The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 160, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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^SERJ3,
SERVICE
msTu
and U*e,j
We
Sell. Trad,
lALLIN'S
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IGERATION
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PARTS
and Truckj
IUTO WRe
IITURE
.STERING
REFINIS
trained, ]
pO PARTSj
»•*
PARTS
u*
i Creek*.
US
TUBES
AVAILABUl
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Creek]
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adto Sendcf 1
hd Delivery
RANSFER
CO.
i Am
bng bn Ur d
ITS CO
I I
^ our Se.TO I
STOCK
ROOM
lave ns
IPW I
PkeMl
I’etersns,
EATH«
...rtiv cloudy this afternoon,
||4n**r Sunday. Warmer thin nfter-
lBnl*l,,0?ntlr to moderate *outhea.<terly
noon.
Slid*
OTDc flailj)
LATE NEWS
WASIHNGTON-
Bilho, (D.-MIm.)
a damned dollar*
contractors.
)L. 29 NO. 160
GOOSECREEK,TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1946
iississippians Disagree--
;OLLINS* GANDY FIST FIGHT
ireaks up bilbo hearing
trfia-
|hop
ni«d
acHINGTON, Dec. 14. H I’1 the committee will keep opposing
UorDunch fight between two witnesse* widely separated and a
Lppians prompted official policeman will be stationed In the
autions today against further hearing room at all times,
r;,,.. among witnesses at the The fight was a short-lived af-
■S committee Investigation of fair between Rep. Ross Collins <D.-
activUies of Sen. Theodore G. Miss.) and Robert Gandy, Jackson,
(D.-Miss.). Mis*., insurance agent, at the
,h senate war investigating close of yesterday’s session,
llttec Is studying charges that Collins, 86, lunged at Gandy and
> accepted gift* from war con- knocked him to the floor, upset-
rtofa ting the witness chair and throw-
of yesterday’s fracas, Ing the room into a turmoil.
rive Me A Baseball Bat1-
;nate Hearings Get Dangerous
Ministers Hit SOVIETS SOUND LAST PROTEST-
Harmony Note
At Parting
CENTS COPY
w
UN Asks Disarmament Plan
A policeman who had been sta-
tioned outside the room separated
the pair before any serious dam-
age was done.
The attack occurred while Gan-
dy was testifying about what had
been done with $25,000 tn checks
made out to Bilbo by F. T. New-
ton, a Mississippi contractor.
Next Conference To
Be Staged In Moscow
On German Treaty
NEW YORK, Dec. 14.
UNITED NATIONS HALL, Flush- treversial troop census cleared the “This resolution is as far from day, however, that if the old reao-
ing N Y Dec 14 (UR) .— The assembly only after a sharp pro- the original Soviet resolution as is lution had been put to a vote, Rus-
United Nations general assembly gj by Andrei Gromyko of Rus’ g*d»ky from the earth'" Gromyko
X ££“£1 diL™amentC°pro: , The rmolution. t, directing the The assembly voted 38 to 6 with 4
States for demanding data on ail
earlier troops wherever stationed, adding
(U.P.) — The Big Four for- «ra<". and determine what inform- security council to determine what abstentions to substitute the com-
aion miniatoro .Trill ation the great powers should aub- information should be submitted, promise resolution for i
O ® Will return ak*%nf thnlp frnAna of hnmn and. ____a___j j_____ l.au
The fight° broke 'up tirohesrlng homo ‘Thik ab,out their troop* at hotoe and watered down both the Russian de- proposal which the United States sharply that "it ja not difficult to
r the dav " , 18 weeK-ena alter abroad. mand for a census of troops sta- and Great Brltr'- **-------*■ J ‘—*-----’ - 1
lor the day.
Before he was so abruptly in-
completing five minor peace The disarmament resolution was tioned abroad, and
terrunted Gandv had testified the treaties and creating among approved without objection, but a lean call for an accounting
... . ’ J **u A1_____ -1 . *»• i<* a ormn.inmluo i/ttt on thn Ann. 1 mon« nt homo
troops
Angio-Amer- political
itain led through the determine who is actually ready to
and security committee submit information about armies,
•HDDRICK C. OTIIMAN
fGTON, Dec. 14, —<L'.P>—
not going back to the U. S.
until I get a baseball bat.
final. .
& next politician who tries to
me for a wrestling mat get's
$25,000 was used in behalf of for-
mer Sen. Wall Doxey (D.-MIsa.) in
his campaign for re-election in
1042. Doxey lost and Is now senate
sergeant-at-arms.
Gandy said that $7,500 was paid
to Roland Wall, former state WPA
senate war investigating commit-
tee bis one-punch fight with a
witness as the committee took
extra precautions against similar
brawling.
Ross Collins, an ex-ccngressman
who ran for the senate and lost,
to see what they’d have to pay primary Aug, Si, 1942. The others
him for supporting Doxey.
The 86-year-old Collins stalked
in at this moment, stumbled over
my feSt in passing, and found a
chair.
"Hello, Ross,'' said Gandy.
'Tin not going to talk to a damn
liar like you," Collins replied.
“Gentlemen,'' soothed Chairman
James E. Mead of New York.
Gandy was about to say how
much he paid Collins, when the
latter stood up, strode over my
feet this time, and took a hard
poke at his fellow politico.
______ Here the proceedings get a lit-
fie and Sen. Theodore C. Bilbo, tie confused. Gandy's red-leather
J testified, collected $25,000 from chair smashed to the floor. Collins
r contractors to help elect Wall tried to jump on him. Gandy kick-
er to the senate in 1942. Doxey ed him in the stomach Gandy hit
despite their best efforts, him again in the neck.
They’re up. They're down. And tell of similar conversations .with
somehow both kicked me. They Collins when the portly former
didn't intend to; they just did.
They were kicking all over the red
velvet carpet. Then, cra-a-a-a-sh.
(See Senate Hearings, Page 2)
In a year for the start of German
peace treaty negotiations.
Behind them were 15 months of
bitter arguments that eventually
ended in agreement on treaties for
r
director. Wall was one of four Italy. Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria
candidates in |he first Mississippi and Finland.
themselves the friendliest at- resolution on the con- troops at home,
mosphere that has prevailed
Republicans Seek
Plan For Cutting
Income Taxes
of despite strong Soviet protests.
Gromyko told the assembly
tod. I'll do the conking,
jt the senate can do is provide
| ^1, as I think any reasonable
nuker will agree after read-
, this report (for the insurance
fcpsnyi on my wounds
Itu sitting there, gentlemen,
(the senate caucus room listen-
I to one Robert Gandy of Jack-
! Miss! tell the war investigal-
fcommittee about politics in the
ilia state.
i included paying the oppoti-
esndidates in the primaries
j cash for their subsequent sup-
said the soft-voiced Gan-
[ he and Bilbo dropped in
Ahead of them is the far more
—...... ■ ................ difficult task of writing peace
WASHINGTON -4U.W- Former treaties for Germany and Austria, ,A T, „ i. r.
Hep. Ross Collin*, (D.-Mi»s.), to- and eventually one for Japan. Most Across I he Board L/UT
day formally apologised to the optimistic estimates count on sev- May Be Dropped By GOP
were Doxey, Collins and . Sen.
James O. Eastland <D.-Mlss.), ths
ultimate winner.
Gandy aaid the money was paid
to Wall to enlist his support for
eral years of peacemaking ahead.
The four accomplished here WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.— (HE) -
everything they set out to do, and Republicans today were still corn-
agreed on an arduous schedule for nltted to the 20 per cent personal
the months ahead to proceed with ,ncome tax reduction but GOP
unfinished business. As a result leaders were willing to modify their
of decisions made here; tarlier plans for making an equal
1. The "
continue
Big Four deputies will dash in all brackets,
working here until the The original idea was to cut tax-
satellite treaties are in final legal »> “straight across the board,” that
form for signing, hoping to have M. to allow- a 20 per cent reduction
_ , .. them ready for distribution to the whether a taxpayers’ liability was
Doxey in a September 15 run-off future signatories for checkiig by * million dollars or $20.
primary. It was to be used to de- mid-January. Now, however, the Republicans
fray what he called the defeated 2 The five-satellite treaties will believe the important thing is te
candidate’s “operating deficit.” be signed In Pari* February 10 reduce the overall dollar total of
The witness had just begun to 3 The new Big Four deputies for Personal income taxes bv 20 per
cent. Therefore, a GOP fiscal a
. . j in London on January 14 to begin [b,°rity *?id' d9?r ls toil
congressman, his right fiat cocked hearing u,, uttie United Nations open alternative methddi
Germany and ^Austria will meet tb^ity^fd^^The to ^'bein^
for a round-house "punch, lunged express (Mr views on the German of “ccomplishing the promised cut.
at him from three feat away. Gan- and Aultrian treaties. ----- u~ ’’
mer Bilbo
l/flfe Enters
fo spital
MAN, Mis*., Dec. 14, -CD-
istoaive FBI search for Ed
14-Year-Old Boy
Is'Cop Killer'
Youth Attempts To Kill
Self After Shooting
WASHINGTON, Dec, 14. -C*- A
(See Fist Fight, Page 2)
Lawyer Sues,
Claims Raft
Bopped Him
BY VIRGINIA MACPHERSON
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. U.— C.R) -
Possible alternatives might be al-
4. The Big Four themselves will ^"<*nof bighe(r exemptions and
meet for their fifth council meet- *** ™te*' t.These
Ing in Moscow on March 10 to be-
«"c^0rkto°hearne ^ 7” other,
COLLEGE GETS NEW KING, QUEEN—King and Queen of the
first baby shew ever held for children of Texas A. & M. college stu-
dents, William Terry and Neil Kathleen Martin display their trophies
while fathers beam. (International)
“* r£,'™r!2>ri£,‘”,sKC“d
cangress is organized.
(See Big 4 Ministers, Page 2)
a'
new
impmeiH anuin iw w ------to, — n HOLLY WOOD, UtC. He-
P. Terry was ended today 14-year-old boy whose mother died Movie gangster George Raft
th« formerseeretarv t<^ Sen ff^yt^AgO 1>Y to^a guarded shrugged off an elderly attc ..
ked in at a local hospital w(ottnd*1,g * w*shlngton policeman uf argument over “love gift*
t rest and treatment for a and then turning his stolen Ger- to a teen-aged film starlet.
klu.nnnMna inn ** lllffPP IftWPI hinifihlf TK/, Inrln in tka Aaen ____
^ living Cosh Up
:^«17 Per Cent
Tax experts believe it would be
easier to accomplish and- to ad-
minister tile proposed tax reduc-
nlk
'Cop Doesn't Always Win
Vet Detective Goes Down Trying
and who merely is speaking of his
to- readiness.”
Scotland Yard
Fights Thieves In
Fogbound London
Race Tracks Close As
Dogs Lose Rabbit Lure
LONDON, Dec. 14. —<U.R>— Fog so
dense that dog racing had to be
suspended because the mechanical
rabbits were invisible blanketed
England today for the second
straight day.
Racing at the Clapton, White
City, Newcross, Walthamston.
Romford and Slough tracks be-
came a farce when the dogs re-
peatedly lost sight of the lure, and
effort* were abandoned.
Thieves took advantage of the
fog cover and kept Scotland Yard
on the go. A welding company
cashier lost a bag containing $2,-
800 to a snatcher he never even
saw. The driver of a truck con-
taining 1,500 pairs of shoes be-
came fogbound, went for assistant
and returned to find his truck
gone. Socially prominent Mrs. Irene
Roberts’ home was robbed of $32,-
000 by a second-story man.
Three persons, one a bride-to-be
who arrived an hour earlier from
Bombay, were drowned at South-
ampton when k car plunged over
the quay wail at the docks.
Boat traffic between Portsmouth
and the Isle of Wight was suspend-
ed. Air service was disrupted, with
an estimated loss to companies of
$80,000 a day on trans-Atlantic
y nervous condition.'
Itrry is described as a key wit
roan luger upon himself.
Wearing an army field
The lady in the case- 18-year- Food Prices Account
jacket, old Betty Doss-said the whole for M0$t Of Increase
routes alone. Train service was
lion by polking it app"ly'acro«7he V CT 1 ' subject to delay,
gKws *s3=r: i: gslll=5
trying,” chunky, likeable Detective Burke said. to close In to zero-zero visibility
James Burke said. He went to the rear of the store again tonight.
Thirty - five f e 1 !,© w detectives and gat down behind some packing
searched the city today for two boxes to wait.
hi«03"lrVBUrHP went At 6:07 Pm' W ^grocs.
Sown",hooting batb ca"yin* Pisto1*' entered the
lorBUh«ri h,!en27nn Pthendfor^ a holdup,” they said.
£r*ha'^ 2* Burke sprang from his hiding
t®ed at the Bilbo hearing in ^ worth $300,000 damages. Of the total cost of living in- Betty Dee Davison ......... 1.65 of a calendar. Shaw heard el*bt shots and two The second burglary in two
'$ton According to police the trouble Mi** Do“- « shapely red-head crease for 1946, 16 per cent occur- Lura Virginia Hebei ........ 5.90 "A good cop never rests on his n,lght,s m P*?*®* Creek occurB?d at
•Jtrsr■sdsRrs s&jrznz1 ss ^ k,„. T°““dw..............**» a -*
ay.inti Bilbo Urget of a sen- the youngster Townsend Anna, thing was news to her.
w»r investiEatinc* subcommit- thc *0B at a waiter — shot and Lawyer Edward Raiden, gray- WASHINGTON Dec 14
|h«ring on charges that he re- 47"^^irtt^foa^hSrHfi^hv make* Raff rrturn*$6 000 worth of The cost ot iivin* increased 2 per
i gratuities from contractors JJ' ?*t." gbt btJ° horrified by- make worth of cent between October 15 and No-
i he helped get army cegistruc- ‘■“wntown VVashmgton. giftiVtbj¥h*L'fhJn v,,mber 15, bringing the total m-
«a .,** °Jb,r l\°n to* the Au u, » per cent.
<«- «. !»*. *« S5»fK S^SfLa £ SSS* “W **“ “ ft >— -po-tai «■
(or ,lmo« h w«k ,f»[ he r.m'dkl'ar'’-!!!*,! ’f'-o hi, effort,. Raiden said In da;(
I alleged ananymous tele- ar,r^ataA u» n^A k,., rs. s lenathv comolaint. he eot slue- A
the
arrested." He fired once, but the a lengthy complaint, he got slug- A 4% oer cent rise in food prices
Goodfellows
Gather Toys
For Packing
Burglar Lays
In Complete
Xmas Stock
in
I their daughter, a guest at the WhM"Gr^s”sUrtod "to'‘inveJu- ever hiring Rmden°“' -Mse^'awrS^f By CHIEF GOODFELLOW ^Burke was assigned yesterday by t'heif^ha^onead t0 get shed ®* cartons of cigarettes,
Hole E Ho^ Jr, a lumber- (fcTi4-’^fM^Pl«e « Raiden says he has a written *».. ner cent between mid-October Toys today were fathered from Deputy Chief Inspector John J. ..ale °ite{Sd:. , . . ... boxes of cigars, ftve quarts
formerly associated with
I informed Terry that he was C v fj D A
td missing and that the FBI LA*V*/1 #1 “I
[been asked to join thc search. _
Backs CIO
the Watkins Memorial hos-
y SirHS
scrip ion of the beating. . increased 65 per cent; meat, poultry showrooms, and there next Sat- holdups. Ul8trlct Attorney SamueI J- Foley ♦- ’«* —«“ B-
Raiden charged the bekting took an(j fjgh about 7 per cent; fruit urday members of the Parent- The fat detecive studied the pat-
ace Dec. 21, 1945, in Miss Doss' and vee-ctahles 4 5 ner cent. Teacher ass—*-*1—* -i-'— j “
said.
place Dec. 21, 1948, in Miss
apartment when Raft worked him
over ’------- ’ ' ....... ‘ '
, , , and vegetables 4.5 percent. Teacher association units will pack tcrn and Picked out Ray’s Liquor
,ment when Raft worked him The only food items which drop- them. Incidentally, we will accept fi°re “t 1439 Webster avenue. —
whiie’^'ll f£SllH?er ®,ty c ned'in price were eggs and dairy ail new toys you care to give to When the street lights began prick- yUrflUiTl jCTYlCCS
!* * the attor- products and these only slightly. • the Goodfellows. ,ng the dusk hc entered thc store
LA/ A J -T mw nonsuch fight” the Uoffth lB thc first survey of completely The Goodfellows have benefitted
WaqeUemana 8outh~ uncontrolled meat prices, the de- from three such gifts already
)UND TOWN CHICAGO. Dec. 14 -CR) Leon . , «.
Henderson, former OFA director, T Aft ASM am 4 |jna|h
I ft* Tri-Cities: The telephone charged last night that C. E. Wil- IvllCIIICIII Vtrdlli
[tow Put a lot of work in on »fn, president of General Motors to .. • *. «.
/ Christmas tree down there Dorp., was “guilty of economic I All \pf A * IL
(the hello emporium ... Joe heresy" when he said that proposed IVII JCI rl| VV
wd C
me “
w COW . . jtACKIC V^onunin^B nwiucimMi a«iu MIC tuuiikl/ wns vwsssw ui
E Dally Sun carrier career realizing tiie "most amazing growth tenement
» lot of figuring here and in profits the American economy final vict
Miss Tony Baca finds ever has known." and that the count at 36 as firemen and house
uncontrolled meat prices, the
partment found thev were 9 oer the many toys given by the TH-
cent higher on November 15 than Cities Lions club, the toys assem-
just before they were recontrolled bled at the party given Friday
" • "*........•• . -tfald fSJirtfuj;
Three-Way Train
Crash Is Probed
plenty of n,,„t. how "rSttnKjj'i";'!. ,e- MANSFIELD. 0„ 1,. -ITJJ- /SHfi/L'!' U i£
price check in No- ceive any second hand toys. We An official investigation was start- fTmer^hoL Lith Rev M E Me! Cash,and ' ^ WW ^ ft°m
in mid-August. President Truman night by the Tri-Cities Jaycee
lifted all meat controls last October Ettes, and a gift from Aaron Ros-
‘ ' ' -------- •*-------a * * ••
There was
ever, for the
Foley ter No money was missing, B.
F. Jackson, owner of the store,
Jackson said the burglar broke
a pane in a glass door and took
everything that could be reached
from the opening. He did not be-
lieve thc burglar entered the store,
but reached through thc hole in
the door, he said,
jonn Clarence Durham, 69, died police officers D. K. flyers and
at 2:25 a. m. today at the home of Henry Enax investigated,
his daughter. Mrs. C. K. Scott,' 209 The officers said they arc with-
Lindberg, Lee Heights. out c]ues t0 the burglary at Kcl-
Scheduled Sunday
John Clarence Durham, 69, died
I re m forlo.P «4- fUk ^g
of rubbie ^ “ft?"K INFANT UIFS
.ent house slowly yielded Us Pnou„h meat in September and through the year we have always ^rs on Christmas furloughs be- unLdiroction ofPauTui^f!'
victims today. Police .set the October jn many cities to provide preferred to give new toys, where fore leaving for Japan—and in- , h Burial services were held at Hil!
8‘ ^,asJflr*men ,and house a complete picture of prices for. possible. * jured more than 30. _ Wiv^’are his wife. Mrs. Win- of Rest'remetery at 1
WS.5g^7T. c."e '(mmawSSS Sto'TdiS .Vi*,™ m pt«La t«i,y SSiTaSt.. o, «,■ u,, i“'fSaiSif*S
Tt,'™>ld“*f’“1(“c C( *™.1> te. • W te »», »«• te th, l.,l Ip., Mri, “tSJTSSteili Pfl.., than loot pTmTS ~f, P.nnyyl.mi. Il„, ^ £?.”« J Sr” Nn
' minuta this morning . boost are "valid." Authorities thus accounted for an(j rent rose less than 1 oer cent Mrs. J. F. Ball in memory of their Pittsburgh and Chicago, were daughter, Mrs. fccott, two grand ^ —-
Ww wmmbLm^* “ nuio conM^ative economist, all Yh'e 92 'resrdento c?th;“ six^tory- tetwe!ITorto™15 and Nm-embir Ton
liv? , ' J51110 RRree’ he sald- that Prlces are out tenement in New York's upper ----
- - Banks • • ■ B*v: Ewing of line with consumer purchasing west side which crashed in an av-
-......IN** being slightly on
|«dted side ... Milton and
C K. Jersey. Funeral was under direc-
tion of Pauli U. Lee funeral hom*.
power.
alanehe of brick, mortar and bod-
F* iv“ srrs«Ktvx «««»**«»
twr-Hs.*wtah!,t5fs T. ,
■ArtOfi jSif ,sg iftjr.nrst'SLSSs. s ««Srtu,»ssixg&sssss *»-
. r. Kan in memory or tneir * at.« whubsu, wm- hlH l hn Neal and
Sv sss *« *•-*«*>*.
J. Sanders. Thanks to all of you. away the wreckage.
We have an idea, in checking Two eastbound freight trains f _ Ta^Imu
purchases, that this year’s party P^ed up early yesterday, leaving SfOCKS WlOSC I OCIQY
will cost approximately $550. That’B a locomotive and seven freight
not much more to raise, and we cars across a parallel track over
- which the Pennsylvania's Golden
Courtesy Citizens National Bank
if —-IS?- , k1, tow been a decrease in consumer- were hospitalized,
them p!??, ly Purchasing power of 25 per cent Tomorrow, churches of the
to be glad since Jaaaary-neighborhood will hold memorial
* “> —*» pS s .sstsri rsz zsrjrs, sasu-ri*
both answered board" income tax reduction. • •, « to •
t0°" •. . The! enlisted to fhl He 8,,id on,y a few dollars wouId Mail Id CTBSH
on December 12 and jf Itl be *aved by the small income per- I’M" 1,1 WOMI
!t »re unassigned C R son witb an actual increase of as IJpai* |af|nf rt Pity
Pronounces the firemen'* much «s “80 per cent in net in- nvaT lOCIIlTV VllJ
fj, bilge success . . . Willie comc for the rich”
herdsr from ^thc 120 000-acre kotary club and others in this area, from Fort Di*. N. J„ was speeding ™
55;G1™“**11 you *“ SSSSfiKas
until January 15 today to remove
their herds from the 12C
maneuver area of Camp
or have them impounded for sa!
Negro Fight Ends
“3S - With Woman Dead
LIVINGSTON. Dec. 14. -O)-
Stcel
Its two locomotives were derailed Allis Chalmers
and the first two coaches, filled Ampr Rnll Mju,
with recentlv inducted draftees, *T Ld V'
were wrecked. Vm ™
Pennsylvania authorities said the
freight wreck was caused when
the first eastbound train was halt-
1 "dil never go to jail as lone
«n ba^e'e ch,5enUteg
«• fiTemen and the depu-
T,1 F Ha“ eal,s *ttention
®»*«8 ease of bottles . . .
M«y'eim,ak®8 a midnight
FSSa.0MfS-Jaclt Hartt delivers
iGenL o leaves her car keys
S«tot and family de.
I and m . Mrs- c Teschen-
|bridireB r J°5ice home frora
*d 0f mV Gforela. and very
fho “ ’J8 new granddaugh!
i her "Mt day
jt... *randmother came for
HI NABOR
By Olin Miller
. A lots of foils
run their fest-
e $ t w fi • n
thoy'r* run.
ning *w«y
from «n ids*.'
JACINTO CITY, Dec. 14. ~(l'.E)~
J. B. McRae, 26, of Houston and
San Augustine was dead today fol-
lowing an auto accident in which
a reunion of two war buddies had
a tragic ending.
The accident occurred two miles
west of JacintoCity during a fog
last night. The accident occurred
when the car in which McRae and
his friend, Charles S. Haley, 28,
of Beaumont, collided with a truck.
Haley was taken to St. Joseph's
infirmary' in Houston with seri-
ous injuries. The two men met un-
expectedly in Houston for the first
time in more than a year during
a government sale. ’
SHOPPING
DATS LIFT
AT and T ...
Anaconda Copp
Budd Co ......
Celanese Carp
Cessna Air
Cities Service
Coca Cola
srtucls^he^during a wild-shooting gjg With,to a^mtoutes^he Sou
St3he was sitting in a downtown ^aJn4Dgh! CrR*hed ’nt° the g Edi^n ' ;
rooming house talking to a neigh- ____Copper Range
WONT RETIRE S’arTz'Lad '!.......... Z
ly. DALLAS. Dee. '4. —CD—Federal Curtiss Wright ............. 8
Police said two negroes had en- Judge William H. Atwell, 79, de- Davison Chew . ........ 18
gaged in a fight in the street nied today a Washington report Dow Chcm ......... 17D
across from the house when the that he was planning to vacate his Du Pont ■•••<.............188
judgeship. Emerson Elec ............, 13
Atwell,4 who received his ap- General Motors —53
pointment during the presidential Goodyear Tire ----- 54
administration of Calvin Coolidge, Graham Paige,
said there was "no truth” to a
prediction made by Texas National
Republican - Committeeman R. B.
Creager of Brownsville that he
might retire in the near future.
•.......
shooting began.
One bullet wounded one negro.
Another shell went through the
window of a jewelry store, glanced
through the wall of a cafe and hit
a ceiling fan.
One negro was lodged in jail
and the wounded man had been
taken to a hospital.
Greyhound
Gulf Oil ................... 63
Houston Oil ............... 18%'
Hudson Motors .......— 15%
Humble Oil ................ 61%
...... .167 Inti Nickle
xti J. and L. Steel .......
.......... Kingston Prod ........
.........V 35& Kenn Copper .......
.......... 35V Libby McN and Libby
....... 97't .Mid-Con Pet .........
..........168 Natl Fuel and Gas
........... 39% Natl Dairy Prod —
.......... 13 Natl Pella, Hess
........... 20% Ohio Oil .............
....... 4U Packard Motors ......
.......... 28 Pantepee OH
..........143 Pepsi-Cola
....... .. 3L .Ponnejr's ..............
.......... 27 R. C. A. ...............
........10'i Rio Grande Val Gas ...
3% Southern Pacific ......
i’a Stan Oil Ind .........
Stan Oil N. J. .......
SL Regis Paper .......
Sunray Oil ...........
Texas Co ... —.......
Tidewater Corp .......
Union Pacific .........
United Wall Paper ......
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 160, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1946, newspaper, December 14, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100244/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.