The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 160, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1946 Page: 4 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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE DAILY SUN. GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS
SATURDAY, DECEMBER u, ,.Mriil!DAY.
0Dt20aif5#un
Sun Slants
Looking At Life...........................8,
Erich
Published each week-day afternoon by
lhe Dally Sun Company, 11# West Pearce Street,
Goose Creek, Texas.
FRED HARTMAN. Editor
ROBERT MATHKRNE, Business Manager
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Month, 75c; 6 Months, $4.15; Year, $8.00
Special Rate to Men in Service—80c Month
All Mall Subscriptions Payable In Advance
Entered as second class matter at Goose Creek,
•r. , .
By Fred Hartman
Texas, post office under the act of Congress,
March 8, 1897.
Filipino Unrest
Philippine independence is not yet five
lonths old, yet already th
months old, yet already there is opposition
by an extreme nationalist group to an
amendment to the Philippine Constitution,
to be submitted at a referendum March 11,
which would guarantee certain rights to
Americans. This amendment is not project-
ed under any semblance of duress. Uncle
Sam attached no strings tb setting the Phil-
ippines free this year, as planned, even
through war had intervened and the Islands
were economically almost prostrate.
Rather the amendment is an expression
of gratitude on the part of the Rqxas gov-
ernment for the defeat of the Japanese and
for the fact that in the year before Pearl
Harbor preferential treatment of Philippine
exports in the U. S. market had been the
strongest contribution to the country's
prosperity.
In the more than three months before the
amendment comes to a vote the Roxas in-
KKAI. CHRISTMAS .SPIRIT
THERE ARE many good and unselfish movements
around Christmas time because the average per-
son likes to do something for somebody eljo -
especially at Christmas time. *
But none of tse movements can surpass the one
planned and being placed In operation here by the
Tri-Cities American I-egion post.
District Eight of the Texas American Legion has
decided to give every patient in McOioskey hos-
pital and the naval hospital in Houston a Christ-
inas packige.
The post here is asking interested persons to pro-
vide baskets in the name of the Trl-Cttlei post.
A committee of Louis Van Meldert, Z. V. Warren
und W. R. Edgar has been appointed to receive
these gifts.
The Tri-Cities pest is very much on the march.
Commander J. T. Mgebroff has announced that 52
new members will be initiated at the mecUng Of
the group at 7:30 p. m. Monday in the Baytown
Community building.
Wc can think of no way to show the Christman
spirit better than to provide a soldier or sailor in
a hospital with a Christmas box.
Wherever you go nowadays you see posters,and
billboards admonishing you to go slowly. “Death is
just around the corner," read one of them I passed
yesterday. "Go slow and live,” said another one.
The Archibishop of Canterbury recently returned
to England from a trip'•to ^hc United States.
"What impressed you most?" he was asked.
“American cops," was Ids reply.
"In one great city," he told reporters, "the police
regarding all speed laws, making ungodl,
ind motorists half to dm
scaring pedestrians and
It certainly can’t be for safety's sake. AmT
certainly, It isn’t democracy. I have the Mg'
gard for the police. They are a fine bunch'
lows and without them we'd be even worm.
we are now.
But why doe* a statesmen or a , politician
delegate from some country wo never heard 1
'fri
>- i
traveled through a neighboring city at 60 miles
hour, decided that neither the Archbishop of Canter-
bury nor ftioir city should be outdone.
’The result was that wc traveled through the
streets at 80 miles an hour with motorcycle escort
report
The
rtanc<-
Archbishop of Canterbury did not
himself. But I suspect that he gave the inti
with tongue in cheek.
I suspect that he was amused by our chili
WE BET NOT
THE PRESENT facilities of the telephone exchange
at Highlands are being douhled, according to a re-
port of District Manager W. W. Hunt. The tele-
port of District Manager w. w. Hunt, rne teie- ,
phene man here says the company is thereby taking A
care of Highlands for the next 10 years.
Now Bill Hunt is a truthful man, but wc believe
in Highlands stronger than Bill's company docs.
ss zi&as’S, ■irf.rs.nr.i" ^
phone facilities at Highlands will need doubling -------
again.
And we're wondering if it will now be necessary
for a man at a telephone at Four Corners to call
Goose Creek and ask them to call Crosby and ask
them to call Highlands to talk to a party less
than a mile down the road.
We sure hope not.
Church News...
Barclay On Bridge
ORDINATION RITES AT
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Four new elders and seven dea
cons will be ordained in
ceremonies at the 11 a. m. service
tomorrow at the First Presbyter-
ian church.
Central Baptist Plans
rVcw Christmas Activities
Mcnt Belvieu WSCS
To install Officers
By Shephard Barclay
Officers of the Women's i
of Christian service at Moml
vieu Methodist church will kl
stalled at the morning *
the church at 10:45 a m.,
Central Baptist church is plan- Rev Don Pevey, pastor i
ning numerous Christmas activ- today.
fluence will be exerted strongly on its be- T WAS GAINED
half. Senator Thomas Confessor, Opposition tWe is an o^d axiom in the newspaper business - . .. ., . ... „
leader and self-constituted leader, as well, that -tors on to say that H a mistake^ made and it -e bdnch
“if '**" r*3--- - --
aims are imperialistic, as though setting the
Philippines free were not a supreme anti-
imperialistic gesture on Washington’s part,
pot to the Philippines alone, but to all Asia,
as well. It seems incredible that his views
can prevail.
, some of an incident
who otherwise may not have seen it.
That’s the way1 we feel about the teachers and
their Upton Close; incident. And we say that without
prejudice to either side. As far as most of us are
concerned, the incident was closed and forgotten
a day after it happened. This three-man committee
report did nothing but drag the dirty linen out
of the clothes hamp
A SET-UP FOR PSYCHICS How could I tell we had a game-,
IT IS not always your fault If ;when one opponent opened the
an opponent slicks you out of a bidding and the other could re-
' i ' ' “HH| double over my takeout? ” aeked
iWest after his side scored an In-
significant set of one trick against
nper again.
Not equal rights with Filipinos, but spe-
cial rights with equal treatment in the de-
velopment of natural resources and the
ownership of public utilities are contemplate totheaJsociation to makt. the report. It should have
ed under the proposed amendment. Presi- been madc and then filed. I can t see where yes- °waer» to vicumw*.
Those who are on the teachers’ side and stay there.
And those who were opposed to them will hot change
their stand if you argue with them for 40 days and
40 nights.
Of course, the committee probably felt it owed it
also that of your partner—that
an illusion is created-which all the
good bidding in the world by
your own side will not dispel. But
a large majority of the time, the
psychic can be unmasked. And,
even if not, you can often, hy
listening carefully and consider-
ing thoroughly the meaning of
your partner's bid, reach the same
profitable contract as if the phy-
chjc had not been bid against you.
Failure to reckon that way can
make you a aet-up for psychic.
terday's Daily Sun report helped matters-any.
dent Roxas is vehement in asserting that if
it is lost, so will be Filipino trade in sugar, •
COCOnut and cordage (hemp), the principal OFFICIALS oU Harris county, after being
exports, With the United States. well-filled and content after being served a choice
We could have told them that and saved them the
price of a dinner.
Few cities in this section of Texas have enough
money. The reison is that they arc developing so fast
they can’t keep pace. And another reason is that
■* were started, they
for their exports. They need American in-
vestment there, and American engineering
and industrial brains, without which they
would share the general Asiatic poverty and
could fall a prey to some other nation. Presi-
dent Roxas says:
“Let us stop fighting today’s wars with
yesterday’s weapons. The battle of inde-
pendence is won. There is no point in fight-
ing it over and oyer again. Our new adver-
saries are hunger, want, economic insecur-
ity and economic injustice. Let us hasten to
the assault.”
And it is only by the aid and with the
continued confidence of the United States
that those.adversaries can be overthrown.
♦ a Q 7
♦ 6
♦ K J 10 7
5 4
+ A K 6
#62
f A J 9 5 4 2
♦ A
A9 7 5 3
7-- # K 10 8 5
4 '
f Q 10 8
*9 6 2
J,*10 2
the 3-Hearts. His side got two
'tricks in spades, two in clubs and
one with the heart Q.
West did not realize that South
had made a second-hand psychic
opening, until after the entire
hand had been played.
; -What did you care, asked East,
"about what the opponents did?
I grant that you could have con-
sidered my first bid of spades,
over North's redouble, as show-
ing nothing but a spade suit, with
:perhaps no strength In high card*.
‘But. when I bid my spades a sec-
ond time, as a free bid over
North's 2-Hearts, you could tell I
■'had some merit to my hand, in-
' 'eluding at least a five-card suit.
With your strength and distribu-
tion. you should have supported
my spades, not just at three, but
all the way to four.”
j It turned out that an extra
trick coHld have been made at
spades, with the loss of only one
'each in the two red suits.
Rev. Ewing McPbail, pastor, will (ties for the remaining days before
conduct the ceremony at the con- Christmas
elders"arc PJSw'aT Untoa®win'hold"'fburfnJ/Tneet*
Ruebsahm, Douglas Barr and lBg Md complete plans for-Christ-
Frank Duvall. mas. Mias Mildred Steed wUI en-
New members of the diaconate trrtaln her Sunday 8chfK)| class
are DelmasSmRh. George Shipley, wlth a chili supper at her h0me at
Sammic McPhail, E. W. Bowcrman, nm
Fred Hartman, Dr. V. K. Rogan l! , . . . , , _ ...
and Royce Matthews. T^c Junior traintag union win
A vesper service is planned at Jj®* “ Wj* * ^30
the church at 5:80 p. m. Sunday at.thf , "a,ter Ro
with the primary and Junior de- «*• leader, wdi assist .
partment* of the Sunday school . Prayer meeting will be held it
and a junior choir to be presented 8 p m_ Wednesday
under the direction of Mrs. Chester 9n Thursday, the Esther Sunday
Rogers and Mrs. McPhail *tho°1 j;1,8*® **/ l*\e ®dult
Rev. McPhail said the woman s ment will meet and have i Chriet-
auxiliary of the church Will have mas party at the home of Mrs. C.
a Christmas party at the N D. D-Dif* ?“ 131, Mf*1’ 1*?ftown . .
Stiles home Monday night. The Fridays wtlvities will mclnde
young people of the church will he tfle Junior Sunday school depart-
guests at a party at the SUles ment Christmas party from St- 7
home Thursday night and the Sen- P-J*- JR church Mrs. EM
ior Weatminstcr Fcllowablo gtoup Chandler is superintendent A. <
will be entertained at the Stile! P-«"- Friday a Christmas tree will
home next Friday night held for all elementary depart-
____ meats o« the Sunday school and a
REV- CfMffH TO DUCU8H ^
GREATEST CHRISTIAN VIRTUE victory class
series of sermons on "Thtj
ards of Christmae "
The impression is growing that when
John L. Lewis finally is detonated, it will
be disclosed that he is a wet firecracker
instead of an atomic bomb.
emands upon the sub-dividers, and
now fell:are still paying taxes for bonds that
paid for improvements that the sub-dividers should
hgve paid for in the beginning.
That is true right hw in Goose Creek.
If there had been paved streets included in the
original subdivisions in Goose Creek, and the prop-
erty owners charged for them instead of being sold
a $175 lot or less on a street that had no improve-
ments whatever, we wouldn't be in such a pad hole
But the point we keep making time after time
is that the street situation in Goose Creek is as bad
as any in the county. (We started to say worse but
figured there may be others a$ bad and we want to
be charitable).
We agree with the city fathers. They need more
money. And right here at home, all of that extra
money should be spent upon permanent street im-
provement projects.
♦ J 9 3
f K 7 3
♦ Q83
*QJ84
East South West North lead a trump, ftpm a holding of
Pass 1 ♦ • Dbl Bdbl fodr headed by the 10. against a
1 A Pass 2 4 2 tf - slam, game, or even a less-than*
2 # 3 V rgarne contnict?
CihiU»Chm“srdaron entire young people's depart-
s,pss.“t sa® ■ <*«*“ ^ *■
Knoweth Them That Are His." frogram on Deccmbci 22 will b.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Biblical city
6. Mouthlike
'.opening
(Biol.)
11. Sun-dried
brick
12. County in
Rjinois'
13. Cloth from
flax
14. A catkin
3. Puts on 22. Polynesian
4. Fetish drink
< Afr.) - 23. Ignited
5. Threatened 25. Pen-name
6. Kind of of Charles
rock Dickens
T. Mile cat 26. Anger
8. S shaped 27. Varying
molding
9. A large
number
weight
(India)
29. A section
jgggffl
REV. HOUSE UNI S
SUNDAV PROGRAM
Rev. G. R. House, pastor of
Cedar Bayou Methodist church
announces the following schedule
of meetings for next week:
Sunday: Church school. 9:45
a.m ; preaching. 10:50 a.m.; Meth-
odist Youth Fellowship. 6 p.m.;
Children’s hour, 6 p.m.; preaching,
7 p.m.
Wednesday: Prayer meeting. 7
p.m. This will be
service.
Thursday: WSCS, ail-day mect-
»ng. ■
announced by Rev. Lester Bell at
the morning service Sunday.
His subject for the 11 a.m. serv-
ice is “I am the Vine."
OBENHAt S NAMES
SUNDAY SUBJECTS
"We Live in a World
Grass Withers and Fiowth j
is the theme on which Re» 5
Obenhaus will preach at ]
Lutheran church at 1021)
Sunday. 4
At this service a dess jfj
adults will be confirmed. T
will sing the confirmatw!
"Jesus. Jewel of My FtWL*|
class includes, Elmer L f
Ben. F. Dcvercux Jr., Mtsij
Hans. Mr*. John Lee Kilgore J
Arthur W. Schneider, ssd I
H. Teten.
The Sunday school arid tMfL
Bible class will meet at till
"When did tbe Wise-men oT
Worship the Christ-child ini
lebem?" will be one of the H
to be discussed by the Bibk i
The Sunday aebool chll ‘
REV. BEHRENS LISTS
SUNDAY SUBJECTS
PIERCE ANNOUNCES
SERMON SUBJECTS
Rev. Lee C. Pierce, pastor, has
chosen "A Hallowed Shafn" as tie __
title for his sermon at 16:45 a.m. meet in the church at I’M
Sunday at the First Christian Sunday for the first rehnwij
church the children's Christmas
"The Beloved Story" will be his The Friendship club wilt
preaching subjcCt at the evening service at Christmas party in the I
7:30 p.m. M». Huey Hoppe, M W.
Sunday school will be at 9:45 at 2 p.m Tucsd«>
a.m.: Christian Youth Fellowship ----------
Vhf Linen's League will hold *5
a monthly dinner at the church at 1 ,
Careful scrutiny of those photographs of 2K“g ^ ^ ^J2L
10. Poker stake 31. Antelope
17. To cook
u.~r
in the air fail to reveal any sign of John L.
Lewis.
sia has asked us for a loan of $1,000,000,000 directly ’ n,rf and gloss;
or indirectly but it Is the only imtioh to the world 20. Alcoholic
which has not said anything about settlement on f
iL. 41AAAAAAA AArt tear! Inoeo wiafAPlol oTpaqHv 471V.
Clamps remain fastened on building ma- the $10,000,000,000 of lend-lease. materia! already giv- »•
terials Shiie an assurtmeut of scrawblils i„
Washington argue about whether prefabn- payment she could make in kind as the agreement 24. Wading
cated service stations shall be erected and provided. About those things she says nothing at all bird
palmed off on the public is abodes. W.'Sfi' "-2W
and acting as a man does with'a genial fool.
Advances Of Communism
Greater Than Peace Goal
.have gained five peace
beverages
21. Carriage
(Afr.)
33. Little island
34. Young sow
< Prov. Eng.)
35. Jewish
month
36. Pool
.*“8- Rev. Ben Behrens announces the 7 p.m. Wednesday. Make ^Room for C3triit?j|
Yrsierdsjr's A»»*«r , following sermon subjects for the L. N. Hays of the Juliete Fowler **ng?n 00 . - M
“ rr. r: ^ = t&szhz
38. Tear with
the teeth
39. Notoriety
40. Money
(Humorous)
42: Turkish title
44. Disfigure.
"Tlie Lord Also Loveth a Cheer- practice will be at 7 p.m. Thurs
fill Receiver," 10:45 a.m, day.
"Are We Able,” 7 pjn ,-
Church school begins at 9:35 a m.
Superintendent J. E. Scale aft- TO CONDUCT SERVICES . ....... , _.. „
iiouned that the church school has Rev, Rahdall A Hutson, of tor on1 Ch^on ^rotberte
LuUierun church. Bay tow# I
munity building.
Sunday school will begiai
am. The adult Bible class 1
taught by Arthur A, Hollei
News Behind The News
By Paul Motion
with ivy
29. Breathe
noisily in
sleep
,30. Movable
barrier
31. Old man
ON THE SURFACE we pave guinea nve peace islansl '
WASHINGTON—It is strange and, unpleasant to be treaties with five little country in Europe, but not „„ q_,, ®j„n,
r#»tlllirpd bv thg' ffLfita tn r#»nnrf fhaf fhn raldii.mlo flLamnanw Ancffia nr Tai>ail, 8 dlSaritiameilt
required by the facts to report that the relatively yet Germany, Austria
congenial international conferences in New York --------*
did not bring a victory for the foreign policy of
the United States -Or even progress or advancement
toward it. This country, frankly, lost ground, par-
Jap:
hich
agreement “in principle" which seems to be only a
delusive Russian game in diplomatic
34. Herd of
whales
37. Total number
ticularty in Latin America, which we must hold to
sustain our doctrine, and in France. Italy, the Bal-
kans, even Britain. Everywhere, except in Japan,
China and this country, we gave political footage
to one single political opposition force -Communism.
Elsewhere around the periphery of this world, Com-
munism is today much stronger than when the New
York international meeting? convened.
Th£ Amerlcah public may not fully understand this
yet because the progress made at the conference
was in superficialities, while the advances made by
Communism- are basic. But the. delegates appear to
understand it. The UN assembly, for instance, is un-
derstood on the inside af officialdom here to be
pressing for early adjournment, perhaps before Jan-
uary 1, because the world delegates are tired of the
prospects and want to get hprae. They will leave
committees to work behind them. Some authorities
who have heard the debates first hand have been
displayed at the plane upon which they are con-
ducted—a wandering plane of ideals wholly torn
loose from bedrock.
tactics, a
ludicrous budget proposal, an attempt by Russia to ■
force the United States to place the permanent con-
ference site where Russian pipelines are deepest and ’f- ^errect
largest-or she will not even attend. Measured ^3 —— FJpla.
against these accomplishments are the advances <5. Immense
of Communism around the world while this congenial *6. Dating-
nullity was being effected. An underground Com- from birth
munist campaign has swept Latin America, notice- 47. Care for
ably heading its advancements in the. Chilean labor _ rpedically
unions. In Europe Communism has broken the So- 48. River (Eng.)
il(st opposition to bits. Strengthening itself by elec- DOWN
1. Auction
2. Norse god
Russia So Far Has Been On
All Sides OF AlMPuestions
cialist oppositio: ..... _ ____ .......
tions in the Balkans and by closer delusive manage-
ment of Tito and its satellites. In France it won
plurality representation in the assembly with the
parties of liberty. In Italy if is winning city elec-
tions and Was broken the Socialist stand against
it, gaining Socialist cooperation. In Britain it has
driven a deep wedge against the American desire
for Christian world liberty in the Labor party, and
an eminently trustworthy British source now says
half or more of the party intellectuals are Marxist.
A Communist move to get at Spain through its col-
onies has been detected as being well financed. jn par East Weaken.
Ail these things and more have been accomplish- Germans Annihilated
ed by Communism against the spirit of freedom anc
had a record attendance for the town will conduct a worship serv- 0
past few months. ice at the First Baptist church of ^
The junior department Christ- Pelly at 7 p.m. Saturday. HINGING CONVENTION
mas party will be* held at 6 pan. Rev. O. F. Keefer of Huntavtlle IN SUNDAY MEETING
Monday; the couples class will ne will" be the visiting minister or —>>"►*
at 7 p.m. Monday in the Bible both services Sunday. He will
class room. speak at 11 a.m. and at 7:45 p.m.
The Methodist men will hold a
M. Jryan. president, and James UHW^ULN^Nffl
luncheon at- 7 p.m. Wednesday, J,
M. Bryan, president, and James d
F. Rhodes, secretary, are in charge.
-- “God the Preserver of Man” Is
CENTRAL ASSEMBLY OF GOD the subject of the lesson-eermon
LISTS SUNDAY PROGRAM which will be read in all Churches
"America’s new philosophy, FeAr of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, De-
God, and do as you please," will comber 15.
be the subject of Pastor Bracy The Golden Text is: “As the
The East Harris county *
convention will meet at 2:MH
Sunday at Central Baptist m
In Pelly. J
All persons Interested in A
have been invited to -**‘*i'
program.
Grec-r at the 11 a m. service Sun- mountains are round about Jeru-
day at the Central Assembly of salem, so the Lord is round about
Odd. . his people from henceforth even
The Sunday night subject to be for ever” (Psalms 125:2).
discussed by the pastor will be a Among the citations which corn-
sequel to the Sunday morning ser- prise the Lesson-Sermon is the fpl-
mbn lowing from the Bible: “The (Lord
The text for this "sermon in se- is thy keeper: the Lord is thy
quel” is found;in II Kings, 17:33. shade upon thy right hand"
The Sunday evening service be- (Psalms 121:5).
gins at 7:30 p,m. The choir will The Lesson-Sermon also^Includes
sing under^ the direction of Lynn the following passage from the
Rowe. Mr. and Mrs Rowe will also Christian Science textbook, “Sci-
_____ sing a special number and there ence and Health with Key to the
will be other songs arranged and Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy:
theater after the Jap attack: directed by Mrs. Sammie Swick "Man, made in His likeness, pos-
George BelUhoover, Arthur Per- Sunday school begins at 9:48 a. sesses and reflects God’s dominion
kins, O. L. Chavers Jr., Earl Eberiy m. under the direction of J. R. over all the earth" (page 516).
and Leo Kurmadas. Spell. The church is located at the Sunday service 11 a m.; Wednes-
Crnm Dailv Sun Files _____— corner of Pruitt and Nasro streets day evening service 8 p.m.; Sunday
^ > jar Classified Ads—Phone 520-521 in Pelly. school convenes 9:30 a.m.
T^nj^ ilfadljnes: Jap Attacks • '■* ' —— ---—■■■ — -s"' *> ......;-1—L-‘-
five Years Ago
St. Paul's
Lutheran Chi
Baytown Community!
'aco
iUFKII
TO
;"m'i
Texas AA
into the quartel
*" r of Iasi
and sirens shrieking, and so excited were the pollc;- and 0ur innate anxiety to ehow off. Wc like to*
that they presented me with a written statement 'em that we are bigger and faster and louder«
on official paper, recording that speed," anyone else. We like to scare the daylights J
The archbishop declined to name the city, 'em. Maybe It’s bcoause we haven’t many rcaTL-
If anybody but a high clergyman had told this boys any more, but the cowboy spirit Is still h, 71
story you would rightly have considered It grow ex- Wouldn’t the archbishop* both of them XJ
aggeration. But. certainly, an archbishop would not seen more of our country and of its "people if XT
exaggerate-and thore is that official -paper. had been permitted to go a little mere slowly™
Furthermore I have seen it with my own eyes. Why give a native a ticket for going forty -a
Right here in New York it’s almost a daily occur- an hour and rush a visitor through AmerlJj
rence. eighty?
Governors and senators, mayors and wardheelers, I like that sign I have seen in eevertl:
rushing to baseball games and meetings, to luncheons “Go *|ow and see our scenery. Go fast and wt>
and banquets at top speed, headed by niotorcope, dia- jail.
Sunday School - * -
Divine Worship - - -JO ,
Theme: “Make RsW 1
Christ!"
YOU ARE WELC
J. A. Pietschi
Ml W. Wright Phone f
Retreating
ON DISARMAMENT, for instance, Russia has
changed position three times up to this writing,
finally embracing idea! disarmament, but within a
few hours refused to let any one know the size
of the Russian army. On picking a site, .Russia
ed oy communism against the spirit of freedom and American and British dispatches
democracy in the world while the superficial congen- from the Far Eastern fighting
lai era was being raised in New York. It is almost fronts today indicated that defense
as if we had forgotten Communism is a movement lines were holding at ail vital
for world revolution and had decided to give in to it. points and told of counterblows by
But the fact that it is making great strides in its air and sea which boosted to 15 the
world revolution is obvious and available for all to total of Japanese transports, sunk
see even in official quarters-while we are xtot They 0r damaged by United States or
are not mine but the plain facts of the World, ob- nut^h forme at th„ ti
switched from New York to Geneva and back to
New York, but worse^ than that ultimately decided
report) she would not go to San Fran-
it was too fttr to go for peace, al-
It is closer to Russia than New York,
the cost of this peace organization, Rus-
committee to favor her paying only pix
le we pay half the whole peace bill,
she would not use a veto on disarma-
she used it immediately in reference
army and to the choice of a site. In
ic said if her wishes were not follow-
withdraw and not attend UN. The
all like that, as if sincerity were
ar.c not mine but the plain facts of the World, ob- Dutch forces. At the same time,
servabie, checkable, true. ' British official circles admitted
The Communist strategy has switched to a new that the Japs had either cut Uie
line, a more successful line, but has not changed Malay peninsula in half or were
one whit in purpose. It is now promoting congenial able to do so at any moment
nullification on the surface of international peace Russia’s gigantic counteroffen-
negotiations and organizing effective revtrtOtionary *jve is'becoming a war of exter-
Communism underneath. It is lulling popular opin- minition in numerous sectors,
ion to sleep for what it expects to be a political where Red army troops are sur-
Pearl Harbor. rounding German units, entrenched
•-- _ or fortified .in buildings and rak-
* * , .... , . , ing them with fire from ail sides:
A Jap, admitting he swiped 11 sweaters from an Bey Scouts collected 12 tons of
American Army establishment said he just wanted waste paper for the defense pro-
to be sure he would be warm. He must expect a gram.
humdinger of a winter. Reported "safe” in the raci/icfi
CHURCH OF CHRIST
BAYTOWN
104 VIRGINIA
GOOSE CREEK
ASH8EL 5 MURRIEL
James LeFan, Minister
Phone 1231J
H. Osby Weaver, Minister
Phone 1136
PELLY
City Hall—Temporary
meeting place
Bela L. Watson,
Minister.
HIGHLANDS
CLEAR LAKE ROAR j
R. H. Echols, Minister ]
Phone 2946
with four i
[in on the lnd<l( i \
Cjplonship
tiring thl»nll
grid Kliry wi“J
, .nd Odessa, HI
[North Side (Fort|
(Houston)
I'Antonio).
Odessa, the
j-i, favored by mal
•t this year, toad
inns Wichita Falfl
"^fhe 35-to-0 J
I them at Wichil
hty Odessa has
Lu to 45 throughout!
| the W-district p|
Rev. Pevey’s sermon it 1
morning service will be ‘The o
of God Upon Us."
At 2:30 p.m. Sunday, the L
Belvieu Youth Fellowship «gl
hosts to the Tri-Cities sub-
youth fellowship, After a t
service and business
Christmas party will be h*j£I|
T. Remko of Crosby is the 1
cilor fpr the sub-district 1
tion and Charles Fay oi l
is president
A regular Youth Fei
meeting for Mont Belvieu 1
young people will be held it j
p.m.
Rev. Pevey will speak «]
p.m. on 'The Wise Men-gigi
Of Truth." This J* tfce sectMl
Ut Ysleta. The
registered 210 mal
’ [rd to 84 poln|
; opponents,
fc Highland Park
tub the North Side I
[Worth at Souther1
unity’s Own by st
vApected to be
i|#4 posting dealt
ipeeson. I
ked by fast-steppl
„ tossing backs,
1 ibown gridiron pf
GOD'S PLAN FOR UNITY
ONE SODY (CHURCH) ONE SPIRIT ONE HOPE
ONE LORD ONE FAITH ONE BAPTISM ONE GOD Eeh 4-1-7
WE INVITE YOU TO ATTEND THE SERVICES OF THE CHURCH
OF CHRIST
■ —
MIMEOGRAPH
___I •CARDS • |
expert wop
TYPING-h
ALL
letter SERVIC
Bremer'*
| Mimeograph Slj
Phone 11*
[(jltMiftoi Adit*—Pho
Come!
To
Shorty's
iSnock SI
• HOT TAMAI.E.sl
e pit barbecieI
eHAMBURGERS |
rDOGS • AND t
318 E. Texas
Goose Creek, Texas I
Clean
I KOTOR and CHADS!
r - - rdff V/
amplete Paint Jo
Rust Preventive
PeintWork
OUR PRICES
ARE RIGHT
TANER BODY SIK
[Bsytown-Pelly Rd. Ph.
"vusssasasfKT
,
JP11* ,8 * fac-*imilie of
auteherx Shop ( art
MEATCUHERS Li
FLOU
model
Motors
Rubber I
Pure €
Slider Kits
[''•Acto Knife!
Dope - Thi
every TH
MODE
, <*«,
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
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/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.