The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 172, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 5, 1943 Page: 6 of 6
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THE DAILY SUN-GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
TUESDAY, JANUARY 5, U
irt Flashes
By Fred Hartman
Ganders Seeking Cage Berths
In Which We Shed Public Tears And Brag On
Ability Of The Departing Arthur (Brick) Goal
allude to us as Mr. Hartman.
NOTE ALL YE reader*:
You no doubt read In the paper
yesterday that Arthur M. (Brick)
Caul ha* gone to a highly Im-
portant position In Washington,
I>. C.
For the time being, this de-
partment ha* moved from a apot
over by the west window to a
more dignified tjiiot over by an
cast window.
Until this east apot la filled
and we are shunted back to the
west window, we wish that the
people, of East Harris county
would recognise our temporary
there was
therewith.
free food connected
r.jviuicemei4> In Our chosen pro-
fession and in tire future please
; AND WHILE ON the subject
of the henna-haired one who
presided* at this desk for 10
years, we may as well go a bit
deeper Into the subject and say
that Uncle Sam is certainly get-
ting a fine news man, and the
DSily Sun, in reverse action, Is
losing one.
Tins department is more or
less of an ex-country boy and
his not been around any too
much, but In what little getting
around we have done, we have
yet to sec a news man with the
speed of the refugee from Kuo-'
SOS'.
Houston
Teams Quit
Conroe Meet
Duration Baseball
Plans Ta Unfold
Gipson Bowlers
Win Loop Match
Basketball at Robert E. Lee
High school this year is more
for, a sc
than a preparation for, a scholas-
tic sports season It is nn ela-
borate extra-curricular physical
training nrogram, and so far 1t
has attracted 32 high school stu-
dents.
Tile group his been divided
i the A. and B squads with
into
tfl H>* obi d«V», even djigj?*-
oM kids called u» W odWfirst
poach JDan Stallworth in charge
f tLi, A iiHnnJ nf 17 an/1 */”V»or*V»
As you may or may not Itnow,/of the A s(jua<j 0f 17 and Coach
»t our national and interna- Holly McLemor
name, and there were myriads
of nicknames hiuled our way,
largely as a result of the rather
well-fed proportions we carry
up and down the street.
Also we were often called by
names that couldn’t even be
termed nicknames, and some of
them could not even tie publish-
ed.
But that was hack In the old
days. Mease address us with
the proper dignity in the future.
In taking over a few of Mr.
Gold's assignments, we want it
known that we also expect to
fall heir to any invitation Mr.
Goul formerly received where
WC get
tfopal news every time ope of
the, Webb Creer's wagons get in
frotu the city. Brother Brick
would meet one of these hacks
-at the station and make his
way to the Daily Sun office. He
would tear through the front
office, gnd by the time he reach-
ed* the composing room, he would
hgve the copy handled, and by
handled is meant read, copy-
read, edited and a headline writ-
ten therefor. Brother, he could
handle a piece of copy with the
speed that George Walmsley can
"get out there" on a sweep. And
if you have never seen cither
Waimdlcy or Goul in action, take
it frgm us, that’s plenty fast,
Holly McLemore directing the E
squad of 15. If plans can be
worked, out, the B team will use
the old high school court in the
auditorium. All high school
boys will be given n chance, to
play basketball. All a lad needs
to do is ask for the chance, and
a suit -will be given him.
Several football players with
no basketball ambitions have re-
ported for practice in the hope
that playing basketball will help
1 in Tootl
Department Longer To Write
them in 'football:
The feature of the first real
afternoon of practice yesterday
was the showing of Richard
Kouba. He reported for the first
tifne and was placed on the B
squad. At the end Of the first
workout, the stockily built for-
mer Baytown star had been mov-
dWlCAGO, Jan. 5. 'U'.Hl Baseball
Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis
today reveals the conditions uiWer
which the major leagues will be
permitted to continue war-time
operations.
The 76-year-old diamond czar
reached an agreement witli De-
fense Transportation Director
Joseph B. Eastman a week ago
on the type of schedule the ma-
jors would play in 1943 and the
manner in which spring training
Would be . conducted. The exact
nature of the "agreement" how-
ever, has not been revealed 'even
to American and National league
Presidents William Harridge and
Ford Frick.
Landis obtained from President
Roosevelt a year ago the "green
light” letter that gave approval
for major league play last"season.
The condition "go" that Eastman
has provided is considered equally
important.
Early arrivals for today's meet-
ing admitted they were "complete-
ly in the dark" about what Landis
may have in mind. ———
“We’ll, know before long, how-
ever.” they said, "what, we can
of the speculation about what
Landis intends to do was furnish-
ed by the distribution of “model’"
1|0 game schedules for the club
representatives to study.
Under provisions of this sched-
ule the season would open April
27 and close Sept. ,.2ti. The play*
ing program adopted at the ma-
jors' meeting in December set
April 13 at the opening d^iy for
Gipson Furniture bowlers won,
a forfeit decision in Commercial
league play last night, while the
A. F. of L. and Peoples State
Bank teams were breaking7 even
in their duel.
High for the night/went
Whirly To Quit This Year
Hi^h Winner May Go To $500,000
34, game schedule.
American League President
Harridge said most baseball offi-
cials were opposed to a 140 game
schedule.
'The .April 27 opening is satls-
catofy,” he said, “But I believe
most of the club owners in both
leagues want to play 154 games.
We can do that and still stay
within the date limitations of the
charter schedule by increasing the
number of our double-headers.”.;
The delayed opening would per-
mit teams to train at hr near
home without seriously hamper-
ing their conditioning.
A* another means of reducing
the strain on transportation fa-
emtftfs, the size of team traveling
Judge C. D. Little
The scores
A. F. of L.
Server
Dunks
Anderson
Sharpless ' V
Lewis /
TOTALS
u 554*
Peoples' State Bank
Holloman
Ftorance '
Cjtmivin
Garcltf
Little
Handicap
TOTALS
DEAL GABLES, Fla., Jan. 5.
U'.IP—The turfs greatest money -
winning horse of all lime—,
Whirlaway—will be retired to
stud at the conclusion of the
1943 racing season. Trainer Ben
Jones said today.
Several conferences between
Jones.and Warren Wright, own
*r of the thoroughbred, top horse
on the Calumet farm roster,
brought about the decision, Jones
revealed.
The five-year-old chesnut has
been assigned top weight of 132
pounds for the March 6 running
of the $25,000 Widener cup at
Hialeah park. He never has
won With mbre than 130 pounds
on his back and will spot six
pounds to Charles S. Howard’s
Mioland. —-—’y— ----—
Whirlaway, winner of $560,911
for an (all-time record, W||jj
shooting at $150,000 this
before closing the books on
lifetime earnings. Several wj
ago it was reported he
shoot for (he million-dj
mark.
‘If Whirlaway was my*
he would still tic running ;
he was 10 vears old." .lone,
dared, “He is the
horse I have ever seen.’
Other leading contender^
the Widener cup besides
way and Mioland. are Bcjl
Whitaker’s Requested. 124; 1
ard’s Kayak II, 121;
Clark’s Riverland, 120; Town
B. Martin’s Bolingbroko,
Galbreath and Dienst’s Best i
ier, 113; and- Greentree
The Rhymer, III.
W elugartrn*
Forfeiture
Gipson Furniture
Phillips 170155
Gipson 126 126
Reid land 146 146
Sloan . 143 176
CLASSIFIED ADS
"FOR QUICK RESUL
and cant do abnit spring training
s and about the type or
squ:
plaj
2271
yers.
SUV WAR BONDS & STAMP*
Head On Crosby Home Fire Than To Rebuild Same
WE USED TO appreciate
Goui’s ability every time he took
a, feu days off. Take, for in-
stance, this morning. We s|M>nt
from 10 a-iii. until noon trying
to figure out a proper headline
far that story of the fire that
destroyed Bing Crosby’s hoirie.
Since Bing is my wife’s favorite
singer, we tried to do justice
to the man and (he article.
After two hours of struggle, we
thought we had it, but a few
minutes later we received In-
structions to change it. By the
time we got the head written,
it was so late we almost had to
hang the article in the margin
of the paper to get it into print
of dues, handle news copy and
take a grocery list from Mrs.
Goul—all at the same time and
quicker than we could have done
cither of them.
We wuited until he left to say
all these nice things about Trim,
because we didn’t 'want him to
be embarrassed by these bou-
quets.. And aiso if ne thought
about us too* much in his last
hours here he might have re-
membered that buCk we borrow-
ed that time and failed to return.
ed up to the A squad.
"He was too good . for us,"
Coach McLemore rgjjOrted after
the workout. ,y
Members of the A squad from
which the Gander* team will be
chosen are * Co-Captains Orvei
Hutto and Douglas Stewart, Bob-
by Foley, Claud Havard, James
trips
schedule we’ll plr.y."
The reluctance of the two Chi-
cago clubs, the Cubs and White
Sox, to go ahead with a survey
of facilities at French Lick, Ind.,
the site tentatively selected for
their spring training camp after
a proposed trip to California was
cancelled, was taken as a ‘‘tip."
teams may be told to train nt
home. French Lick is 278 miles
from Chicago and some Mtservers
Pvt. Red Ruffing
Reports Tomorrow
WHG BE
Morosini 194 162 172*
TOTALS 779 765 730
... _ BUY WAR BONDS & STAMPS
FIG HT RESULTS
PHILADELPHIA Lulu Costan-
tino, 12fFi, New York, outpointed
Elba Phillips. 130It, Philadelphia
Tift), P*" *F7. ‘ ~* v . - ..
PROPERTY FOR SALE LOST AND FOUND
FOR SALE — Five-room house
complete with 'furniture at
Wooster, $4200. $3700 unfur-
nished. Terms. Telephone 675.
154-tfc-
LOST Gi-Cert Schaeffer Lifsj
fountain pen top
Phone 127W. ta
FOR SALE—Misc.
.Ellis, Ross Smith, Ted Hunt, did not believe even that much
Gerald Hanson, Gene Hazelwood, travel would be permitted,
IT LOOKS as if this column
certainly being
IF EVERYBODY the govern-
ment has called into Washington
were as efficient at his appoint-
ed tasks as was ouri never-to-be-
forgotten contemporary, the con-
&
duct of the
be in good
&
would certainly
read these
cay*, we have job* lined up
for "the next three Saturdays for
our hog killing friends who pre-
side at the Lee gymnasium
building the bodies of Tri-Cities
youths. And at two of the spots,
they Will be |>aid in haekbone
Mid at the other in spare ribs.
-7-=-:---- BUY-WAR BONDS & STAMPS-
A telegraph editor’s brain must NEW ORLEANS Willie Pep, 129.
nut just function_____Thai-JanV Hartford. Conn., outpointed Vince
eliongh: ~It ’must explode. ...... vrere -rw w.... xrAiu «a,
Marcus Vidrinc, Wendell WKten,
George - Dabney, Kirk Busch,
Wade Glenn, Luz Aguilar and
Bill Taylor.
The B squad is made up of
Claud Smith, Darrel Nickerson,
Kenneth Chandler, Alton Simp-
son, Ernest Haney, Paul Bill
Kern, Walter Roberds, Eugene
Slagle, Terry Lee Shanks, Phil-
lip Boubel, Thad Fenclon, Alex
Strobel, Milton Brasher, John
Sydney Lee, Aldon Weaver.
It was noted today that the
six ^Houston schools had with-*
drawn ..from the Conroe tourna-
ment planned this weekend*-,
uncertain whether the Ganders
would go to the meet now, or
Whether they would . accept
The only sound basis for any
>j{G BEACH, Calif., Jan, 5. tl'.Ri
Pvt. Charles <Red> Ruffing, for-
mer ace hurier of the New York
Yankee, reports this morning at
For*. MacAi thur for processing
into the army.
Ruffing, on_ a, seven-day fur-
lough during the past vveekv was
accepted for army duty last week
despite being minus four toes on
on? foot. He is marj-ied and was
employed by Voultee aircraft,-
. .' . — BUY WAR BONOS a STAMP?
squads. Gn the first group were
Taylor, Hutto, Stewart, Smith
and Ellis. Hutto was the hot
shot of the afternoon. He was
hitting "the bucket more often
than the remaining players com-
bined. p
'J&n the next' group Were Han-
son,"“Hunt, Havard, Foley and
Glenn. Hunt was the standout
in this group
Oh the third
I group were Vid-
Hazeiwood, Busch, Witten
Brother Goul could read- a
mystery story, cuas out a Brother
Elk for being late in payment
Dell- 'Qrto; 133,“ New York (id);
Jack Links, 123, New Orleans,
scored a technical knockout over
Willie Alvino, 128,j Memphis, Tenn.
go
r jtl
bid to Beaumont
in a hre-aegson
there. <
The Gander A
rme,
and.-
Besidcs Hutto and Hunt, others
>r who showed promise were Hav-
a* ard and Foley, two string beans
participate in their own right. There seems
tournament little to choose between ball
, handlers Smith; Hunt, Ellis,
CARRIES Si03 IN CHECK
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. II.F)- The
man standing before the desk at
police headquarters had a big
bulge in his check. When the desk
sergeant told him to spit - it out
he refused. He also declined to
open his mouth and give his name.
Police pried his jaws apart and
brought to/ light a roll, of $103 in
small bills.
day was divided into
squad yester-
three
Hanson. Each likely will get
his chance to go.
NEW and USED \
LAVATORIES; WATER
HEATERS and CLOSETS
M. E. Young—Plumber
General Plumbing Repairs
rhone 874-J
Strike Out For
Better Health!
Improve your scon and yoor
health too by bowling frequent-
ly on our well lighted, cared-
for alleys? More enjoyable
playing tiiiie provides the re-
weicome
tlnu
war_worker»
me of- day or aight.
BOWLING ALLEYS
a BAYTOWN a__
FOR SALE—Several good buys.
!*• Close in. G. >1. Ammons.
207'-j West Texas Ave. Tele-'
j_ phone 836. 142-tfC
FOR SALE—Milch cow.
year Jersey. Inquire 20* j
port, Pelly. Sirs. Nutt.-flB
FOR SALE- Timber, farm lands,
oil royalties. T. F. Whitley. Box
451. Telephone 310, Dayton. •
160-26tp
FOR SALE Fresh yard eg^
cents per dozen. 1015 Nortkj
ett. 18
FOR SALE 16-foot 2 wheel t
, crL„house, Good -tires. 20Cj
pen, Pelly.
FOR SALE Five rooms and bath
with garner apartment In East
Baytown. A good investment." 1940 Model 6-foot Norge ref:
•Also practically new home ih
Morrell Park. Small equity. See
B. A. Stewart. 700 East Main.
Telephone 1097W. 166-tfc
ator. 207'i Cherry St.,
Apply immediately.
k .vi
FOR SALE-Two-room.bouse and
lot Across street from school at
Channelview. $1000.* $200 down,
balance monthly. House now va-
cant. See A. M. Schulz after 5
p.m. ‘First house west Baptist
church, Channelview. * !67-6tp
FOR SALE T-ft. Frtgidaire.
feet condition. 601 East Hu
Phone 490M, tg
FOR SALE- 16-foot Indian ]
trailer, good condition.
Inquire Qilmttre Shoe
Shop, Baytown. 11)
FOR SALE
ern hohic, utilit
blinds, !■* acres, corner.
Equity, $3500 mod-
utilities, venltian
Only
laxation you need Tor longer, *. —$790 cash. Balance, $2000
harder working hours. Me jjj-.bq. m?nth. Galeener and
Moore. MarkejLSt. Wd, 169-6tp
FOR SALE Cheap Horse i
1 saddle; 80-lb. hog; 3 montl
calf; 14 months old Jersey!
See me Wednesday, 218 (
Bbytown.
FOR SALE.....Two and one-haif. 5.
10, and 20 acre tracts close in.
Easy terms. Also several small
homes in Highlands. Jones and
• ^Jones Real Estate. 1003 Miriam,
F.OR SALK Beauty shop
ment. Facial chaiT.
chair, 2 hood gas dryer,
manent wave macione. 4 chi
chairs, 3 wail sterUtaers, chi
hall tree. Cali Elsie at 644.
_ >13
Battlin' Henry
Rated 3-1 Over
Former Protege
'
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 5. (RPC—
Battle-scarred Henry Armstrong,
one time holder- of three world
, boxing ehftmpionshisp, rates a
3-1 favorite over his former pro-
tege, scrappy Jimmy McDaniels,
for their 10-round fight tonight
as he nears the cliipax of his
comeback campaign.
Hammerin’ Henry will meet
Beau Jack, recognized in New
York State as lightweight
champion, in a 10-round non-
title bout in Madison Square gar-
den on Jan, 29. but first he must
contend with McDaniels, a hard-
punching, thlnncd-down middle-
weight: ' ,
In his comeback. Armstrong
has tuned up on 14, opponents.
He scored two knockouts, eight
technical knockouts and three
decisions. He lias dropped oho
lO^round’decision. -«*•
McDaniels, who wrestles beer
kegs around during his working
hours, is an in and outer in the
pugilistic ranks, but is a rough,
tough scrapper vylto won't hesi-
tate to risk al! to plant a hay-
maker.
After Armstrong announced
his retirement from the ring and
before *he began his1 comeback,
he spent his time around the lo-
cal gyms. He was attracted to
the.skinny Irish youth and spent
several weeks tutoring him.
1 It was reported at one time
that Henry would turn manager
to handle McDaniels’ fistic car-
eer, but that didn’t pan out. Now
teacher and pupil meet up again
under very different circumstan-
ce* with Armatrong favored tq
deal out » severe lesson.
, . . — BUY.WAR BONDB & STAMPS
Sat. Bulanek Describes
Jap Zero As Hell Cat’
The Jap Zero is a "hell cat”
of a fighter and sure is fast, ac-
cording to 8gt. John M. Bulanek
Sheldon, who has jtiet Written
..J* ■ halftbrothef, F. W. Burke
from_MidIand airfield.
Zero captured In the Pacific
ed the Midland field
men there to inspect
Zero Is. our;
"'TS,
- AMP*
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
Condensed Statement of Condition, Close of Businej
imber 31. 1942
/
RESOURCES
LIABILITIES
Loans and Discounts ..........................150,593.68
Overdrafts
154.96
Banking House ...........................................30,889.64
Capital Stock?
Common ..
A
Furniture and Fixtures
Other Real Estate........;.,..............
Stock in Federal Reserve Bank..................
Other Assets ....................................
Cash and Due from Banks $1,097,781.18
U. S. SorIt. Bonds............ 594,065.84
Other Bonds and Securities 15^285,07
9,954.31
19.004.00
2.550.00
135.31
1,844,132.09
..........$ 52,000.00
Preferred .............;.... £ 23,000.00 $
Surplus Fund .................................
Undivided Profits .....
Reserves for Other Purposes......................
Preferred Stock Retirment Fund................
U. S. Gov't. Deposits........$ 242,000.00
Individual Deposits............ 1,699,044.00 J ,941,044.00
75.000. 00
10.000. 00
26,272.75
3,900.24
1,197.00
TOTAL.....................................,$2,057,413.99
TOTAL......................................$2,057,413.99
OFFICERS
JOHN M. KILGORE
Chairman of the Board
W. W. MOORE
President
W. T. BUSCH
Executive Vice President
DR. G. A. LILLIE
Vice President
S. T. WEAVER
Cashier
O.W. DUBE
Assistant Cashier
F. W. McKINNEY
Assistant Cashier
DIRECTORS
W. W. MOORE
E. R. KILGORE
W. T. BUSCH
FRED DITTMAN , A. M. WILBURN W.L. JONES, Jr.
JOHN M. KILGORE ,, O. B. CRUMPLER
DR. G. A. LILLIE
Mtinbir Ttdarpl Deposit Insurance Corporation — United States Goventment Depository — Member Federal Reserve* System
-r-
WANTED-AI! kinds of junk and
—scrap metal. Tri-City Salvage
Co. Phone 345. Highway 146.
t - . : 85-tfc
Lamar Court, Telephone 49.
ni-tfc for RENT
HELP WANTED
MECHANICS WANTED - Make
up to $70 weekly. Apply J. B.
Holloway Motor Co. , 187-6tc
VVANTED'-^L^eor'" hoy Apply
Western Union. 171-6te
FOR RENT -Furnished front!
r room adjiining bath,
entrance. 122 New Jersey,;
town.
FOR RENT Bedroom,,
entrance, adjoining bath.
'AVest Itumble. Ill
WANTED
FOR RENT Bedroom, two I
two women or couple. Sill
nolia.Baytown.
gnu revt
VVANTED To BUY—Scrap metal.
Writ’s too heavy to handle, Tel-
» ephone 666J. I'll come after ft.
ISdlie Cox. 160-tfc
■ _ f
Twin beds. Near, rubber (
Two gentlemen '*■<
couple.' 12-1 First St. Wo
WANTED TO RENT
Five or
six-room house; Goose Creek or
Pelly. Telephone 939J. l67-6tc
FOR RENT _ Furnished
room. - Garage^ ^CoupitL
. ed. *15 Schilling,
Park. ."
FOR RENT- One four-raw J
USED WASHING MACHINE ~R .
i R..u u- rw.i„v,t oi,/.na..... Adults only,
phone"51gJ.
L. Bull, 523 E.
1138W. T
Wright, Phone
172-3tp
NOTICE
NOTICE
Elsie Post and Geraldine Brown,
formerly of Elsie’s Beauty
Shop, are now . at Eileen’s
Beauty Salon. Telephone 664.
• ., 170 3tc.
NOTICE "T-7-
W. F. Hal! will buy anything
vou have to sell. Come see
FOR RENT — Front
adjoining bath, 1009 Grl
Lamar'-Eourt. T e I e p M
925WX. 1*
FOR RENT «— Nicely fun
bedroom with adjoining
1231 - Iowa. BaytoWr. 11
eue at 314 Main St. in Pelly,
Telephone "1347
W. F.
Hall.
151-tfc
FOR RENT Bed room, two!
or will share house with (
Bob Gardner, Oakland Est*
*- . v-~
—«■ ■•■••'jkj8- ■a-———"
FOP. RENT —’Front
Couple or men only. 409 !
DR. MAUDS D. EVANS, D. C. P.
K., massage and Infra red
light. Free analysis. Phone
1130-J, Baytown. 151-tfc
Humble. Telephone 1168. 1"
NOTICE-Leaving this week for
Richmond, Va. Can teke two or
three riders. Phone 955. 171-2tp
GRANITE and MARBLE-VFInest
quality, monuments, markers,
cemetery work. Tri-Cities Monu-
ment Co., Baytown. Phone 759R.
172-tfc
FOR RENT - Completely I
nished five room house, _
Lake Drive and 12th
Highlands. One block i#
ban.
NOTICE Wc will be closed Jan.
.11, 12 and 13. Smith Brothers.
, 500 Main Street. Pelly. 172-4tc
WANTED USED Cl
Highest Cash Pries* Nf|
For Lata Modal UsadOMii ]
JACK SAUNDERS
BAYTOWN
PERSONAL LOANS
American investments in Nor-
way are estimated to be in ex-
cess of $111 million.
We Buy and Sell
Used Furnifure
M. Wilkenfeld
Warehouse, Ph. I042W
CASH DESERVES
BIG DISCOUNT!
Crosley Radios, Tappan
Ranges, Furniture
HOME FURNITURE CO.>
Across From Woolworth’e
IN A HURRY!
Most folk* when they *
to » b*
money they need it to i
That’s where we come is ■
we do away with all the 1
tape. Just drop toy and seel
fair our phut Is Ilia next f
you need a few dollars qu
Baytown Finance
H. A. DAVIS, Manage
i. A-. DAVIS, Manager
First Floor
Kami Katrlba Building
PHONE * « »
yeatht*r Forccc
,sT TEXAS—Rn*n
■nigh1-
(oTuM E 2
larly Bre
fith Axis
Ihiie See
ction Is Foreca
rqentine P6pe
|sit There By M
’ENOS AIRES
jp) — Informet
flieved today
jould soon break
Rations with the
j Argentina then
jie only nation in
hemisphere
lining relations.
[The newspaper
Igarded as close
>ntiaekdpmist‘
hilean Minister
aul Morales, who
[month conferrin
residents of tl
fcates, Brazil and
W left that imp.
JvTlAGO, Jan- ft
; of Interior Ratll V
• press conference to
tpected to discuss C
I: ■ :i|- Av:
|He arrived late yes
■axil, spying he
Jeased" -with the
[jp to the United „S
hd Argentina.
ire Kills Fi
ecreation
error-Stricken T
Congests Doors,
rllCAGO, Jail. 6.
Ffsons burned to
ires suffered shod
^juries early today
rickt-n attempt to
ngeSted doofs and
that destroyed
fcecration parlor in
pile Beverly Hills d
I The bodies of five
land a: 4:30 a
„ washroom wh
lieved they had r
aistaken "ajtcmpt to
Ion from the blazt
pntinued to search
destroyed buildir
f Firemen, battled the
hours, before
enter the
t whs all that
ponilad recreatio
l Fire Marshal Anthi
e yestimated
red by the fire
IlWrono He said
areotly started In
fading from the hei
i an oil storage tank
funding.
GROUND TOWI
[ In the Trl-title
Bln F A*. Washci
pnant at Fort S
. Charles Lang
pi a hurried” re-
job . . M
fcwcomer here fi
|her points, get
r:.in the Tri-Ci
'■ Womack tellln
[iig along in th<
king an ait
»e Kubik
bain, we have so
pry-tax records
>u give your e
lhat you deduott
iegan is now
|ainesvi!le. Text
Hart home
fmy life . . . jj
popping in and
luff her defenst
Idd things ha;
s»tch tape ...
Jters ... A grot
ISO entertaine
fore than their
here jester
ansportation t
peeks not catch
1 Oscar Killg
main stem
Jays . . Don M
Pnf distance
porning . . . 1
pough.
• A USO dane
’ 14 for the 1
I'ty building, t
now who -will I
nkle' np to t
nd quaff whilt
|audal news
•'ing like pt
pagazlne.
I In La Porte;
N Daliie Wi
a|l!e
e on their h
led Blanton h
ickr. on anJat
w-hile yoi
lour spare timi
pr fronts into
ofth wind.
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 172, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 5, 1943, newspaper, January 5, 1943; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100563/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.