The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1946 Page: 2 of 12
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THE DAILY SUN. GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1^
)AY. NO^
ilicans In
te-Over Talks
fluential but they cannot speak fi-
nally for the Republican member-
ship of congress. But they will
make recommendation* to the
committee* of the new congress on
top policy question*. Taxes head
the Hit with the Republican lead-
ership already pledged to a 20 per
cent cut on personal income next
year.
52 Miners Killed
In Bohemia Blast
(Continued from Rage One)
the Republican members of con-
gress themselves have voted on the
question.
Members of the house committee
are Reps. Joseph W, Martin Jr. of
Mass., who is slated to be the next
speaker; Clifford Hope, Kans.; J.
Roland Kinzer. Minn.; John M.
Robinson, Ky.; Harold Knutson.
Minn.; Karl M. LeCompte, Iowa;
Hal Holmes, W*sh.; Leo E. Allen,
111.; Earl C. Mic'hener, Mich; Hall-
eck; Brown; Leslie C. Arends, 111,;
and Roy O. Woodruff, Mich.
In addition, the following repre-
sentatives have been Invited to
meet with the committee; James
Wiel^dwnrtah'M!«.Y 'itfctlma included 37 Czechs
Wigglesworth, Mass John Czech coltdborators,
Simpson, la.; Mven f>rTn*n w,pr .prisoner* and
one free .German' miner, according
to the announcement.
toipB
lairinan, Annul
H. Vgndenberg, Mich; Kenneth S. ' ,h» „«rri
Wh.tw.
H. styles Bridges, N. K<.^Un hr|n|ing out the
PRAGUE, Nov. 14. -tU.Ri Fifty-
two miner* were killed today in
an exploaion of unexplained origin
in tin* Brown coal mine at Lorn
in Northwest Bohemia, the minis-
try of industry announced.
N. Y.; Richard M
Leonard W. Hail, N. Y ; and Bert-
rand Gearhart, Calif.
«*■* “*—«•—
Ford 1946 Loss
At $51,600,000
Black Maiket In
Blood Revealed
15 Die In Mexican
Mountain Air Crash
JALAPA Vera Cruz, Mexico, Nov
i. -rttpvl
(Continued from. Pago One)
had to defer large expenditures
for much needed manufacturing
improvements. We have had to
. . our
000,000 that we would like to In-
vest In added research and engi-
neering facilities. And, of course,
(Continued from Page One)
round up and buy back the plasma,
scattered in scores of drug stores
and other markets in Shanghai.
Director Davis said the situation
was one which he inherited when
he took over the office. He said an
14.—<IF.P>— Rescue crew* plodded
up the rocky slopes of 17,000-foot
high Cofre de Perote In the "Mex-
ican Alps" today to bring out the
bodies of 10 persons who perished
in the crash of a twin-engine com-
mercial airliner.
Forrest Lee Smith, 34, Mexico
City correspondent of the San
Russia Re-Opens
Fight For Bases
In Dardanelles
these losses before we can do
great many tilings that wc would
like to do things' like retirement
plana and plans for more stabil-
ised employment
"But," he . insisted, "we at the
Ford Motor company have faith in
the future of America and In the
Express, 10 adults and a baby and
the crew of three were among the
victims of the crash. Smith was
the only American aboard the
plane.
The plane, which left Mexico
City early yesterday, was three
tons of v minutes out of Jaiapa when It
plunged into the side of the moun-
tain, one of the tallest peaks in
the Sierra Madre Oriental range.
ST?**'S£&"i"Er«si ■*** b”“ lrt°l
Eugene D, Millikin, Colo. _ _
General statements of policy and ...
possibly some agreement on the
senate leadership is the utmost ex- SMITH TWINS
pected from today’s meetings. Taft
could settle the leadership ques-
KNGAGED
Churchill
.TO
daughter
Twin sons were born Wednes-
tioh in the senate instantly simply day, November 13 to. Mr. and Mrs.
by saying he did not want it D- Smith, of Goose Creek, at
The house leadership question Goose Greek hospital,
may develop into a sharp contest The boys were named Raymond
to be determined finally only by a Gale and Richard Glen. Raymond
v°te of Republican representatives. Gate weighed four Poundsi Rich-
The steering committees are in- ard Glen, three pounds, 12 ounces.
WED—Mary
of Britain's
war-lime prime minister, will
wed Oapt. Christopher E. Soaim-s
of the Coldstream Guards In
January. Assistant British mili-
tary attache in Paris, the groom-
elect and Mm Churchill met a
month ago in the French capital.
The announcement explodes all
rumors linking Miss Churchill
with Prince Charles, regent of
Belgium. (International)
S. n«vy erroneously classified the
plasma as "surplus" and the
Shanghai liquidation commission
sold it, without checking the con-
tents, along with medical supplies
from Okinawa.
Red Cross officials estimated
...... that 290 measurement
opportunities in a keenly competi- ?|a8,m* had /ound ils way to the
live system. And, with the con- bl*ck market and that at current
tipued cooperation of our employe* fric.c» iLw™W br‘n* approximate-
I bat faith will be justified." *10-000-000 U- s- money.
Pointing out that the profit EUROPEAN BLACK MARKET ,.
system was "at best a profit and OPERATIONS UNCOVERED
loss system,” Breech added that ZEILSHEIM, Germany, Nov. 14. -
such a system was "by its very na- Oi_U. S. army raiding squads
ture experimental, and, therefore, swooped down on the Zeilsheira
uncertain." displaced persons camp today'
This nation, he said, cannot have seizing ten persons and thousands
mass production without "bigness,” of dollars worth of illicit goods in ..a.*.,
even though "bigness” creates a a blow at what was believed to be j
problem in which management the nerve center of one of the J&mZSStSi t^vii
sometimes loses "touch with peo- biggest black market rings in Cen- ,e„t|y condemn*Tnexatkaf pro
P iak/ir h- „: j tra E,ir°P*- posal, was certain to make clear
ktor, 1* Mid, step- -jhe total value of the illicit what already has considered to be
ped into the gap. Organized labor goods recovered In the operation the eventual outcome of South Af-
has done a great deal to achieve was not yet Itnown. It included
economic and other tangible ad-
(Continued from Page 1)
has demanded that she be permit-
ted to "join” Turkey In the de-
fense of the Dardanelles.
Turkey's position was that such
an agreement would Involve sur-
render of Turkish sovereignty
over the straits. It was upheld by
Britain and the United States.
The Anglo-Americans urged an
international conference of powers
concerned, including Russia and
the United States, to revise the
Montreux copvention governing
the; straits. It appeared here that
Russia had in effect rejected that
suggestion.
Husbands! Wives!
Want new Pep and Vm?
Tliouauda ol nounW
TSoMMa! Of osuplw an
bsiKUd -—'trr . .
vim, Tltnl
Iron you.
ViUlUiB b
Al ui'ujg rilOfvi uvujryMi
at Doom Creek Fhari
Australia Opens
Fight On Veto
ANIMAL PROTECTION’ FAILS
(Continued from Pace 1)
The Clever Gift
7' 9 »
For a Practical Use
i
Pepper Mill
Made of wood and stainless steel, it’s a handsome table ornament.
But, more than that—in these days of pepper shortage-it’s a gift
any hostess can use. Gift Boxed.
PEPPER CORNS
COME WITH THE
MILL.
$495
Robson’s
JEWELERS
223 W. TEXAS
Bevin Hay Lose
Post In Cabinet
rica’s movai.TB* assembly will re-
■ , .. _ . more than $30,000 worth of sac- ject it overwhelmingly,
vantages for the wage earner. But charine, “stacks” of German South African Premier Jan Chri-
what organized labor did, perhaps markg miHtarv scrip American o A.ric*n .Frefer Jan'c“rl
more than anvthine else was to 1 , ,ry , p’ „ stlan Smuts made clear yesterday
more tnan anytning else, was to currency gold coins and 20 or that a reiecflnn of hla reoucat bv
thing—tt is a social thing. Men vation for weeks as a suspected rule South West Afriifc as “an in-
and women are often proud of center ot bl»ck market operations tegral part" of the union and will
their unions and take comfort in extending to half a dozen large not conaider placing the territory
the vision of better things which German cities including Frankfurt, under trusteeship,
they see in the programs and pur- Hamburg and others more distant. As the committee moved on to
poses of their unions.” It had been suspected that a the explosive veto question, such
Pointing out that the relation- large counterfeiting operation was veto-hating countries as Australia
OURAY, Col. -(UJ>)~ Native ani-
mals of the Rocky Mountain re-
gion under the "protection of U. S.
Forest Service workers, are better
off when left alone, it was found
through experiments near here.
Hay and other foods generally
given domestic animals often
cause the death of deer and wild
Big Horn sheep. Forest rangers
have decided to let the animals
choose their own fare. 1
PALACE
DOORS OPEN 1 P.M. DAILY
ENDS TONITE
"SAN ANTONIO"
“TOO YOUNG TO KNOW
Starts Friday
THRU SATURDAY 1
MSI
-JPUJ8
“BOTTLE NECK”
“HOP HARRIGA.V
ARE
(Continued from Page One) _
eont Hon#, thut hia roinung oui ittai me reiauun- large uvumericiunK uiiciauon was rcw-uaniig aiunuica mm aumiaua
eminentwill an____■•-T.-a *Lg0VI ship between organized labor and also in progress at Zeilsheim. How- and most of the Latin American
,. , asia recast nnnniit„nnia nfla** a Vau tn oka* AmovImis ormu nlflnnvo In Anitnlriaa knour that whiia tha TTni.
its conduct of international affairs
as to afford the utmost encourage-
ment to and collaboration with all
nation* and groups striving to se-
cure full socialist planning and
control of the world's resources,
its constituted* offers a key to
management, Breech suggested the
following four points be consider-
ed by leaders of corporations;
1. With “too much isolation” in
business arid industrial manage-
ments, top men in any company
and thus provide a democratic and
constructive alternative mU8t ** developed who can un
to other-
wise inevitable conflict between
American capitalism and Soviet
Communism in which ail hope of
world government would be des-
a six-inch stack of German hun-
derstand thoroughly the men who
are to work under their leader-
ship^ We cannot have an ‘officer a remark bill*.
lltEi Itplp
yesterday expressiy to —IcadcrshiD " we were looking for. Blur of them
compel the rebels to withdraw 3. Business men should spend ^er* ,bl* time’ rIn*
their amendment to the king's more time working with people at ‘be other four were largs-scate m-
speech, which was written by the ail levels of government. Com- dependent operators.
pany executives should give five One hundred American soldiers
per cent of their time in the next and 25 army criminal investiga-
12 months to working with gov- tion agents took part in the raid,
ernment people—“not as opponents No hostility was encountered
v,IC ^uu„v„, or proponents, but as honest, ex- Some of the 2,500
censuring the rebels received 126 perlenced, well-informed citizens tants of the camp
votes. That was a majority of 4hose who want to make a contribution when the raiders
to the public welfare.” through the camp.
4. Vision—goals—should never Provost marshal
ever, American army officers in countries knew thst while the Uni-
charge of the raid said that no ted States and Britain would join
counterfeiting equipment bad been Russian in batting down the
discovered. slightest suggested change in the
■snwwJM SSS?
in the camo, along with caches of voluntary'Big Five agreement slm-
American dollars, gold coins, mill- «d *t modifying the veto's appllca-
tary scrip valued at $2,000, and ti0B-
planned to remain silent
stages of the veto de-
in
bate .
but Sen. Tom
of the United States delegation
was prepared with a statement of
American policy on the question.
political committee,
Connaliy, D.. Texas,
FREE
NYLONS
AT THE
Watch For Date
MfJJ'l
ENDS TONITE
“CAPTAIN EDDIE”
‘FROM THIS DAY FORWARD
Starts Friday
Til It I! MATl ttniv *
(JHJART
(JARTON...».i
quart
bottle.........
i/j GALLON
bottle........
THRU
Always
No. 1
SATURDAY
2 Features
No. 2 —--—
Chester Morris in
“A CLOSE CALL FOR
BOSTON BLAURIE”
-ALSO-
“Fer Better Or Nurse"
“Who’s Guilty*
cabinet and outlined the program
for extending the socialization of
Britain. ,
A resolution by Herbert Morri-
son, lord president of the council,
Inhabi-
atill in bed
prowling
voting. But it still left 33 voting
against and 120 abstaining, plus 11
members who stayed away from
the meeting.
Thus the cabinet was able to
muster only 32 per cent of its
strength in the house of commons,
which now has 390 members.
Abstentions during test votes
loom large in the British parlia-
mentary technique. For example,
Neville Chamberlain resigned as
wartime prime minister not be-
cause he lacked an actual majority
commons when he demanded a
vote of confidence after the ill-
starred expedition to Norway, but
because he was sensitive to the
ue lurgouen, so mat. me prouierus nad oeen wa
of mass production and mass dis- SOme time in
tribution will be met through mass* leaders of the
leadership. ■
CIO And Guard
Locked In Feud
ings. Army agents
ed in a German
heim and had learned of large-
scale black market trading.
Yesterday the Occupation Chron-
icle, a weekly newspaper published
for the dependent’s community in
Connaliy expected to:
1. Emphasize this country's un-
equivocal opposition to any change
in the charter voting provisions at
this stage of the UN’s existence.
2. Hint of the American attempt
to promote, through Big Five ne-
gotiations at this assembly ses-
sion, s mutual agreement to trans-
fer more and more 01 the secur-
ity council's business from the
“suhstantive" category—that in
which the veto applies—to the pro-
cedural category -where a simple
majority of any seven of the U
council votes will suffice. The
Americans also are hopeful that
a way may be found to permit a
Big Five power to abstain from
voting on an important matter
and thus avoid a veto.
3. Express the hope that eventu-
(Continued from Page One)
until the organization was stop-
ped.”
Akin said that McGee told the
fact tbat"io membere *oT his” own that wjgjtfsed labor ob- tiflcates.
party abstained from voting in his *<*«» * the National guard unit
Frankfurt, charged that UNRRA ally the Big Five will give up their
goods were sold in sidewalk booths veto over all but matters inVolv-
at the camp, and that counterfeit- ing actual threats to peace
era at Zeilsheim were turning out breaches of the peace and acts of
unlimited quantities of money, food aggression,
ration coupons and clothing cer-
TODAY
THES
THRU SATURDAY
a DOORS OPEN 1 P. M. DAILY #
Pi
AGAIN!
AsJumurc!
CUT FROM F\
NORTHERN
PORK SHOUj
•
-ALSO
BUGS BUNNY in "RHAPSODY RABBIT"
"PARAMOUNT NEWS"
CHRISTMAS
TOYS
FROM THEIR OWN SHOP
ONE OF THE GAYEST, MOST
COMPLETE SELECTIONS.
Everything For the Merriest Christmas Ever!
DOLLS
CHAIRS
DESKS
Rocking Horses
Stuffed Animals
Mechanical Toys
Doll Houses
Tea Sets
.
Sewing Sets
Pull Toys
Little Housekeeping Sets
Doll Cradles
GAMES
DRUMS
AND MANY OTHER TOYS IN OUR COMPLETE SELECTIONS
See Our Ladies' Gifts
• Linens
• Pottery . • Gift Soaps
Plastic Playing Cards and Other Items
on these grounds
“It was unnecessary. ■
“The CIO and prominent citizens
Of Texas City already were work-
ing to establish
reserve unit there.
"Organized labor had faith in
the regular army which has a per-
support,
The revolt among labor members
' parliament followed recalcit-
rance at the trades union congress
Brighton last month. Eighty
per cent voted to demand the
withdrawal of support from Geh.
P™clfco Franeo of WhS
mmorily to 40 jw cent flnd which could be depended on to
voted for a resolution censuring handle any disturbance officer;
Bevins whole policy, especially its „ , handle
alleged anti-Russian, pro-Wall ."There were hundreds of war
Street tendency. veterans in the area who could'be
During foreign affairs debate in mobilized on short notice to assist
commons October 22-23, the only in protecting lives and property."
back benchers to give unstinted McGee reported that he said, ac-
praise to Bevin’s policy were four cordjng to Akin, that no real
nonentities, one of whom wasj necessjty for the expense of tax-
making his maiden speech. The payerg wfu shown; that only the
others were silent or took excep- big 0il companies, military, of-
tion to one feature or another. ficials and “some chamber of com-
Morrison. and Prime Minister merce members" showed much in-,
Clement Attlee urged the rebel terest in the formation of a guard
group at the meeting yesterday to unit; and that it was feared they
withdraw their opposition. The were attempting to organize a
group held a long meeting during strike-breaking agency,
a commons recess last night to "Officers and members of the
consider whether continued opposi- CIO unions will continue to exer-
tion meant expulsion from the else their American right to pro-
party, as some political sources test or approve every pubUc actlon
BARKALOV DAUGHTER
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Barsalou Jr.,
marine corps 70i Fifth, Baytown, announce the
birth of a daughter, Catherine
Renee, at Goose Creek hospital on
November 13. She weighs 7>4
pounds.
..........
Bronchial
Coughs!
Due To Colds or
Upper Bronchial Irritations
Sptnd • I
iur« fat 0 tx
(«ipl« otlif
.0101 MinU
octing). Taka a «»»!• «f ii»«
(Ml it* muon! poworfol #»•!!.»• oc
llu igiood tkr« IkroM, hood end br.otk.oi
loboi. It itofti tight awor to lootoii o» thick,
choking phlogot, tooth* irrlta
indicated. Only three ot the group involving taxpayers money,” Akin
decided to give in to Attlee’s view- sajdi "regardless of any intimida-
0010 hord coughing ipolll
SuBoroii from tlwio poet
cough* duo to cold* Sod luckl
MS o*dc!l
rilolod MutHN! (ltd
Horn, tatty initoliog
uchltr't bciogt <uick
Du't xoil—got luchity'l
Oil drag ttocoi—today
CAhW.............
herring drug store
DINE
AND
DANCE
EVERY NIGHT AT THE
TRI-CITIES CLUB
Serving Steaks
Country Fried Chicken
Be* Foods, Sandwiches
Plenty of Local Beer
HAMBURGER BAR,
Serves
Jumbo Hamburgers
Dally
Curb Service
Beginning Thursday’, Nov. It
TRI-CITIES
Market St
CLUB
Wooster
ENDS TONITE
“STRANGE TRIANGLE”
STARTS FRIDAY
THRU SATURDAY
• TWO BIG FEATURES
NO. 1
THE RIOTING RASCALS ARE HERE AGALN-
mam
Eoll
KECuuZHI
>v
B
FRESHLY GR<
PORK
FRESH, NOR1
PORK
FRESH, NOR!
PORK
GRADE 'A' YJ
BEEF R
FANCY, CLE/
NO. 2
ON THE SAME
PROGRAM
Little Lulu in
"Mem’s Pest
Friend"
—......7,1 i1"'.
RATH'S FAF
point
SEE
W.G. (Bill)
Wilson
iff-
far
Quality
lije tnwranre
Strvu-e
Phone 1067-WX
Box 484 - Goose Creek
• ' .
! Northwestern fyatiottal Life
INSURANCE COMPANY
gty.MKOLD.lm - MIKKUWUS. MM*.
tion or coercion attempted By mili-
tary brass hats,’’
OIL WORKER DENIES
PIC KETING CHARGE
TEXAS CITY, Nov. 14. — (D.R1—Joe
D McGee, secretary of the CIO
Oil workers, today scoffed at re-
ports he threatened to picket Tex-*
as City stores in an attempt to
rgani
'guard unit in Texas City.
■Nothing was said at the public
b Peep Shop
Goose Creek
QUICK RELIEF FROM
Symptoms of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
di*to EXCESS ACID
Free BookTells of HomeTreatmentUiat
Mast Help or it Wifl Cost You Nothing
Over two million botUru of the WILLARD
Tit K Al'M ENT have been sold for relief of
symptoms of distress arisinx frOm Stomach
and Dupdensl Ulcer* ddc to Ext
PssrOigoitkwi, Sour or lt|Mttta^l!h]
Cnilnetl, Hosrtburn. Sle*p»e*.ne**, etc.
forum about picketing,” he
"It would be foolish of us to try
to picket all the stores in Texas
City."
McGee said organized labor had
informed merchants they would
"take their business elsewhere If
the merchants sponsored a guard
unit." He added the merchants said
they were not sponsoring the unit.
•The CIO policy opposes nation-
al guard units only if they are used
os a strike-breaking agency," Me-
Gee said.
“I said in my speech at the open
forum that the National guard had
been used as strike breakers, as
history shows only too well on oc-
casions in the past.
“Nobody would oppose the guard
on military grounds.”
GOOSE CREEK PHARMACY | MASTERS BABY
Baytown:
BAYTOWN DRUG STORE, Inc.
NANCE DRUG COMPANY
3HLANDS DRUG STORE she weighed eight pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Masters of
Pelly announce the birth of a
daughter, Jerry LeVone, at Goose
Creek hospital on November 13,
vuinrio
HUMBLE CLUB
DANCE
I11
SATURDAY, NOV. 16
■
Baytown Community Building
9 to 1
Music by
JOHNNY DYSON
AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Humble Club Members Admitted
Without Charge.
m»i
ENDS TONITE—
"Don't Gamble With Stronger*
THIS MAN’S NAVY”
DOORS OPEN 1 P. M. DAILY
STARTS FRIDAY
NO. 1
—2
THRU SATURDAY
BIG. FEATURES
8EMDEZV0US
24_
William Mono
GARGAN • PALMER
NO. 2
action>
Charles
STARRETT
"Desert
Horseman"
-Added-
"Mysto
Fox"
"Lost
City
of the
Jungle”
Extra
Texos-Qldohoma Gciat” .
cm
DECKER’S F/
LIVER
WISCONSIN
AGED
JUMBO KOS
DHL
AMERICAN
SHEFfOl
PICKLE AND
VEAL
^5
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1946, newspaper, November 14, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100761/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.