds
dp not bring fair weather.
Light snow was repotted foiling
at some points tn Texas today and
more wa* forecast. Light snow
wa* seAn nl Amarillo, Clarendon,
Midland and Wink ihi# morning.
You won't bo
* • r y opt to
qit your bock
to tho woH If
you keep your
thouldor to tho
whool.
..Gonerut Electric
ii,, t., i' Motor *
Graham Paige
Greyhound .....
Gulf Oil .........
Ho. U. and Power Co.
Houston Oil .
Hudson Motor* ......
Humble Gil
Jones and Lau^hltn ....
Kroger GroOery ..l....,
Ijouisiona lAnd ■
Lambert ................
Ijnrillard ... . ..... .. • .
Murray Corporation ...
-Tidewater Corporation
T-P Land and Trust .
T-P Cool apd Oil . . ..
Uniter Aircraft ......
United Corporation ..
l/nited States- Steel
Wal worth
Western Union
White Motors
Wilson Compo
Cotton Up 2 l
Hayes «>••»•••
Premier
Bt, Regli
13 S
.. 16
!! 391f
.. 4\
'
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 10, 1946, newspaper, January 10, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100074/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.