The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 173, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
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Goose Crei
■y
yH—Fair ionlght and Sunday.
Moderate winds. Maximum xes-
liffrrm; minimum last night,
ve*. Rainfall last *4 hour*, 2.4*
mi Daili!
-f
MO,, 173 •••'>••<
GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 194 4
LATE NEWS BULLETIN
WASHINGTON—zf.Pi -Arfm. Stark taM
the IVarl Harbor Inveillation today that
naval representative* abroad were barred'*
< from making political rominltments to the
hve cents cory
SSS5 Si? 23 Persons Deal, IS0 Hort
By Inst Texas Tornadoes
conference tn Chicago next week gated'Meat cutters fAFL) Tm-
''"V" ii. "01,1(1 avert-«, p1ored" President Truman to pre-
Strikc 385.0H0 APL ami CIO venC the walkout which wbnM
packing workers, called for Jan- halt-thc flow of fresh meat to the
uary 1 , nation's butcher shops.,
a. A facUfinrlimj hoard for the Officer* of the AFC Union carl-
'I industry .will
TUI) 1‘RKSS . •
,-,v.rimient officials held
Conferences on labor de-
er higher wages today ps
of.-work stoppages m rs-
nduBirjcs were pushed to-
stfike istnfitt-
of:,376:000 U. S. workers
led- by strikes, with more
I.OOQ: others scheduled to «r»< CIO), whose 700,000 members
in within the next two^arc slated to walk out January M
- 4. Approximately 250.000 tele-
most pressing arrd far- phone operators were being polled
‘disputes: on whether to go out in sympathy
leers of Jhtf Ufllted Elec- with 17,000 striking Western Elcc-
oricepr -CIO) meet today trie employe*. 7 5
--f strike date, probably In every case, .strike action was
for 200.000 irtembers railed to bolster, demands for
30
industry ..wll! begin hearings . icr Authorized their 135,000 mein
„Atonda.y between the 1/ S„ Steel hers to join the walkout called
t.orp. nnrd the United Steel Work- by its CIO rityil.. ' "
eitil CIO), Whose 700.000 mmilmN Admini«t rt.iI/.n v.rfi/.|ulu rv,f,un.
Jap Election
MacArthur Postpones
Balloting Date So
Plans May Be Completed
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5. -
(UP.) — Japan’s first glee*
Administration officials, mean-
while, studied the pbsaibilitv of
*<* »««»m *
closely supervised by allied
‘General—Electric,
house and. General Mot-
mance division.-
labor . department an-
ii three-day mediation
per cent.
Announcement of the meat
packing mediation conference'
came iiist night after the Amal-
manufaeturers' prices while hold
ing the line on retail prices
Unlike the .situation in the Gen-
eral Motors dispute, the steel and
meat packing unions have not
stipulated that any wage, increases
mdst^not result .in a rise in prices
The government officials met‘a.s
leaders of the three biggest CIO
(Sec, Top IV S. Officials, Page 2)
It WHS
rman Occupation
rce To Be Cut To
,000 Men July 1
Jan.'5.
(U.P.)—Gen. Joseph T. NlcNarhey’
that the American forceJn the European theater
-'tfitced by next July fromr its present 616,000 men
at which strength it will remain indefinite-
t 300
oNarney, cqrm»ander of U. S. forces in Europe,
ed for the first "time.-.the makeup of the American
to handle the longHerm occupation assignment in
hy, ' X ‘
ile armored task
numbering some 38.-
ps will range the Amer-
• in armored cars as the
of the U. ;S. occupation
China Civil
War May Be
Ended Soon
Nationalist. Communists
Agree On Procedure To
Stop Hostilities
CHUNGKING, Jan. 5. -
(U.P.1—-The National gov-
ernment and the Commun-
ists have agreed on a pro-
cedure for ending hostilities
- in China's civil war a nd for
restoration .of communica-
tions. it was amFRffunced to-
he .said, the army*'tonight.
rwnon tU.vn *t(UVAAA* - '
edition to the mobile po-,
the occupation army
Imisist of three infantry
totaling about 45.00(1
tn aiy force. 12 light tank
and supporting serv-
j<l administrative echelon,.
th"e total forett Will be
|more than-half, to remain
less static, McNarncy
titrated that, American
would be sent, home as
possible, but emphasized
c repatriation Would de-
i.thc fulfilment of respon-
in Germany, rather than
llity of shipping.
turn Pledges
nan Support
lent Described
ommon Gitizoo’
I.'-Jan. 5. <l".P)~, Amidst
nf his policies and recent
dint let both Democrats
Hiblieans, President Tru*
ay had the pledged sup-
I his leader in the house of
[natives — Speaker Sam
speaking at a dinner
i hofror sponsored by the
atir women of Dallas toun-
rthed the President as a
homespun, average Ameri-
|izci£, with, a head full of
s> nsc, with a heart and
It burns with the desire, to
Iright thing by the people.-
Kscrves the support of ev-
jbrican citizen and If • he
that he. will make a
lind kindly leader. He
my support -in that."
also called for United
syburn Pledges, Page 2)
IND TOWN-
Baker's purse has been
U-ft at the Daily -Stm
br her tf she will call for
C. W. Spear had a lot
hie finding enough bricks
|li he wanted dorie , . . But
1 problems are not new for
Pies’ . Mrs. Pauline Clay-
Mghtens out a minor de-
loomed large for a time
Harry-iHeadline) Harvey
Jwav with his hobby ram,-
fliltc of the. scarcity of the
wants most . . . O. T.
harries alone the afreet
It Mo ahead of Schedule . . .
I'i’v Marshals Bill Frazier
Johnson agree on a min-
Fahy Godfrey was in
Thursday and spread
(el good cheer in every
Mrs. George Keene
[up the final details of a
program she plans soon
[Kilgore sets material More
for the. future , , . Abe-
ug hits the traffic ehnln
pikbt moment i . . Holly
slill belleye* ice cream
*t refreshment even -in
° Mrs. Qharley For-
‘I'ev'es In sharing the
p lav av had lemon t>te for
yesterday . . . Mrs. Lu-
|ter angles Into a parking
■refutly . . . qty Manager
■lintcr does his heat to ox-
Tuuftta . . w tv. non*
,0 giving credit where
due , , ,
f'1""1- former Humble cm-
attending Notre Dame
.recently fbtjhd ffijir
anson la Veal competition
took in an Ice carnival
®° **)'• the movie star ant .
bind him.
"Sen. Robert A, Taft ,
Sen. Taft Calls
Truman Program
'Communistic'
Lions To Sponsor
Tri-Cities Used
Clothing Drive
Woolford Named Head
Of Local Campaign
A used clothing drive in- t|ic
Tri-Cities area, in eboperatidn
with the national collection head-
ed^ by Henry J. Kaiser will open
lXr Republican T-ires First"
ship of thc^.Tn-Cities Lions^ club. n r ri .♦ r j
J. D. WooIfprU. executive st-c- "•’•-election- balvo
•fetarv of the Tri-t’itie.s Welfare
league and a Lion, will be chair-
man of the drive, which (petends
through January 31.,
Other members of the directing
committee are J: B... Hpllaway.
T. Gresfgcr, Syd Gbiitd Clyde
Kelly. Mark M Carter, Jr,; anil
Buell Scott.
Woolforil said that postof-
fiees, fire stations and theaters
in, the area will Serve as depots
with the central depot a biiild-
ing at .the Welfare league een-
[ ter on Pruett street in Petty.
President Hairy S. Truman is
honorary chairman of the drive
; in' the nationi •
The Tri-Cities ai'ca has been
asked for 30,000 garments In-'
.eluded on the list - of needed ar-
ticles are shoes; hats, and any
types of wearing apparel for men.
women and children:' .*
‘‘The articles do not have lo be
laundered, although we would
•preter, t(T get Ihem that way/’
Woolforfl reported.
Pickups of the clothes tit the
‘centers and'depots will be handled
by the- Lions committee.
'iy ... »•*
Bank Deposits
Zoom 7o Over
$t 6-Million
~TFIi^7?SaraTgb”ohT)eceniBcr 31,
1940. banks of the Tri-Cities ,
Citizens National Bank and Trust
company, the First National
Bank, and the Peoples State Bank
showed deposits of $3,416,077.
On December 31. 1945. just five
years later/the same three banks
had deposits of $18,027,883.
Nearly five times as .much on*
lit today as five year* ago!
make another • compari-
son, in just one year since Oe-
occupation forces
learned today.
• It also was disclosed that
the election date has been
postponed by .this government.
The elections probably will not be
held before sometime in February.
The elections originally were
set for early this month. They
now will not be held until (ieii.
Douglas- 5Iae.\rthiir has set up
the necessary arrangements for
free eleetious and umletirahie
persons have been eliminati-d
from Japanese polities.
MeNarnev said he was cominr -
ed th< occupation should last at
least 10 yrars, and on the basis
<>.f present evidence he favored an
even longer term. .
i!v July 1
plans to send more than 500.000
troops to the •United'Stairs, while
receiving - necessary reinforce-
ments from home. “
Redeployment has been slow-
ed down somewh.nt, lie said by
the failure of selective service to
provide sufficient replacements in
Germany to meet the' require*
ments of the military government.
Military, government officials
in Japan, it was said, are screen-
ing carefully nil possible candi-
dates and their platforms. They
also are deciding hp.W .Japan *hail
he divided for the elections and
methods .of . policing the campaign
and voting.
Details of the
hostilities and
communications
out immediately,
suspension of
restoration of
will be worked
K. C U’u. -.in.- .
Utter of ^information announced.
The, unity conference delegated
Chou Kn-Lai, Communist leader,
and Chang Chun, governor of
Szechwan to aiect„ and' work out-;
the detailed plan. •/ y— .
1 Wen said (hou ami ( harig
prohaldt would issue the ae
1 tout oe««q-flre order after eiui-
- ferring with Gen George (,
1 Mar-hall.
: Wu s statement indicated, tluit
tChou-aiud- Chmig -protiahRs Had'
GKHMAN (Hill) AWAITS TRIP TO I'hristim- Voel*.
IJ, horn in Brooklyn, New lurk, gar.es out o( the window
at a displaced persons <-amp in (••rman)' where she is impatient-
ly waiting return to her mother in Brooklyn. Christine
was two years old when she left the United States uih a friend of
her-mother’s, to be reared h> her gratplnwither in Gerniany. She
is one of many children nf I >. diocnship, living a.I the <*mp until
legal proof of citizenship has been 'obtained. When papers are in
order, Christine will proceed to the Coiled State* (Intemaltonal)
Mat!Arthur Tofik a Big step in been designated by the Commute
CINCINNATI, Jan. 5. U’lSy. The
Republican campaign to win--con-
trol of congress in next Novem-
heFs election wag Squarely lauit-
t hecl today With an assertion by
Sen Robert A. Taft <RO.> tirat
President Truman's legislative pro-
gram at least in part is commun-
istic.
Sp'caking over a nationwide ra-
'dio network ,NBC) last night,
Taft took up the gage flung down
by President Truman the previ-
ous night when he accused con-
gress of delaying action o.n his
reconversion program.
Taft's speech was listed "in ad-
vance by GOP "national headquar-
ters as ”'h Republican viewpoint.''
It amounted to the opening kickoff
in the 1946 congressional election
campaign. ■ . —
Taft said the I*re*ident'« aei u-
salions were directed at Demo-
crajx in congress since the I)e-
miMrats are in the majority,
heqd all committers and have .
a majority on all committees.
“This is Ijot a fight between the
President and congress," he said,
“It is a Democratic family fight,”
He then turned to the Presi-
dent's charge that congress has
(!Ser Sen. Taft, Patfr •>)
Negroes Assault
Houston Coed
laying • the groundwork for free
elections in his latest directive
purging men and organizations
which have promoted aggression.
For,some time. It was said, the
legislatfUc affairs branch.of Mac-
Arthur'* governmental section has
been' working on these .specific
tasks in preparation for general
elections:
1 Secretly inspecting all legisla-
tion scheduled" to' be introduced in
the diet.
2. Listing political . parties and
thcefr cahdfaaUrs whicfr"lfi3hltl he
encouraged or eliminated.
3. Studying whether elcetions-
should be allowed to. take place
. on the new tentative date and
how to divide and police Japan for
the-elections. ,
Police Service
To Be Improved
24-Hour Operation Of
Radio. Station Planned V nQ
Headquarters for the Goqse
ists and National government
spectively to serve with Marshall
on the three-man arbitration com-
mittee which will seek to resolve
China's differences,
, Marshall met with Chou today
and later lunched with Marshall
Chiang Kai-Shek. •
Marshall, does not intend to
visit the Communist center of
Yenan, it was learned.
Meanwhile"; a Democratic league
s|»okesman said, .the organization
had juiviscii Marshall ttiat hOstlii-
Outer Mongolia Wins
Freedom From China
tics should cease before opening” about
CHUNGKING. Jan 5 UP’
China recognized the indepen- ,
denee of Outer "Mongolia, today
after a unanimous Mongolian
plcbesclte. official! ceding to
Russia a dominant rote over 1.000 -
000 square miles of territory
which the
mediately southwest of Outer
Mongolia.
"■’"This agreement
the Sinkityig capital
Wgotiat'ed
. .. _ _ capital Uru
Tihwa>, granted the Kazkhs
in
imeht tor
(See, t'hinaCivil, Page 2)
Christmas Seal
Quota Contributed
East Harris County
Sales Total $3,000
Fast Harris emiflty today had
contributed its quota of $3,000
to the antl-tubereulhsis campaign
and workers were offering tr>,aid
jher sections of the county which
lagging tfl obtaining subscrip-
two nations have
argued for’25 years■ ,
The plebcsi'llewas held by open
ballot on Oci 20 after China
promised Russia she would grant
independence if a majority of the
Mongolians voted-for it
Simultaneously, a Central-News
agency dispatch reported that the
Central Chinese government has
reached a peace settlement with
the rebellious Kazkhs in the re-
mote Sinkiang provlore at the
ndrtKwest corner of China., ini-
high degree of autonomy.
Granting of independence mark*
the biggest official Chinese terri-
torial "loss In 100 years. However.
Outer Mongolia Inis been inde-
pendent for practical purposes for
a quarter of a ...century, Ortfla has
maintained offlyiai sovereignty
over .the territory, but ha* been
u.itlaait ihilmiptstiativr ' -power
(heCfiJdncr l»!h). when the Soviet
Influence, spread throirgtr the area
. The Russians have strongly
supportid tile. "Mongolian [Vo-
ple s re|4uhiii' They, have called
it "a tiled ally jd the USSR lor
ihatijr years '’
tlonsS. , - r- •
Under-Jhe, lepdership of Fred
Hgaier The Tri-Cujes Crosby.
feiiHcT
deposit
And
just
bfi'hks "had an incrJ^fe in deposits
of nearly *5JKX),000.
Here are the- figures, with a
hope this addition is right
Deposits, December 31, 1940:
Peoples State $152,237: First Na-
HOllSTON, %n. 5 tllRi- Police
today ' searched Tor two negroes-
who an attractive University of
Houston student said attacked her
last eight in a heavy downpour.
The 21 -year-old girl‘was treated
for shock and Injuries at a hos-
pital where doctors confirmed she
had been assaulted.
En route home; the part-time
student was attacked a block from
her home. Her 13-year-dld brother
and mother heard her cries for
help and the negroes fled upon
thefr arrival, police said.
Creek police department will be
moved to the' second floor of the
city hall, and the police radio
broadcasting station will .be in ser-
vice 24 hours a day, beginning
Monday. .
.These changes in the police de-
partment set-up of the city were
made as result.of a special meet-
ing of' the city commission held
last nigh! at the city hall.
The police chief s telephone will
be moved from the ..CuljJcppcr
building on Texas avenue to the
office in which the radio station
is located and ail activities, of the
department will be centered there,
the commission decided. ,
KHGG, the police radio broad-
casting station, has been operating
on an oight-hour basis for the past
month, but with the employment
of plher operators this week, plans lllln
•wett'. completed^Vnr fulFtlms-sefv* ~ty,r-si=nfrtrTtorTJS; "(loose Creek
. .\ ’Or.dVfeclIy to the Houston Anti,
The eommi«£bner* dUciAsed tie- Tuberculosis League at Houston
AHj
Coatty and
quickly rcspomhvj, with last mine
utc contributions when it seemed
that the goal of $3,000 would not
be reached in the Christmas seal
sale, sponsored annually by the
Anti-Tuberculoids League.
The drive was sponsored lo-
cally by The 1 Trl-Citle*- Junior
phamber of Commerce and the
Juycee-etteS.; . - - '
“Thanks ufc (n. order in'all the
people of- the Fast Harris coun-
ty for. thefr generous response to
this worthy cause. Allgaier said
"Harris county as a whole still
is falling short of the quota and.
we' Wilt accept ' donations from
anyone desiring to contribute at
this late.date .Contributions may
Schoolgirl Turns Outlaw
200-Pound Cab Driver Is Kidnaped
Pint-sized
DENTON . Jan. 5. 'l'.F>
Eva Let linoop, a 14-
ant schoolgirl who "S’
Eva Let Knoop a lt-year-old tru-
' m'inPd: ra-
at Gordon three times and that
oiiee- she stole from the school
ther be an outlaw than go to 4t
school, probably will be. Charged
w.ith juvenilh dclinqueniy today.
The charges • will -be an out-
growth of the kidnaping of. a 200-
pound taxi driver _by the 90-pound
Kiri .. ’"" , ■
Dent oh County attorney W - K
Baldridge said Eva late tqjd 'him
she had ruq: away ;from her Tunqe
but they didn't do anything altoul
Rod-faced F L. Howard, the tab
driver, reported he had pickl'd up
his fare on a Dent on. St reet “and
that she had pulled a tiny .22 cal-
iber.pistol" three tnehes-long on
him and told hint to* fork over $4
In change and to "get oul of Tex-
t.'i/.v of offlhefs duties, and, spprOv
the alteration of Ray Glenn
Jphnson ,nnd other offM’Vq’tih l»‘-
ti'ol ,and "car marking’'. All, offi-
cers will (>c reqdired'tej keep a
log' of thftlr activities while on
duty.
MAN DIES IN CRASH
BFRTftAM. Jan. 8. d'lb John
* Jt”s«eh. 45 was, killed near
Burnet Jatc Friday when his truck
collided with 6 .Southern Pacific
rtillroad train - during a blinding
rainstorm 1 8
Aflgaier’S assistants In the drive
.included the following
Mr*. Fred Lmdstrom. of Crosby,
B F Hopper of Highlands; Miss
Irene Miller and W. _C Jackson.
In the Baytown refinery; - I' 17
Elis; pf General Tire and Rubber
company plant C P. MeNabb.
Aimisc Creek; M W. Hierper, Briv-
tdwn; D; C. Seamans Pcliy: Mrs
T. C, Scarborough, chairman, of
the Jaycve-ottes ' •
Goose Creek and Cedar Bayou
school students and faculty also
'Assisted.
llonal 1).085.867; Citizens Nation-
al, $2,177,973.
Deposits, December 31. 1944;
Peoples State, $1,211,4837 First Na-
tional, $3,54.2,535; Citizen* Nation-
al. $0,358,678
Deposits. December 3I. 1945:
People* State. $1,765,772; First N*-
tional, $J,970,45<>; Citizens Nation-
al,,$9,291,861.
Truman Schedules Television Appearance
Othman Worries Over Washington's News Of Week
could
Ion
HI NABOR
By OUn Miller
The f * * *®,n i
men d®n)win
a r q u tn « n * i
with women i»
bee*me"
w'iTK
$ani* d®"*
t r q u • t n
women.
It\ I RI DEIUt K t , OTIIMAN
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5. (|U»i
Tills Was a .worisomo week and
what worried,me moat was wheth-
er President Truman must paint
his fkce pea color and his Ups
chocolate" for his, television 'debut.
IBs moving y4*4tire htariTrrr Cir'^tHe
the air January 15, when he tells
congress about the state of the
nation. Maybg the art has Im-
proved. but thi Inst time I was
in a television studio, the actors
had 'To wentf green rouge and
brown lipstlckre**'
Mr. President, they looked pe-
culiar Like Lon Chanev coming
out of a' tyehnlpolOJ:. tomb.
^ Another fellow I had to worry
about waa Wilson W. Wyatt,; of
Louisville, Ky, the housing etar
Poor devil. Couldn't find himself
a house In Washington. Then
there was the telephone rnmpnny.
he set by strikes and threats of
strikes, only to have a radio an-
nouncer say that the first 1,000
wqhien who phoned’ Disrict 6363
Id buy a pair 'per each of ny-
5ep, crippled local service n^emenjs said come and g
ThH*JgM, *>nly the bcjinnmg-of. - The- regp)’TfaUigr iTTol/ere
.•capita)*- troube*.. A citizen u,nMe hlr0(, „ ni.vvr|flwv,.r
unWfied when his lady chauffeur
at the Patuxent airbase mistook a
seaplane ramp ,for' Highway 20. A
crippled veteran. ’Knocked of' his
crutches by the union station
mobs, got his leg Broken. An e»-
wac sued a Wave for $25,000
heart balm. . * ’
Things reached their.' finest
frenzy wheti the government
the President's ya. ht 10 miles
down the, Potomac.
Federal spokesmen s lid don't
try to buy tires unless yon need
'em desperately; the tire adver-
tlsemenji said come and
Irf Jthi
to re-
place the one they wore down
Then they had to stop for a .week
while the new counsellor read the
record, which now fill* three file
cabinet drawers, tightly pkeked
The United Nations organiza-
tion seTW'-n 'delegation of house-
hunters trom t«o/id<>n to choose a
tangled with the government: The
federal cafeterias said they were
er*_
Building site near Boston or Ne
Yqjrk. The Bronx Booster*
dub
going to
OPA said theyl were
raise j their prices; the
not, either
Ice cake*, such! a* brought about
the downfall ol| little Eva, "halted
won waiting for 'em
' The supreme court refused to
have any part of thr move to fire
Sen; Carter Glass of Virginia, who
(Hre, Truman .Schedule*, Page .2)
Mr. and
" an'fifiunde TFif
, lei Pruitt Underwood, on Wednes-
day, January 2, at Lillie-Duke
hospital.' D*niel I’ruitl thereinaft-
er known as Danny) weighed
eight pounds, and he, ami hi* mo-
ther haw-,-already- gone to their
home, 722 Fast Ar*n „
The Underwood* have a daifght-
‘ef. Kay Ellen. 10 tlnderwoo.1 I*
in the eom|)oslng room at the Dal-
ly Sun. and any njistakr* or- aim is-
■stuns of the last few days ea?: be
laid to (lnderw;ood, - who has Just
settled down .after being on the.
"more than slightly" nefyous side'
for the past three or four days.
Dennis, will sutler no ill ef-
fect* of 1h. week, hi* physician^
have assured. And both Mrs Un-
derwood and Danny are doing O.K.,
too «
25 Yanks Arrested For
Black Market Activities
SHANGHAI. Jan -8. d f* 17 S
army headquarters announced to-
day that approximately 25 Ameri-
-cuwWftma and eirtlsted -menr hmy
been arrested on charges of steal-
ing more than $50,000- worth of
army supplies and selling them in
the black market.
The soldiers are awaiting trial.
They were arrested during a ser-
ies of raid* by military police.
I ItA/IKR lt4>|GNS I HHM __
HTTP POLifE FORCE
l W P. t Bill I Frazier,' patrolman
on the Gza.se Cre.-k poiic* force,
resigned shortly after reporting
for work at 8 a.m. ttirtav
Frazier had been a deputy city
marshal for (he past two and a
half years,
Hows rtf drove ' adroit* the Red
river Into Oklahoma and managed.
»l a 'illlng station stop, tp notify
ar attendant Xil his predlrament-
The attendant telephoned Sheriff
Harmon Spicer at Madill, Ok la.,
UJlil tile offioei slopped the cab,
when It drove through, Madill, tak
Young Danny Underwood
Near New Year Arrival
Tir Tiirt^Tof h Min, Dan- , ' There via» lit
Search Crews
Still Probing
Wreckage
Palestine, Nacogdoches ?.
And Clawson Areas
Most Severely Hit
PALESTINE, Jan. 5.-
(U.P.)—The death toll in a
series of tornadoes which
swept scattered parts of
East Texas mounted to *23
today and searchers ‘still
combed the : wreakage nf
scores of homes, in search
of possible other victim*/ More
than 150 others were injured
The. wind*, which snapped trees
like matchstick*. cut several
. wjyath*-through rural nrcq* which
have yet to be heard from due to
lack of communication and travel
(actliUbs, and the toll may mount
much higher ,
But a hiidmomlng rheek by
I nited Press 4tiszTosrd only 2.\
known dead — 13 of theni in
Ihe I'alrstinr are*, sis ill the
Naczigdorhcs area, three tn the
l.ufkln- area an done in the
■Shiloh-St |»aui roiiMiiunlty la
, I .eon (ouniy. Ail of the stricken
areas were within a fM-lM mile
radius southeast of -Dallas.
The list of injured Mill hospl- .
taiized stood at 23-i) in th.t?Fal-
estine area, six of them erltietilly
hurt;-15 at Iaifkin four,of them
listed ** crttteal ;a score or more
at Nacogdoche*. three of them :
listed as critical, and 13 at "'
Crockett, where the Injured from
Bhilrih-St Paul were taken.
An 18-mile strip south and
southeast of Palestine apparently
suffered the worst with ail build-
ings m the 100-yard wide stricken
area leveled.
•Reports front NacogstaChM aaW
that there were many plles nf
what once were homes still Un-
touched by searchers along n two-
hiite stretch of the Nacogdoches-.
Alto highwoty and in a practically-
isolated negro section hear 'tow'n.
It was jn this section that the
.winds snapped off trees two feet In,
diameter, first felling them to the
South, then whipping back a few
yards further on to blow them '
,down to. the north, ~ .'
Tfcavt rains which accompanied,"
(See, 28 Knz.wn Dead, Page 2)
Tri-Cities Hit
By Squalls, Rain
2.43 Inches Of Rain •
Falls During Storm
Squally weather that ad ruck''
Tri-Cities lost night nrough
downpour.of 2:43 inches t* prOvido
stminicr weather dlverslog (n mid-
winter
Winds up t,o 35 miles ail hour ]
In guest* accompanied sjlqwers
. which started yesterday/ aftex-
noon. ■ • *
But the reaf.. show started
around 11 p. ns, with a heavy elec-
trical storm accompanied by ncar-
cloudhurets of min tc»hr.F with"
gusty winds from every direc-
tion unusual wintertime weather
The weapon proved to ne un-
loaded and Had "a faulty mechan-,
ism, hht. a- Ifqcvn.rd puipted out.
you mnt tell about a gadget Tike
ttiat when you're looking at the
wrung end of IF. "And Women al-
ways. baffle a msn. anyway," he
added.
The doll-like girl, who said ahe
feot her ideas from rending hooka
and seeing movie*,, said she "got
tired, of firing,to m tuail and decid-
ed -to be an outlaw,"
’ • " fty
Stocks Close Today
little damage re-
ported to utility facilities from tire
sqUdiiy weather although jjght
cermpany crews'u-erc busy early",
'tbdny
Tliere was nearly two Inches of'
rain in less than pn-bour at the
heightii of-the storm which
grraliy Inconvenienced midnight
shift change wbrhrra going to and
from their Jobs
M,*,xlmum temperature yester-
day was 73, and the minimum Just
night was 48. ' '■
Uourtcy ( itlsens National Rank * Trust <2*
Allied Stores
.; 47
Americaji ,\(aricaibo
...; s'«
American Radiator
1844.
American Roiling Mjll
.17'*
Americai) Telephone
180
Anaconda Copper
. . 434i
Bcrkicy and.Gay
• 8
Bethlehem Steel
94L
Chrysler Motors , ...
.. 132V
Cities Service ,
; 8* W .
Cbmfherttiir SAveht 7*
" 24
Consolidated Aircraft
31", ‘
Cotton Down 2
Curtiss Wright
Du Pont... .............
.,184
Flecrric Bond ami Share i1
ID',
Electric Power and Ught
IT’*
General Elect rtc‘ .........
. 47 \
General Motors .
74%
Graham Paige - ,,,
Greyhound .....-.
.... 31 >*
Gulf on ......
89%
Hayed ............
.... 13%
.. Houston Oil ...........
.... 20%
Hudson Mptors
... 31%
Humble Oil .......
... 49%
Jones and laiughlin
.. 42
Kroger Grocery ..........
•r *«%
lamlsiana Ixpd
. 11%
Ijimberl , .................
43
X-dOri l!a
»
Murrnv Corporation
I*’
Nash Kelvinator ........y
. 1
W *4
n
National Dairy ........
Ohio Oil ........ .........
Packard Motors.-
10%
Premier ..................
V.1
Pure Oil ...................
22
Lead Holler Bit rre-nyTr
rt.......”■
HiptiMk -stcH
Sharpe find Dnhrtn .......
Sinrlnir k. ............
32
23%
1!)%
Southern Parifir
38
Standard Oil of Indiana .
40%
Standard Oil of New Jersey
67%
Sunray Oil *'......t.
Tpxas Corporation
oh%
Tjdewater. Corporation
2t%
T-P Colli and Oil ,
27%
T-P Izznd and Trust ______
United Alrernft 1.
17
34%
4:!
United Corporation
United Gas ......
: 18%
United States Steel
*0%
Walworth ............
13%
White Motors • .............
18
Wilson Company ..........
- »*,
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 173, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1946, newspaper, January 5, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100150/m1/1/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.