The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 254, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 10, 1946 Page: 4 of 5
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PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY SUN, GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, i944 KqNESDAi
hpi
fonts
'uWishfd e»eh week day afternoon by The Daily Sun Company,
119 Weal Pearce Street, Goose Creek, Tews.
FRED HARTMAN, Editor
ROBERT MATHERNE. Business Manager
.....’"■& SUBSCRIPTION KATES:|iMHH
By Fred Hartman
Month, Toe i 6 Months, $4 15; Year, $8 00
Special Rate To Men In Service— 50c Month
All Mail Subscriptions Payable In Advance,
tiered as second class matter at Goose Creek, Texas, post
office under the let ot Congress, March 8, 1897.
TWO PLACES AT ONE TIME
WE SPENT A rattier hectie night Monday report-
ing on meetings here and there. We tried to be two
places at once,, and if you. have ever tried that,
.you know it is not a very easy thing to do.
W’e firsts attended the meeting of the u
,r tk.
We Take Prevention
The Associated Press reported an item
out of Seattle .the other day which said
that a ertide sign posted beside a highly-
traveled road in that section caused plenty
of safe and sane driving on the part of the
motoring public. .
The sign sead, “Beware! Speed ©op hid-
ing in rocks.”
The article never did reveal whether
there actually was a speed cop hiding out
there trying to slip up on motorists. But
the motorists weren’t taking any chances,
and they drove along at moderate speed.
Judging from practices elsewhere—and
here too we’ve been told in the not too far
distant past—officers have been known to
secret themselves and pounce- out upon
those who violate speed regulations. We
have always thought such a practice was
comparable to dealing off the bottom of
the deck.
This is not a plea for speeders, because
most of them deserve exactly the fate the
judge metes out—a stiff fine. But the pa-
trolmen, who by their presence out. in the
open in constant and vigilant patrols of a
city or county dr highway: who keep
traffic going ahead at moderate speed but
make few arrests are of much more value
to the people for whom they work than is
that traffic "fisherman." And by that we
mean “fishing for violators.” '
Crime prevention is the ultimate aim of
every police department. Just because a de-
partment doesn’t pay its own way or
doesn’t keep the jail full .of violators is no
season that it is not doing its job in an-
efficient manner. Preventing accidents is
job enough. *
Too often too much stress is laid on how
much a police department will “make” for
a city or how much a traffic court will
f” for a governmental subdivision or
board
of trustees of the -school district, a-nd when that
board decided to end the evening via the execu-
tive session route, we "left" and dropped in on
the Goose Creek City commission,where a more
democratic session was in progress.
Many things transpired at both meetings that
were not important enough to be placed in the
news story that appeared on page one yesterday,
but they can be placed here without loss of dignity.;
MONEY STILE COUNTS
FOR INSTANCE. Superintendent George Gentry
casually announced that Dean Walter Rundeli had
been named secretary of the Texas Association of
Junior Colleges or, maybe they call it thc Associa.-
tion of Texas Junior colleges.
Anyhow, not n trustee even as much as lifted an
eyebrow when this announcement was made..
Then Gentry very casually mentioned the. fact
that Dean Rundcll also has been named'treasurer
of the association.
Immediately, board members perked up and took
notice. . a
"I knew I should have been more friendly wjth
Mr. Rundeli in the past," new President R. D. Mar-
- tin smiled.-------: ‘ .....' . -r~......'
• After all, there> nothing as dignified as that-
“stuff none of us seem to have enough of.
by
K 8!«TKl»tnXD BY KINO FTATUSES SYVDICATZ / i
ANNE ROWE
COPYRIGHT. 114$.
BY ANNtROW*
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
I GOULD HAVE slapped Hunt!
Here I'd relied on his help, and
rl'iR
now look what he was doing! How-
ever, thanks to my talk with Claire;
I was prepared,
“You and your clgaret stubs!”
^hrugged. "I d forgotten all about
then), Inspector. Because, well,
they only .exist in Doctor Berwick's
imagination. You see, he wanted to
find a clue to Mrs. Ingalls' absence,
. and when I brought him a tray
: with highball things she and her
guest bad used^he insisted there
weren’t enough stubs to account
for the asheA That was all."
“Oh, that was all!" Inspector
Barry seemed to share Hunt’s view
on theVnatter to an uncomfortable
degree.) "Is that tray still around
somewhere ?.”
The question set an incredible
• amount of action In motion, and
after a while Rosa was ushered into
the room by two uniformed police-
man, red-eyed and uttefly bewil-
dered.
“Why, I washed them • glasses
and things last night, soon as I
•got home," she' informed the in-
A LITTLE LATER in the meeting it was sug-
gested that the hoard should act immediately to
do something about making 4>e very’ needed re-
pairs to the Sam Houston school building.
You recall that dome on the corner in the front.
It's pretty to look at but for years water has been
pouring into the building, and the board from time
has been agreeing that the dome should be dumped,
and a different and more practical roof installed.
PROBLEM CHIU). OR PROBEKM PARENT?
GRAB BAG
spector .indignantly... when she
learned what it was all about. “A
fine housekeeper I'd be, if I let used
glasses and messy ash trays smell
up the place overnight!”
That ended the inquiry about the
missing stubs for the time. For the
. .press poured in, simultaneously
At last most of the reporters left
and I thought the worst was over.
But'no! The inspector started ques-
tioning me again.
"About thoSe c<garet stubs, Miss
Applebee. Berwick is certain some
were missing, so please think: could
anyone have come in and removed
them without your knowledge?
Through the "service doer, per-
haps?"
It was a marvelous “out.” “Not
through the service door. That was
locked," I told him. “But we heard,
later in the evening, that the front
door had been open for a while dur-
ing the afternoon.”
"What's that?" Inspector Barry
spun around and glanced at Hunt
qiiestioningiy. "She says ‘we.’ Does
that mean you knew about it?’1
Hunt nodded placidly. "Sure I
did. I’ve already sent one of your
men for the person who saw, and
used, the open door.” He signaled
toward the foyer, “There he is
now.” ----—; ——--—-
And there was Polly Woodfords,
carefully groomed and wrapped in
a gorgeous brocade dressing gown,
jerking in .between two burly po-
licemen and quite obviously scared
to death.
"My dear Miss Applebee, how
could you! Oh, how COULD you!”
he wailed loudly when he saw me
.standing beside the inspector.
The room became silent in an-
Easy Knowledge -wTttrRagsrfraiswer, and^maiie^such
put it on a consoler In the foyer. «
"You’re sure you only went ini.
the foyer?" Inspector Barry., CVM
were boring into the little drtst.
maker.
"Word of honor! Not a step u.
yond it As I told Mademoiselle Ap!
P "And you didn’t see anyone in ih,
apartment—you thought they were
“Oh, no. no! On the contrary i
thought Madame Ingalls was h
Dressing, perhaps. Or resting.'1
"Why? , .
"Because—" Polly stopped .short
cocked his head and blinked up «
Hunt beseechingly. “I do not know
what to say;, Doctor Berwick," he*
quavered.
“The truth,’1 Hunt advised hln
briefly.
“Ah, oul! Of course! The truth*
Polly steeled himself for the ordeal
visibly and plunged: "Because f
had seen a man go down In the ele-:
vator who must have come front
this apartment. And when a visitor
leaves, he does not leave an empty
house, n'est-ce-pas?”
“Not as a rule,” the inspector
conceded, “At what time wu
this?”
Polly shrugged and flapped. “Ah,1
that I do not know exactly, I do
not live hy the clock. It depend
when I left my store uptown, and l
shall have to ask my secretary
Trite^Theo fokMk^tcWngrthfexrpr:3- ■. One-Minute Test -tender, kind, considerate, love *** ^
‘jidv eWtrd H tne wmie tt0Use suuaiea. ot your km and immediate house* + , . ,
Irn- p» Llulucna MM Mm.'. MW .a «•« ih, ij„, pah|lc ,«*,**» MMM
3. What were three of Thomas with words, and you can be per- buiba and ■ question* hurled at me
Jefferson’s titles? suasive in speech and writing. >.51■
how many votes Ciaude __
had made that repair at Sam Houston last year.
Everybody laughed out Claude.
TRUCKS BY THE THOUSANDS'
THEN DOWN TO the city hall the team of Com-
missioner Jack^Ward and City Mam Red Grantham
put up a militant battle for a new truck.
And Ward conducted a one-man round table dis-
cussion of trucks the army had available.
Over at this one concentration ot war surplus
aoros oi ivigQoin secret friendship may prove to InT , nearu oi me muruer. . . uot
It is not the place that maketh a 50,,^ of great enjoyment, but lan-v ldea whY Mre Ingalls wanted
your apartment to herself?"
"Who was the last man in
cin ■- ril
material at Leesville, La., they have over 5,000
two and one-half ton trucks in this one sale.
“net”
Thg way they do they get all tire property to-
gether, and then they let different public agencies
buy them for a set price for a few days before the
public sale. Then after these sales have been con-
summated they tlirow all of the remaining items on
sale to dealers and other buyers who bid on the
stock.
the person, b.ut the person that a |jttfe later, be guarded in vour
maketh the place honorable. - conversation as an unnecessary |,"h0 wafi th« k*t man in her
Cicero. , argument might arise. Brighten jUfe?* . . . “Next of kin,-pleAsd?"
up your surroundings early this { • • • AnY boolcs to be published
afternoon; add a new lamp or | posthumously? . . . “How much
picture to the living, room. did she make with her writing?”
j And from another grodp: “Lsn't
*.ynur sister Neal Tarrant, the. ac-
swer to what sounded like an accu- about that. It may have been quit*
ivhife before live, and it miy
xation. The lew remaining report-
whether a justice court is in the blue or the
reel when the auditor gets through.
Arrests and convictions pile up revenue
from fines, but prevention of violation
saves lives. Which do you prefer?
Just think how many trucks the army must have
id-
had at one time, if nearly a year- after the war end-
ed in Europe, there were as many as 5,000 units of
one size alone at one concentration point.
Hints on Etiquette Q
If you stop a stranger on' the
street and ask for directions,
which he gives, don’t forget \o
thank him courteously.
Today’s Horoscope
A person celebrating a birth-
day anniversary today is fastidi-
ous in his ideas, and careful of
appearances at ail times. If it is
yqur birthday you are both artis-
tip and, idealistic. You think
quickly .but act slowly. You are
One-Minute Teat Answers
1. Pennsylvania avenue.-
2. The White House, the cor-
nerstone having been laid Oct. 13,
1792.
3. Author of the Declaration-of
Independence and Virginia Sta-
tute for Religious Freedom, first
secretary of state, and third pre-
sident of the U. S.
News Behind The News
By Pod Motion
WASHINGTON—Everyone is saying the world
crisis has passed. UN is twiddling i.ts thumbs until
May 6, judging the Iran issue more or less settled.
Oh its agenda are only two matters of organiza-
tion. But-
Russia is known to be planning a regular army
of 6,500,000 men or more after next July 1. We
are planning an army tnen of 1,550,000.
Russia is planning an airforce of 1,200,000 or more
in her army. Wc arc planning an air force of 400,-
000. ' . ,
Russia has inaugurated conscription which Is to
provide 1,500,000 of fresh manpower each year, with
two years of service for regulars and five years in
her army for specialized sevices. I have not heard
an authoritative estimate of her planes, but we
are to have 5,000 for one-third the number of men
‘DRINKING’ A PROBLEM
WE "FELT" FOR both the school board and for
the P-TA women, Mrs. W. A. Blasingame,' and Mrs.
R. L. Carter, in their conference.
The Anson Jones women have about $600 they
want to spend on electric water coolers, but the
project-may take as much as $2,000 by the time
the remainder of the cost is paid as well as all of
the plumbing bills incident to the installation.
That wouldn’t bankrupt the school, but what
would happen if all of the other school patrons
decided they should have coolers at their schools
Barclay On Bridge
By Shephard Barclay
OO.
In a little while the project would take on major
contemplated, and if the same ratio of men to ~ , ic for Pa
planes could be maintained by Russia, she would 13 £ . . thine
have 15,000 (she cannot provide herself anywhere Evmr Umc * for 1
proportions.
The Anson Jones P-TA is primarily interested in
youngsters at Anson Jones, and they arc to be ad-
mired for it. But the seven trustees have to look
at all requests from the angle of all schools. This
hasn't been done in the past, and inequities exist
that shouldn’t exist. Thousands of dollars were
spent on the Baytown Junior high gym building it
years ago, and at the same time the facilities let
boys' physical education at Horace Mann Junior
high are a disgrace to the Goose Creek Independent
School district. „ ...
The school board Is' correct in its stand of what
good for Paul."
for one junior
f JUST THE RIGHT TIME
YOUR CARDS have variable
value. Though a particular one
seems worth just one trick to you
as a trick-taker, it may have an
extra value in preventing your
opponent from taking a couple of
other tricks if you use it at just
the right time. On still other oc-
casions. it can be. worth a couple
of tricks to refuse to take any
♦rick at all with the card.
marked A. If he had, the spade Q
and J would then have been set up
for discards of the club Q and 5.
The diamond
tress?” ..... “Say-y-y! Then you
i are Parris Tarrant's daughter,
i too!" . . . “Wow, is this ease full
!of names!”
j I am sure I would have become
hysterical without Glaire and Hunt.
Claire, cool and dignified, with the
; poise of a great lady and the ver-
[ nacular of Broadway,.knew how to
> handle the press. In spite of the
| early hour, she had drinks served in
‘the dining room and, glass in hand
j herself, literally shot information
at “the boys," answering question
j after question without pausings for
i breath. Meanwhile Hunt was do-
’ing my telephoning for me and
taking care to get Dick to the
) phone without alarming Dita.
’ coming in at once,” he in-
1 formed' me in passing. “Uni
fully 5.000,000 are supposed to be her own troops,
the other 1,500,000 coming from her satellites.
Il the world crisis over?
and deciding which one shall get it when you get
th\Ve hope the Anson Jones folks will understand.
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+ J 10 6 2
Why Does Russia Need An Army Three
To Five Times Bigger Than Ours?
But by using the same argument back on the school
board, Anson Jones deserves the same sort of
drinking water service that David G. Burnet, Ash-
bcl Smith or any of the other Schools enjoy. The
board'has-1 promised this much.
Bring a school board member or a city com-
missioner is no picnic. Those who serve deserve
support of the patrons just as the patrons requests
IF SO WHY does Russia need such an army and
air force, three to five times greater than ours?
In the face of such figures, how. can people like
Senator Pepper arise and naively accuse the United ___________ _
States of kicking Russia around, or proposing to? __ deserve consideration of the board.
Qreat Britain has nothing formidable, a scattered .
army which will be about the size of China’s July 1
or shortly’ thereafter, and China has far more
planes than Britain, mostly ours. Britain will have
about half our force in her home army, the others
being dominion troops. Measured in world mili-
tary terms, she will be weaker-than ever before
In her history. The army expansion program of Do-
Guullc in France has been defeated by the Com-
munists and France cannot be considered a world
Give China 1,000,000; Britain a little over 1.000,-
ranoc around 400,000 and us 1,550,000 iwith
of^°ng t m^rngHow^ver! this' d'ld'noCchrer
him up—it was in his kitchen.
Tuberculosis is not a hereditary disease, but the
organism is easily passed on in families.
—.- 4f--
4 A K 7 4 2
4 K 7 4 -
+ AQ5
(Dealer: South.\ North-South
vulnerable.)
South West North ' East
14 14 2 4 Pass
4 4 , ■
West put up a pretty defense
•gainst this contract. After lead-
ing his spade K and seeing the
dummy, he immediately switched,
to the diamond f. South lef it run
to his K. then laid down the heart
A and K. leaving the good Q out
•gainst him.
Next he lqd the spade 7. expect-
ing West to come in with the
The diamond 7 could have been ! formed1 me in passing. “Unfo;
ruffed, so that the only tricks lost [business, he’s telling Dita.”
would have been two in spades and ----- ------ —;
one to the heart Q.
i But West did not play his A on
.that second round of spades! He
sized up South as having held only
two spades originally. If that was
right, playing the A would have
given South his contract. So West
played low or the 7. and the Q
won in dummy. Now West’s A was
doomed never to take'a trick. But
that play beat South’s contract,
he now could not get any dis-
cards of clubs. As a result, the de-
clarer lost two tricks in clubs, in
addition to one in spades and one
iaJieart^-sowasset -one.—..........
what?" Hunt’s voice fell sharply
into an expectant hush.
"Have the'police drag me out of
bed and force me into this horrible
tragedy!” Folly twittered irritably.
Someone gave a Bronx cheer. A
reporter said, "Nerts!" And Hunt
told Polly coldly, "You took your
time about being ’forced.’ I sent for
you almost an hour ago."
"You sent for me? . . . Oh!”
Polly’s arms flapped in abject apol-
ogy. "I am so sorry, Mademoiselle!
I most humbly beg vour pardon for
thinking It was you!”
"Never mind who sent for you.
Why did you take an hour to com-
ply with a police order?” Inspector
Barry snapped at him. Lj
"But, my dear sir! I was In bed,
asleep, when the dreadful message
eame! It madie me ill! I had to re-,
cover from the shock first, and then
make myself presentable and—er—
eat breakfast”
"Oh! You had-to primp and eat
breakfast when you were needed
in a murder investigation!” All the
inspector’s joviality was gone.
"That's just fine! Well, now you're
here at last, tell me what you know
about the outer door being open
yesterday. And why you used it.” ,
"Why—why—as I told Dr. Ber-
wick and Miss Applebee—I wanted
to [w c a note for Madame Ingalls.
A«a. when I saw, the door was open
slit, no more—I went in and-
have been considerably after.” ,
"Let's, -say}......offhand, between
quarter of ami quarter past," ft.
spector Barry accepted Polly*
vagueness. “You — er — recogmui
the man ?’’
"I did not," Polly’s twitters wen
suddenly getting shrill. ”1 told.Dr,
Berwick and Miss Applebee that I
did not! I saw a tall man in * light
gray hat, that’s all.” His arm)
flapped in circles. "There are half
a dozen in this room who answtr
the •description—tall men with gray
hats everywhere— even kdoort ih
this room! Why, it might have bea
you, sir.”
"Sure. And yesterday !t might
have been me,” Hunt recalled dryly, i
"It won’t wash, Woodfords Last
night you clearly told us you
thought yQU.hgd recognized tha
man. That is, before you had a
attack of ‘discretion’.”
The reminder turned Polly into*
cornered small animal.
"What is it to you?" he snarM
at Hunt angrily. “You were diy
guest last bight. You broke sly
bread. And now you are trying
your best to deliver me into tto
hands of the police. Why? I uk
you why?"
"Because he to the police. Ht’»
been deputized by the district at-
torney's office to assist me," the
inspector told Polly grmvely. “to
you see, it would be wise on row
part if you told us who you though
was in that elevator." k
(to Be CooUnued)
What's Wrong With Helping America?
Everybody Jokes About Gl Shortages, And That's All
By HENRY McLEMORE
This is the country^ thaj pro-
dueed the atomic bomb. -----------— --------—------
This is the country that brought 118 a11, ri8ht to mah® Jokes about
strip-teasing to its height.
This is also the country that
now civilians can't look the part, country when many million* of
There just aren’t .enough clothes mcn rcturnod from war pft d*.
for men out of the-armed services.
the*. No
Tomorrow’s Problem
4K 986 4
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*:< q e
(Dealer: South. Neither
vulnerable.)
What would- you consider the
soundest bidding .of this deal ? y ■
side
elected John Nance Garner vice
president, elevated. Daddy and
- Peaches BrowfiTng^W whaTalmdst
amounted to a stale of sainthood,
and made millionaires out of
those folk- who created the Di-
Dec Laundry,
What I aray' trying to say. is
that this country can do- almost
anything. It makes the likes of
Bilbo' a factor in our national ex-
istence. It gives Jackson day
dinners when the Jackson day
dinner-givers get up the next
morning and yell about the Star-
vation of those across the seas.
-But- this country can't do bne
thing.
‘ It can’t properly clothe the men
Who fought for it.
Most of the men who went- out
to Save this country from those
who wanted to destroy it and are
nouses. No noUMa
beenmadi0UEY"dn
best comic, has made light of the 10 Finland. Worry about
situation Berie has.! Frank Mor-
gan has. Hope has. Lenny haa.
Crosby has. Name your funster.
But jokes don't turn blue* and
khaki into something you can
wear. Eddie Cantor can make
you laugh about the problem,' but
he isn’t doing any tailoring.
A few days a’go I was talking
to a naval lieutenant. ...He had
taken a whack at everything
from the Canal to Okinawa. Not
much fun. He was on terminal
leave. Most of all, he wanted to
way. Fret about Denmark Get
all upset about Iran, Turkey, to-
dia and everything else
Isn't it time that this cow-
try looked out for its own’ It
is quite all right to take cut'
of the rest-of the World: to feet
the German*, the French, tie
Dutch, and send fabricated btai-
os across the seas But whit k
wrong, and I ask this In the bpf*
of an answer, what is wrong wy
taking care of Americana* Ri|w
in my (own there are men
leave Most of all, he wanted to were wounded in the Battle of t*
be a rivijian. He wanted to shed - Bulge, \vho have no place to W
that blue suit. Regular army' There sre men in this little to*
men, and that goes double for who, wearing mighty good ffl«*
lers and Annapolis A' ' - • ^ - * ‘ *—
won’t understand his
000; Fra Hot-
air! and Russia will have a force greater by 1,500.-
000 or more, than all the major nations combined.
Looking At Life
By Erich Brandeis
DAILY CROSSWORD
(These figures fill out the Balkans estimates of So-
viet strength given you last Friday
The estimates of our army are baaed upon an-
nounced factors such as minimum occupation re-
quirements, keeping bases, transportation lines, etc.,
and lastly—and perhaps least in consideration
maintaining home defenses. They do not contem-
plate war with anyone.-What requirements the So-
vied figures arc based on, I do not know.
Some time ago I wrote - that you must earn
your way through life and that the permanent
ably never heard of him. But he was a man w ho
earned his way through life. He was a success.
“He was not a- great man,’’ says the newspaper
article, “nor was he a business tycoon. But of this
Realities Prove That World Crisis
Still Exists Throughout The World
YET-:
IS EVIDENT in these realities, the world
as not yetWMSasd, ABd UiatJhe -
“’sTmpfy the ignoring of problems of world
peace, greater than Iran. No peace treaties have
been concluded for Italy, and Austria. The peace
for Germany and Asia is unsettled. But even if
these diplomatic affairs are eventually adjusted
can there be a world confidence in peace with
Russia maintaining such plans?
Peace cannot come unless or until Russia opens
up drops her IsolaUonism, her censorship, and
takes her footing on the same basis as other na-
tion* of the world. Her tremendous military pro-
gram coupled with her secrecy, cannot accomplish
anv result except world unrest, uncertainty and
suspicion. Frac inspection of limited armamenta,
on« the other hand would establish, a justifiable
of international security,
view of this condition of affairs, it Is plain
HQ
nic bomb, in addition to the prospective military
, is absurd. Above all, oor national state
no longer Hlert to rcajltic*. but is al-
lapning into theories of defensive security,
«d the past two wars to last twice a*
iy would have lasted, had we been pre-
thero is no doubt: He was a good man. He provid-
ed well for his family. He helped scores of little
people get a start in business or make the down
payment on a home.
“He fixed leaking faucets for the neighbors. He
never turned the needy away. As a landlord he
was one for the book. During the depression some
of his renters had no jobs and no money. He never
'tU’^^T"^Sp^Mtrn(^eB'’nsc«aBr(mtmyr~Tr^T.<ro(iSBesr~~ * •wxiwrnr
ACROSS
1. River
( So. Am.)
4. Infant *
food
7. Moh»mm«-
dan priest
8. Regret*
19. Nimble
11. Persi*
13. Thresh
13. Nets
,15. Portion of »
curved lin* .
16. Except
17. Meadow
18. Keep
4. A flguped
fabric
5. Subtle
emanation
6. Like pearl
;7. River (Fr.'.
9 Gibe
12 Obstable
13. Sunset
14. Mournful
16. Offer
19 River
(Swiaa)
20. God of
pleasure
(Egypt.)
22. Lixivium *
23. Weep con-,
vulsively
24. Silk scarf
(Eccl.)
25. Rub off
27. River
(Eng)
28. Anxious
29. A cereal
grain
31. Mosquito'
carrying
yellow fever,
34. Floor
covering*
Party Men Win In
Illinois Primary
Yesttrd*} '* Aiiwm
35. Cover with
asphalt *
37. Part of a
locomotive
went up $1-50 a year, he'd raise the rent by $1.50
a year no more. J.ist three weeks ago the neighbors
saw him out in front of his house in a-tree, sawing
of a limb to keep it from brotherlng the passers-by.
He was alwavs doing something to help others.
They buried George Harris in a large plot which
he tonight several yenrs ago.
"In it are already several graves, with different
names on the headstones. They were friends of his.
He furnished them a place to stay when they were
living, and he took care of them when they died.
“Many of his neighbors attended his funeral. And
those same neighbors will erect a simple tombstone
over his grave with this inscription: George Harris,
1*56-1046, He was a good mam”
Edison? A Pasteur- A Ford A Gershwin.
It is enough to have been a George Harris.
■t of American defense lias al-
ways been our customnrj- woeful deficiency in men
and weapons inspired by our customary belief
that Uie latest war was absolutely the last oho, and
in any event, that we will have a year ro so to get
ready.
Oceans saved us from effecta.of our follies of the
' ' - ' hrunk the oceans into
past. bu(pscience has
explorer
21. Rotten,
of an egg
23. Fly aloft
26 Edible
mollusk
30. Sphere
31. Solemn
wonder
32 Grass, cured
for fodder
33 Empty
35. Errand boy
36 Praise
37 Arrived
3$. Border
. JH Afftom-—
40 Urge worm
♦l.God of
pleasure
.,1 * Egypt)
' DOWN
1. Forcible
contact
* Wagon
8- UlrUjftme
n
P
E
—
1
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s
•
M
n
m
L.
_
rr-
n
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H
to
n
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w~
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IT"
—
CHICAGO, April 10 Oi- Party
organization candidates, including
the SO-ycar-old dean of the house
of representatives and a young
naval lieutenant, were the victors
today in the first of the nation's
postwar primary elections. ‘
In the light voting which fol-
lowed a dispirited campaign in
yesterday's Illinois primary elec-
tion. ail 25 incumbent congress-
men seeking re-election won nom-
ination* for another term. Rifteen
were ItcpubL4jiiB» -- and -K)-- were "'
Democrats. - .
Rep. Adolph J. Sabath, 80, ap-
pareittly weathered determined
opposition in his district to win
the Democratic nomination for a
21st term In the hodse. He is
chairman of the house rules com-
mittee.
The biggest vote getter on the
Republican ticket was navy Lt.
William- G. Stratton, 32, who still
is oh Oklnawn. Stratton easily
won the nomination .for con-
gressman-at-large. In the^Novem-
ber election he will face the in-
cumbent Democrat, -Mt-s. Emily
Taft Douglas, who was unopposed
In the primary.
West Planters and Annapolis
graduates, won'
feelings.
Isn’t there a tailor, or a tail-
ors' guild, with enough skill to
take uniforms and change them
into civilian clothes" Can't some-
one take a.sun-tan' suit and make I
a business suit out of it? Isn’t !
there a switch or two that can i
be made so that blues will be a !
sports outfit?
I’m serious about this. Thous- i
ands and thousands of men in i
this country have no clothes but I
uniforms. For the life of me. ,1 !
can’t understand why the govern- :
ment didn’t have at least one man j
of vision who could see the prob- j
torn that was going to face this
als, have no shelter for their wltw
and children _____ 5
Thi* country,- to toy way i |
thinking!, 1* making a mistsM
Take care of those at home.
those at home will take care rf
those over there. But not befort!
OPEN
AN
ACCOUNT
TODAY
Pkmo Tuner
For the Goose Oretk lad.
Jachaal,.Dl»trietv~
Free Estimate* on Repairs
F. M. WORDEN
P-O. Box 1273—Baytown, Text*
$35 Equals $55,000-
SHANGHAI. April 10. (13 Cht-
nc*e messengers for American and
British news services agreed to
end their Sfr^c today after the
bureau of social affairs ordered
their salaries raised to $85,000 a
week, $35 In American money,
=====
CONCRETE
PIPE
Delivered to You, and
Spotted in Place
Size 12" to 60" Diameter
TONGUE-GROOVE
Concrete Septic Tanks
CEDAR BAYOU
CONCRETE CO.
JOHN VOPARIL
East James Road Next to
«• . Midway Garage.
Phone 522-M
wbiJY, SELL, RENT!
Big Bargains
In
New and Used FumituK
,* STOVES • RADIOS
• REFRIGERATORS
• WASHING MACHINES
" aMances
Of All Type*
See Us Before You Buy!
MORRISON
FURNITURE CO.
Phone Green* Bayou ,4jtl
12744 Market St. Road
case °f Gl
Ivitch. former I
I leade r, is on P
|ng an intern .'I
fhaiiovitch
IKE FRJ
TATE RESE
Me Retort]
Phone
Conte In an
the
Lenitb Heal
[Cone's Ph|
Admiral Dtl
I VVest Texas at|
[7 DAY SE|
ft'atcli Clock
Repairinl
yfown War
market St.
lKE A
TOPI
USE Y(
[EDIT T<
exas' Greatest
212 W. Te.-J
M
an
i>top Dosing Yol
lith Soda and Al
r-tpcct to get rH
the, sour stomach,
1 by tali tog soda
I
■ -;..i • 1 of
hetri
l-ation,
fcis case, your real
[properly,
kt- you want for rej
g an aikafecr—bus
p-k” your intcstliw
to dean it out cilt
r 1
Os directed.Tticyge!
[“un'Mra k" your d
lermit* your food I
|}i>-.Naiure'sownc
>n reach it. You get
hake* yolf'W ttit'd
[Carter* Pills At
| nbto<-k "yourin
kief from
your inlet
indigesti
SEIDLITfl
——I
When You I
lytown
Baytown-Pclly
THREE TRA
Tract 1 30
face road. 24
and* school but
face road. Ap
den e only.
Tract 3- 63 a
face road Ap]
deuce only.
Accessible to
plants. Cash
HIGHLAN
Box 60S
CAI
(0 W. Main
kddings
:opying
iSERVICEMEf1
-■ gopk;
j. c. 1
OUTH
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 254, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 10, 1946, newspaper, April 10, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100377/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.