The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 101, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 5, 1946 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
THE DAILY SUN, GOOSE CREEP. TEXAS
RDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1444
Some People Always Attract Bad Weather Corpus Christi
City People Always Put On Most Clothes-At Home
b
By HENRY MeLEMORE
NEW YORK—If the weather men
of thia country knew what I know,
they would keep an even sharper
eye on me than they do on the
barometer*, thermometers, rheu-
matic old gentlemen, and all the
other gadget* they use to forecast
the weather.
Through the years, and much to
my discomfiture. 1 have learned
that when I travel record break-
ing weather tags along with me.
It is exactly as if Mother Nature
a thirty-day period was racked up.
Never in the memory of the oldest
coconut had there been such dai-
ly deluges. Similar bad weather
tagged along with me to Morotai,
New Uuinet, and points south. I
often was tempted to tell the ar-
my about the spell I was casting
but held off for fear someone in
authority would send me home.
When I packed for this trip to
New York, I put in things design-
ed for early fall weather which
New Yorkers were enjoying at the
the
city dweller a mountain and he'll
start shedding his clothes like a
hen does feathers in moulting
time, or put him on the rim of a
desert and he’ll peel like a tan-
Show him an ocean and
In 21-6 Win
Over Port Arthur
Five Year* Ago Russian Pledges
f™» Doily s.. fum USSR Cooperation
UNEMPLOYMENT
■ IT’ A
crease in veteran
WAND CU B MEETING
DALLAS, Oct. 8. ‘I r„dar Bayou Band club will
in and 7:30 pm. Monday at the
Today's headlines: Yanks Cop
Series Final, 3-1.
Ernie Bonham bested Whitlow
Wyatt In a 3-1 game today as the
New York Yankees won the 1941
world series, four games to one.
(Continued from Page 1)
Corpus Chrlsti's Buccaneers beat
htm the Port Arthur Yellow Jackets
he ll start yanking off haberdash- ^ Gordon's pinch'blow won the
try a mile a minute. But at home
in the city he frowns on sitting
about without a coat in the mez-
zanine of a dark theater or being
caught without a tie in a subway
rush And as for taking off his crowd to route Sam Houston's Tig-
coat in a restaurant in order to ers, 47-0. The Tornado line allowed
be cool while eating his lunch, the Sam Houston team only 36
he’d just as lief be caught yards and the Galveston backs
• ' Backs
complete Us work, the Italian poli- 13174 non-veterans unemployed in
tical commission, heard a Russian <]YXas while there-were 83,548 ex-
tion commission office ehre. ^
The report showed there were %
of the club attend
promise of world cooperation,
“however different our views.”
rvlcemen without jobs.
last night while other District 14- gtm(.
AA teams scored wins over lesser A hurricane ripped over Florida
opposition. jnt0 the Gulf today, hitting below
The Ball high team of Galveston Miami, and causing little damage,
turned on the heat before a home A wage and rent control bill
was being drafted today by con-
gress, Rep Albert Gore (Tenn).
was preparing the bill. He planned
prices of October g-12 as the base.
Thirty men were drafted into
had chosen me as her own little time. But when Igot !*®r.e “I* weji, -- - .
eiiinca niir and was determined to weather was hotter than tne.msioe robbjn„ a poor w scored in every period.
what extremes of of a biscuit. The aaphaltwas run- j m&krSfer this is. If I were- which W««d_far thT^TSr^^hT^ited StMy anmr tdjfa O-
nmg-hke-syrttp. cottars- were-w4V- hTsb'Ro!.‘TcTTry toTTgW TroW. highl and who the Ganders wfflT ft. Ashley oT Haytomf Holland
ing as they hadn't wilted at this »ee a )0t of this season, were: Bielstein of Baytown, John Henry
time of the year for 21 years, and A1 Vaiani, Russ Roc, Dee Clements, Brahm of Goose Creek, and
the Empire State building was PiUlUllfifail Gene Hubble. Five out of seven eg- Eugene Bennett of Highlands were
find out just
“weidwr T-wuM itgmr
It matters not where I go—Los
Angeles, Wichita, Chicago, or
Cheyenne. And it matters not
what the season—summer, winter,
fall spring, Indian summer or dog
days. Let me reach a town and I
know what I’ll read In the local
paper: "Hottest day in 72 years"
or "Coldest January 2 on record.’’
My unholy charm for the ele-
ments works as well out of this
country as in it, too. During the
war I spread unusual weather
wherever I went. During my short
sojourn in Australia, that country
had its worst drought in years.
Things were so dry that kanga-
roos carried canteens in their pou-
ches for their little ones. When
I .went into Leyte with the 24th
threatening to loosen its collar and
roll up its sleeves. That’s what It
should have done, of course, but
that can’t be done in a city. It
has always puzzled me why city
folk feel It necessary to dress up
so in hot weather. What is It
about big buildings, bustling traf-
fic, and all the other things that
go to make a city that causes the
citizens to frown on your going
down the street in shirt sleeves,
tieless and wearing cool, comfort-
able sneakers or loafers?
Plans Completed
For Chest Drive
Dave
(Continued from Page 1)
Higginbotham, Thad Felton, Jack
Saunders, and Fred Dittman.
Other committee chairman in-
clude John W. Sylvester, chairman
of the Baytown refineries of the
Humble Oil and Refining company,B__ wf
Paul G. Cater, assistant refinery touchdown that beat the
chairman: Roy Elms, chairman at Park Yellow Jackets 6-0.
tra points were kicked by
Balderac.
South P-drk of Beaumont beat
weak Nacogdoches, 13-0, at Na-
cogdoches.
Orange, Lee's first district op-
ponent next week thery, beat a
good Lake Charles team from
Louisiana, 7-0, at Orange.
The Pasadena Eagles remained
undefeated when Jimmy McNeil
ran 48 yards for a second period
Galena
among the 30.
10 Years Ago
Kilgore No. S was a completion
In the Cotton Lake oil field today.
Highlands News
BY MRS. R. A. HOOPER
The same people the minute ^ g^wn plant of the General
they get away from the city, will
undress until the taw calls a halt
and go about garbed as casually as
Come In and fry
- - tiki
Zenith Hearing Aid
Cone's Pharmacy
Admiral Dealers
West Texas at Gilltard
What New Yorw needs, and the
same goes for moat'of the other
big cities of the country, is a
mountain range right smack in the
middle of it or a patch of desert
or an ocean so nearby that high
tide drives the trolleys and taxis
off the street. Then the people
would dress comfortably, Show a
Tire and Rubber company; George
Gentry, Goose Creek school sys-
tem; R. W. Akridge, Cedar Bayou
school system; W. E. Dunks and
W. T. Taylor, Four Corners; Har-
ry K. Johnson Sr.. Highlands; Al-
bert Houdek, Bayou Pipe Line;
Fred Allgaier, oil field production:
James Harrop, outside contract-
ors; and Nelaon McBlroy, outside
wholesale firms.
Beaumont, idle last night, will
meet San Jacinto today.
Slavs To Release
UNRRA Engineer
MRS. C. L. FOLWER HOSTESS
AT BRIDGE CLUB MEET
Mrs. C, L. Folwer entertained
with a bridge luncheon at her
home on Wednesday honoring
members of Ihe Original Bridge this^conference, so necessary, how-
c|ub ever different our views.’
Andrei Vishinsky, Soviet vice
foreign minister, told the Italian
political commission that the en-
tire Soviet Union was behind the
recent words of Premier Josef Sta-
lin in a desire for peace.
Sen. Tom ConnalJy (D.-Texas'
joined Vishinsky in a peace utter-
ance. In one of now famous ora-
torical presentations, Connally
thundered that “We must not, we
can not have another war.”
Vishinsky was in r-meUowmoott
at the 43rd and final session of
the Italian political commission-
He made a lyric speech extolling
the virtues of the commission. He
veered into a vein of gravity, when
he promised Soviet cooperation
in world affairs.
"We have had our differences in
this commission," Vishinsky said.
“We know we are divided in our
political understanding. We do
not, react in the same way to
events which are happening in
the world.
"The Soviet Union, however,
stands behind the recent words of
our great Generalissimo Stalin
and the Soviet delegation is deter-
mined to consolidate the work of
For Classified Ada-Phone 820-521
^ birthrate dropped from 40
lnhabitK inhabitants
dance to\
IG H T
Ml Sic BY
L _____ ____________
DICKIt JONES AND HIS SKYL^SS
ri«oty o1 CM Beer
■./ \ ,
COOK'S PEA
<
IL
3 Miles East of Highlands on Walli*villa R«ad
- ............rB~l
Minerva C
Af Harley
Mrs. Harlej
at her home F
initial fall u
Study club. M
ducted the bu
members com*
guest day Nov
~ Mrr W jr
spoke on "At 1
and Mm. R. c
topic was “At
took part on th
Oil I* »»
Our Enemies"
Mm. Kennel
Charles Sloan/
ben attending
derson, L WAia
baugh, J. R(/«r 1
L Thorpe, 7 R-
White, and/M. L
Prize winners were Mm. G. H.
Swenson, high scorer, the hostess,
second high, and Mrs. F. B. Strat-
Vnerl nnneAlo tmfl 1
(Continued from Page 1)
a. m. September 27. The Yugoslavs
ford, consolation.
Othem enjoying the hospitality
were Mesdames W. C. Hopper,
Howard Brown, Allen Ueckert. D.
O. Mayfield and Clifton Adams.
Kansas was named for an Indian
tribe, “people of the south wind."
Drive personnel includes: Mayor informed UNRRA headquarters
D. W. Jones, H. ^ "
400 CLUB
C. Q. Alexander; D. W. Jones, H. the .same morning. Michael Ser-
D. Evans, Sol Aron, Leslie Wil- gfelchic, chief of the UNRRA mis-
liams, Don B. Baker, ft. R. Ball, sion, immediately demanded
Paul Braden. Otis L Baughman,
H. H. Blum. George Burnett,
Johnnie Busch, James H. Busha,
Herbert Carew, A. J. Chauvin.
Abe Jarinkes, E. E. Hunter, A.
C. Coker, L W. Croppe, H. S. Cre-
gor, Duncan B. Johnson, C. H.
Harper,. D. M. Holland, E. R.
Couch, A. L Jordan, Lee Pierce,
full
MRS. TALLEY LEADER OF
STUDY ON INDIA
"Industrial India," the second
chapter of the mission study book
on India was brought by Mm.
B. B. Talley, when the Women’s
Society of Christian Service of the
Highlands Methodist church met
at the church on Thursday.
Mrs. G. R. Skinner, president,
Old Cedar Bayou Road
presided over the meeting. Others
' • s Ivy Brin-
present were Mesdames
J. B. Hance, Bel) Moore, E.
information of the circumstances
and charges.
It was reliably stated that Gen.
Vladimar Velebit, assiatant for-
eign minister, sent formal notes to
the UNRRA and American sm-
bassy asserting that Burnup was
engaged in “collecting detailed in-
wouen, «. iL rfuruau, * •«*'•>» formation on the Yugoslav army 80n j B Hance tieu Moore, e.
J. R. Gibbs, T. R. Kemplay. H. R disposition and the strength of its j Blanton w jf Fehr, Raymond
Mullins, J. T. Woods, Chester OU- units.” . James, L. F. Leach, S, C. Irvin, A.
vcr. Immediately upon receipts of the 0. Briggs, J. W. Gentry and Con-
11 C, Spence, Robert Robson, note, Sergeichic saw Marshal Tito nie Firw,.,.. U_
Abe end Aaron Rosenzweig, R. B. for an hour, the authoritative
Warne. Victor Northcutt, John source .sa d Tirt> told him, ‘We
Campbell, Tommy Scarborough, have detailed evidence that under
Buell Scott, Claude Smith, Frank thd law Burnup could have had a
Hruby, Sam Stassi, Mike Frans- prison sentence of 15 years. The
N. D. Stiles, John E. Swingle, Yugoslavs filed a formal state-
Donce Tonite
Music by
THE TEXAS
SWINGSTERS
union CAFE
111 8, ASHBEL
NOW OPEN
YOU NEED OUR
DELICIOUS FOOD
STEAKS - SEAFOOD
CHICKEN
Donald and Gertrude Drake
WE NEED YOUR
BUSINESS
T
Pelly Method
To Sponsor l
Pelly Methodl
sponsor a chioke
until I p.m. Octi
City hall, toembe
Ticket* <o the
may be purchaw
mHjMiiE' •
shortage next year.
SEMI-ANNUAL ROLL CALL
OF MEMBERS
aiS
Central Baptist CM
PELLY, TEXAS
350—God For Sunday School
135—God for Training Union
c§m
PASTOR'S MORNING MESSAGE:
••When Prayer Takes Control"
' ,
SUNDAY SCHOOL—9:45 AM. MORNING WORSHIP—U AJL
TRAINING UNION—6:45 PAL EVENING WORSHIP- 8 PJM.
LESTER C. BELL, Pastor
58 MILLION PIGS
WASHINGTON, Oct. 5.
The agriculture department today
urged the nation’s farmers to pro-
Miu, ... J* IIVOCJ. " duce 58,000,000 pigs next spring as
Joe Kelly, Rufus Hunnicutt, -E. E. evidence with the UNRRA to insurance against another meat
Wainscott, 3. T. Weaver, Ross V. support Titos statement. L
DeGree. George McKinney. Sergeichic has maintained con-
Theo Wilburn, M. Wilkenfeld, L. tact with the Jugoslav foreign
A. Wilkie. B. B. Williams, E. D. ministry three times daily, has been
Williams, Paul Pickel, Bryan fully posted on developments, it
Stratton, j. T. Adams, Sol Golds- was stated.
worth, Harry Massey, Ivy G. Har- Burnup arrived m Yugoslav flve
bour, Charlie Marshall. Wesley months ago as an instructor in Oie
Woods, Monty Broadway Marvin use of ^
Jacobs, Sam Johnson, Allen Rice, ment. Authoritative informants
Jake Kannarr, Ray Lawrence, said he would he returned to the
Milton Lyons, O. T. Manning, Roy United States as soon as releae
Waiker, Royce Matthews. formalities are finished.
Silas <3. Moore. Shannon Mor---
ris, G R. Myers; Judge C. A. Nye,
Wilbur Lee, George F. Gaiennie, Employment in mining indus
foE schedule
CALL 8M
U t/V7
ENDS TONITE
"NIGHT AND DAY"
WISTItN
Half Aa How
guaranteed
l>»s SUNDAY
NBC MORNINGS
STARTS
THRU
M. E. McPhail,, J. W. .Pyle Wil- trleg g3<000 ta ^ Rocky
liam Quartz, Bob Gillette, Joe M. Mountain area in February, 1946.
Miller, Howard Lee, Irvin Reiter,
Drexel Vincent, Max Altman, F. C.
Woodward, Bart Antle, David Ar-
nett. .
Aubrey L. Banks. Walt E, Baum-
back, Wallace Brunson, Albert
Houdek, Fahy Godfrey, Ben Beh-
rens, Lester C. Bell, J. E. Black-
burn, Maurice Blum, Clifford M.
Bond. F. B. Braswell, Millard M
'Carter, Darrel! W. Tuck, Edward
Vaught. A. C. Chaddick, A. T. Cole.
R. C. Stephenson, Millard Gas-
saway, A. E. Drew O. W. Dube,
Hobart Enoch, Happy Sanders,
Si
DANCE
SYLVAN BEACH
CLUB
■:
LA PORTE,
TEXAS
Every Friday and
Ervin Flowers, C. L Fortinberry,
ArUe Froehner, Gerhardt W. Ob-
enhaus, J. E. Crawford. Truitt G.
Parker, W. N. Peddycord, J. E.
Brooks, Don Robinson, Lewis U
Rushing, E. O. Russell.
Pat Ruyie, Dan T. Ryder, John
Kader, J. H. Strait, Mose Sumner
j; E: Swingle. Ted Peudy Floyd
K. Bengtson, Tom Cranford, Clif-
ton Boyer, L. P. Thibodaux^ Abe
Bemel, J. C. Tillery, R. L epton,
Dr. Harry B. Naylor, W. W. Bunt-
ing, Ralph L. Walker, Earl Y.
Saturday Night
^ Music by
The Swing Rascals
POPULAR BEERS
SUNDAY
TUESDAY
Lionel
Lewis
Stone
Edward Arnold
MARGARET
OBRIEN
hi
MARGARET
O-HMESt
IN ONE W
BROADWArS
GREATEST
: •
BROUGHT TO
THE SCREEN
% -— ALSO iRt"
COLOR C ARTOON
“OF THEE I STING".
“THE'GOLDEN HUNCH”
"FOX NEWS"
For Schedule Call 37
|
mm
Central
Assembly of God
Church
Corner Pruett and Naxro
’In the Heart of the Tri-
CitieS for the Hearts of
the Tri-Cities”
INVITE YOU TO HEAR THEIR PASTOR
BRACY I. GREER
Sunday Morning
11:00 O'clock
••Bud” Pumphrey, W. G. (Bill)
Wilson, Frank .C Harrison, Dew-
ey Hathorn, Walter Henckell,
Jack Holiday, Paul Holladay,
Thomas W. Hooks, E. T. Johnson,
Robert Irby, G. E. Jessee, Wm. G.
Johnson, Mike Katribe, J. Rhea
Keiley, Clyde Kelly, J. V. Bell.
Waiter Kerr, John King, Eddie
Cleveland, L. Lohgneeker, J. Bry-
an Stratton, Allan MacFarlan, J.
E. Mallory Jr, Joe A. DeHart,
Steele McDonald, J. L. McKinney,
Jr, Curtis R. McNabb, Wiliam F.
Miller, Robert M. Mintar, L. E.
Cole, J. A. Budd, S. V. Roberson,
and W. C. (Cuz) Morris.
And here’s the women who will
be on the working staff: Mes-
dames Royce Matthews, Sol Aron,
C. J. Bailey, Glenn Barber, G. A.
Lillie, Mike Katribe, Guy Hensley,
J, D. Giddings, Harvey Tanner,
George McKinstry, Gene Bauer,
R. H. Monroe. A. W. Costley, O.
T. Manning. W. H. Bridges. Ar-
chie Hale, L. A. Wilkie, Syd Gould,
Jack Saunders and Lee Pierce.
Automobile Stolen At
Lee Football Game
An automobile belonging to ei-
ther Sid Lee of Baytown, or his
father, Was stolen from the park-
ing area at the Lee-Austin football
game at Robert E. Lee High school
last night, police reported today.
Constable Wyatte Busch,' investi-
gating with Patrolman Ira Jones,
said police saw four young men
looking through the parking area
shortly before the car was-stolen.
The men are believed to be from
Houston.
No arrests had been made at
noon today as police continued
search for the missing cat which,
they believe, may be linked to a
Highlands liquor store hijacking.
For Classified Ads-Phone 5»-521
delicious food...
tempting menues
„ *
r*'
v\.
■ ■
ISK
SERVED FAMILY STYLE EVERY DAY
SUNDAY DINNER - - - 90c WEEK DAY DINNERS - - - 65c
|;W' •>::
IN THE
CAir-Cooled
CREGER HOTEL
DINING ROOM
MENU
FOR SUNDAY DINNER,.OCT. 6
TURKEY AND DRESSING
ROAST
GIBLET GRAVY
POTATO SALAD GREEN BEANS
ENGLISH PEAS AND CARROTS ,
YELLOW SQUASH CELERY * TOMATOES
FRUIT SALAD
HOME MADE PIE
r- i
OPERATED BY MRS. MARY DANOS
107 W. Pearce
ENDS TONITE
“COWBOY
MILLIONAIRE"
STARTS SUNDAY
THRU MONDAY
2 BIG HITS 2
HIT NO 1 —-
Pi 4?«W%li
FONTAINE
HIT NO. 2
JOHNNY MAC
BROWN
in
"THE VALLEY
OF THE
LAWLESS"
- PLUS -
COLOR CARTOON
........ . J
"CANINE
CASANOVA
PHONE 15
- ENDS TONITE-
“THE BRIDE
WORE BOOTS’
“THE HIDDEN
EYE” 1 -
• STARTS SUNDAY a
THRU MONDAY
True Story of
America’s .
rs«|| Daring
Undercover
Agents!
ALAN LADD
GERALDINE
FRITZGERALD
"O. S, S.
ON THE
SAME PROGRAM
COLOR CARTOON
"HOLLYWOOD
For Scheduled CaU 46I-W
ALAMO
v ENDS TONITE '<
“SHERIFF OF
CIMARRON”
“STRANGE VOYAGE”
STARTS SUNDAY
THRU MONDAY
STARTS SUNDAY
THRU MONDAY
• 2 FEATURES 2*
No. 1 ----
JUDY ROBERT
GARLAND-WALKER
The CL^fK.
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 101, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 5, 1946, newspaper, October 5, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100417/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.