The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 10, 1946 Page: 7 of 10
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DAY, JANUARY i01
USE
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• MATTRESS FACTft
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;FCOND SECTION
Gtfje ^ailp jSun
-THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1946
PAGE SEVEN
1
elebrated Artist Trio To Appear Here Tomorrow Night
CIVIC GROUP
TOSPONSOT
PROGRAM
'.- j 4 V ’ 1 ' r-
Three celebra.ted artist soloists
Trinity Church
Officers flamed
Rhodes, building fund. H A. Gar-
ner midp the treasurer** report
and Mr*. G. A. 'Lillie the nomin-
ating committee's report,
Confederate Veteran
Only One At Reunion
KYLE, Tex, O' Veterar
X , . . , . uasi cnecK si
Confederate Army still Miold ,ivin_ in e,,,,
ml reunions at Camp Ben *
1m
i (Jornllo
Ruby Speneer Lyon
EVERYONE IS PHOTOGENIC
WITH SKILLED PHOTOGRAPHY
To Prove*
-This . . .
We Make This
SPECIAL
OFFER
Good for a limited time'
[your daughter (infant or.grown! is difficult to
lotograph and you've never had a really good pic-
|e of her . bring her in for a Marshall Portrait.
I
We will make one of ourYery besT8"x10"
(TRAITS
THE REGULAR
$8.95 SUPER DELUXE
ned and Satin-finished for..................
With Beadtiful Folder Free!
$r95
5
OR
JR REGULAR
' x 7" PICTURES
FOLDERS
3
for
$1175
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
. “ ..'a :■ ' '
MARSHALL STUDIO
At Home Furniture
p W. Texas
Goose Creek
will be presented in the Rjiby
Spehcer Lyon Trio program at.
8:15 p.m. Friday i If the Robert 6.
. .Lee High school auditorium.
The program will be the second
in a series of four to be offered
this season under auspices of the*
Tri-Cities Civic- association.
Miss Ruby Spencer Lyon, colo-
ratura soprano, Is from New York,
Miss Jennie Gaudto, violinist, is
from Chicago, and Ejnar Krantz, Ejnar Kranlz
plniio accompanist, and an artist -i , _
soloist in his own right, is from * "■ "
New York STATION IN CIXM OS ~~
g^vK^^n^ CHICAOO A radio sta-
iawski’s “Oberlasa" (Mazurka>; l‘°" in ‘hc e£u'is h,MrTn Ucens-
Wlenlawski's - "Romance" (2nd f b> FederaI Communicn-
Movement from Concerto in' D tl<ms Com™*s'°"
Minor); end Brahms' "Hungarian The University of Chicago has
TAXES PAID 100 P. Veterans of
New officers and delegates to WoKLAND, Wyo d pi Wash- ,he ,
the. annual diocesan Council were ,lkil! cOUnty Treasurer A. I- Pear-
elected at the annual parish meet- S0I) r,.1M)fU prol*.rtv taxes in McCulloch, near here hut -, mis
ing of Trinity Episcopal church. the county for mt were paid up )«* but m#n *'« able to at-
L. J_ Weller, R. R. Zierlein and loo per cent, with no delinquen* - tc-nel. ■
Walter K. 'Unscott were elected to tie* • He .is Gen-William Banks of
three-year terms on th<- vestry
Holdover vestrymen jure W. H,
Barber, George T, Atkins. Ray .
Spear. J A Rhodes, and. L. A.
Lovering
After election of the new mem-
bers, the vestrymen named the
following officers; Rhodes, junior .
Warden; Spear, treasurer; Lover-
ing. clerk; Linscott, treasurer.
Barber was appointed senior 'war-'
den by the Rev f* Walter Hcnek-
•II, rector
Horner C. Wilson was .elected
to a- two-year term on the board
of vestrymen to succeed Russell
Vennwho resigned.
Delegates to the diocesan council
which Will be held at Trinity .
Dance." all famous vioiln-selee- been fiutnori7ejI_teu^LJllR;tULv«fe church Galveston on January 22
tions. "'"y'.......perimental station aboard a free and *3. are Nat.. Pace, Lfngeott.
Miss. Lyon's initial two numbers balloon within a 380-mite radius of Rhodes. Barbee and Ziertein '
will- include Charpentier’s -"De^ .Chicago. ; ,■ ■ » Reports of the year's activities
puls de jour-Aria from the Opera The balloon will be used in the were made by Mrs. Thomas Hale
'Louise'," and Aditi's. "IJ1 Bacio,” university’s studies on cosmic on the guild; Mrs.-j.-A. Snyder,
Krantz wjll play three numbers rays. . the altar guild; Barber, budget;
to make up the third part of the - ——-—1—;-------------—^-------—-—-——— ---a
program. His offerings will in-
clude Bach-Busoni's "In Thee Is
Gladness"; Chasins’ "Nocturne in
G Minor," and Dohnanyj's “Scher-
The three artists will appear in
trio for rendition of “Ave Maria”
by Bach-Gounod to close, the first ■
half of the program.
After the intermission Miss
Gaudio -will offer Kreisler's "La
Gitana," Chopin-Sarasata's "Noc-
turne” and Kreisler's "Liebes-
• frued."
Miss Lyon's second solo offer-
ing will include four numbers, “My
Heart is in Bloom," by Brahms;
C lara .Edward's "Into the Night."
Hageman's "The Night Has a
Thousand Eyes," and La Forge’s
“Come Unto These Yellow Sands."
Kfaftlz’ *cdnd part of thY «ro;
gram will include two nirmbers,
Brahms' ''Intermezzi OP- US, Nds.
1 and 2," and Chopin's "Scherzo in
Rb Minor"
The finale will be a "Light Op-
era Medley” with all three of the
artists appearing in trio.
Houston.,X**., and he was auto-
matically" re-electsd Commande-
of the Trans-Mlsatsilppl Depart
meni He will be 100 before the
next scheduled reunion and hopes
for a larger attendance.
Last check showed 21 survivors
TURN YOUR PROPERTY
INTO CASH
HIGHEST PRICES ,
'• Quick Sales—No Red Tape
LIST YOUR PROPERTY WITH
BRASWELL
», E.H.A, Conventional, and Business lawns
siyTE; Texas. Ave, 4 Phone 272
■ Florida is nicknamed the "Pen-
insula State,” • t .
BACKACHE, ~
LEG PAINS MAY >
BE DANGER SIGN
Of Tired Kjdgm
If .bsOsehsaad l« pslsssie atsklaem
; mlerrxSH. Sun t juti consisis sn4 4o aeOUst
■boot them. NstartnarWiMnUac jmt tan
tour kidneys need tlintioa.
The ktdnsy s »re N *1 u re'sekiet asiref UklM
excess sclds and poisonous wests oat of tas
blood. Tbsy kelp Most people pus sbowt S
ptntrn dny.
If the IS miles of kidney takes sad Mtsn
don't work well. poisonoiuwMtemtiar stays
in lbs blodd.TbsMpoiioumaysUrtn«cxfaa
bsckachss. rheumsUc pshu.tot pains, loss sc
I pep snd enerty. teUln* up ntfhu. swsUis*.
pufflnessnndsr tks eyes, kssdstbss sad 4h»-
ruu. > t cqucnlor tesnty psustssVUbsaaart.
Incand burnlnt •omrtlmrsibowe tkersissaaw.
t)„nt wren* with your kidneys or kftSdsr.
Don't wait! Ask yosr drutttst for Doan’s
, Pills, s atimulsnt diursite, used iiirriastnKr
by millions fur oeee «« yssr*. Doss's sirs
bsppy relief end will Kelp the M mOm <4
kidney tubes flusb ost poisonous waaU froaa
tks blood. Got Doss's Pilk.
Look at the Books
TRY SUN CLASSIFIED ADS
BEES LIKE OLD HOME
JERSEY SHORE, Pa. --(RRI— A
"cash and carry back” policy
went into effect here recently, en-
gineered by a honey producer’s
staff of‘busy bees. *
A resident bought several hon- ^
oycombs from a bockeeper“on the-
other side of town and placed
them onf' his back porch. Later,
investigating the appearance of a
swarm of bees around his house,
he discovered the newly purchas-
ed honey had disappeared. It had
been transported back to its for-
mer owner > 7"'
(OKMOKANT RENEWS VISIT
INDIANAPOLIS - (I'm . An un- ,
usual bird has been reported at
Lake Sullivan near Indianapolis,
visiting with ducks and geese It s
a cormorant, one variety of which
is used by Chinese and Japanese
for fishing. The bird stopped off
at Lakt Sullivan three years in a
row, missed last year, but return*
»>(l this w
"A Finger in the Pie”?
Which is the UAW-CIO really after? Is it seeking facts—or new
m
economic power? Does it-want to know things-or run things?
1 111 ................. ' — ....................................... -......— ■■■■
*. ■ : ■ - ■ ........' • -b ....
■■■■' ^ ............ .; ■ .' . . " ... - . - v
These questions concern you as well as General Motors. -
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
\\ \ \ i
kis&m*
.,.v •
m
rf ‘ %
*4£K,
WKpF
' H\RK Y:" I rlun't know what they’ll weigh
up. Judge, but my cattle and i»uhry sure
have bwn geUm’ falter since I started to
hw. distillers* dried grains in their ration.'’
01.1) JUDGE: “ You’re about the tenth one
*ho has ttild me that, Harry. Mow do you
»«ount for, it?"-
HARRY: ‘ The by-product "recovered from
Komis used by distillers is very high in vita-
m>n and prMein content. It’s the best (tied
^Wemertt wckli'jipitTc'i bilahcc i lie rations
o, Tlfnjr dairy cows, livestock and potfl-
r> Mlixed with original grain, these dis-
tillers’ dried grams have a much greater
feeding value than the original grain has.
OLD JUDGE: "Have any trouble getting
all you need ?"
II \RRY: "Yes, at tiroes, even though the
distillers produced 1,200,000,000 pounds of
it for the year endin’ last June. I hope they II
be in a iwsition to produce a lot more
next year."
■iHD jyDWi: “'Then- f gum nobofh' ran
tell you fraufit uasted in distilling."
JIMMY: "Not mb, Judge ... I know,”
For years the facts about General Motors have been
made public. ' ’ \
. . * *,, - •
In spite of this, the UAW-CIO demands a chance to
look at our hooks, with the hint that we could meet
-Union demands “if the truth were Teally known.”
• * u ■
We have firmly declined to recognize this as a basis
for bargaining:
r*,, *»c»<am* t***
,-afc»w.w.— -—-^aaaiiiiMwaaas.
The Full Facts are Published
How much General Motors takes in each year—how much it pay*
employes— how much it pay* to stockholders—how much it pays in
taxes—how much net profit We make—and many other (acts ar.e
plainly stated in annual reports and quarterly Ycports.
These are broadcast to 425,000 stockholders from coast to coast— ,
sent to newspapers and libraries. Additional copies are free tor
the asking. ' ,
■ ■ All Figures are Thoroughly Checked
Every General Motors annual statement is audited by outside
auditors. Similar figures arc filed with the Securities A Exchange
Commission.
0 Does the UAW-CIO honestly believe that General Motors would
or could deceive these experts? *
Baals of Collective Bargaining Is Defined
. .. . ■ ; '-i ^ i ....... <o
The Wagner AcTjayt jlown the rules mr coueeuve Bargaining.
These cover sucli areas as rates ot pay, hours of work, working
conditions. , ,
No mention is made of earnings, prices, sales volume, taxes and
the like. TJmm are r*oognk*d as the problems of management.
'■ Something New has been Added* A
Tlie obvious (act is that the UAW-CIO has gone beyond its rights
under the"- law—and is reaching not for information but for new
power-MO/ for a look at past figures, but for the power
to sit in on forecasting and planning the-future.
A “look at the books" is a clever catch phrase intended as an
opening wedge whereby Unions hope to pry their way into the:
whole field of management. ......
It leads surely to the day when Union bosses, under threat
of strike, will demand the right to tell what we can make, whan
we can make it, where »>e can make it, and how much we must
charge jja^-all with an eye on what labor can take out of the
business, rather than on the value that goei into the product.
3* This Threatens All Business
- If the Union can do this ip the case of General Motori, it can
do it to every business in this land of ours.
Is this just imagination? Union spokesmen have said, “The
Union has stated time after time that this issue is bigger than
just sn ordinary wage argument, that it is bigger than the
Corporation and bigger than the Union."
For Labor Unions, to use the monopolistic power of their vast mem-
bership to extend the scope of wage negotiations to include more
than wages, hours and working conditions is the first step toward
handing the management of business over to the Union bosses.
We therefore reject the idea of”a "look at the books" not because we
have anything to hide but because the idea ilttlf hides a threat to GM,
to all business, and to you, the public.
General Motors
'•J
.
-MOM AMP OCT rite THIMQM FQ* MOM N«N<*
:~r.r-T'''..........”;i
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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/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.