The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 216, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
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THE DAILY SUN, GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25
The Daily Sun =
W. L PENDEHGRAFT, Editor and Pubiuhrr
ROBERT MATHEItME, Busincs, Manager
SUN SLANTS
By W. L. Pendergraft
NO SOLUTION
PubU»hr«l each weekday after mi
11U Wes* IVj
Company.
uon, by !
ifct, Ocki*
Peoples Printing
Creek, Texas.
........ but to ua the idea of using soldiers to harvest
ANNOUNCEMENT THAT troops are to'be crops without paying them over and above
- *• used to gather the long-staple cotton crop their army wages is repulsive. It smacks too
SL'BSCRttTlOX RATES:
Month 65c, 6 Months $3.65; Year $7.00
One Half Price to Men in Service
Mail Subscriptions Payable in Advance
Entered as second elm
postoffire under the ac
matter at Goose Greek, Texas,
of Gongfess, Mirctj 1807.
A Bible Thought for Today
BIT SOME HAVE NOT EVEN LISTENED,
NOR CARED TO HEAR WHAT GOD HAS
TO SAY TO US: Whatsoever God hath said
unto thee do......Gen. 31:16.
Odious Comparison
In castigating strikes over the na-
tion, Wayne L. Morse of the War La-
bor Board, expressed public opinion
when he said that service men who
are “fighting and dying that labor in
America may remain free,” will not
accept alibis for wartime work stop-
pages.
“No combinations of words, no ra-
tionalized alibis, no pleas of provoca-
tion and extenuating circumstances
can be, will be, or should be accepted
by our fighting forces as justifying
work stoppage^ resulting from dis-
putes between employers and employ-
es or between factions within their
ranks.”
It should also be said that the peo-
ple are becoming nauseated with pub-
licity seeking to impress on the public
that workers in war industries are oc-
cupying “battle stations." By the wild-
est stretch of imagination there is no
comparison between a workman liv-
around Phoenix, Arizona, brought and un-
favorable action from the members of con-
gress who have been demanding that some-
thing be done to relieve the shortage of work-
ers on farms.
Senators pointed out that assignment of
entire army units to a harvest makes avail-
able only unskilled labor and that this does
not meet the need. Such labor cum harvest
almost any crop and can plant some crops.
It cannot cultivate the growing crops nor
can It do many of the other things around
the farm which requires labor with more
training and skill than is required of most
factory jobs.
Care of a dairy herd, for instance, is a job
for a man who has had special education
plus considerable experience. Untrained men
and women can not care for a large flock of
hens with any assurance of success. These
are only examples! There are many other such
jobs around the farm which require .highly-
trained and skilled workers.
To permit the production'which is needed
from our farmers, they must be given the
trained men as year "round workers, not
merely to fill in at harvest time.
The senators did not say anything about it,
Strength for Today
“Reg. IJ. S. Pat. Off." _
By Earl L. Douglass, D O,
LIFE’S POISONED CITS
A story is told of an ancient king who one
day being handed a cup filled with poisoned
wine, made over it the sign of the cross and
uttered the name of Christ. The cup imme-
ditcly fell front his hands
and was dashed into a thou- j
sand pieces at ills feet.
There is plenty in the an-]
cient legend for modern man ]
to ponder. If over every sit-
uation in life we utter the
sacred name of Christ, we
may Jje sure that when the
cup is poisoned, it will drop
from our hands and break,
If we bring all our plans un-
__________ . t dor His will, if we never
ing at home, enjoying family life, and start an enterprise without
drawing the highest pay on record, Him what we should
and a member of our armed forces
who really occupies a “battle station”
where bullets fly and men are killed.
It is an insult to the boys at the front
to even compare home jobs with sol-
dier’s work.
asking Him what we should |
do and how we should do it,1 nni'm
if we bring to Him the best uuuuLAsa
wc know every day and usk Him to put it
aside if it does not match the best He has in
store for us- then we may be sure the world's
poisoned chalices of temptation and perver-
sity will not harm
the false
rpot harm us. The way to separate
■ from the true, the evil from the
fore t
No soldier or sailor at a "battle sta-
tion” ever strikes.
Editorial Views
As Other Editors See It
LITTLE BUSINESS IS TOUGH
(Bast Texas Magazine of ,,
East Texas Chamber of Commerce)
The early passing from the American
scene of the little business retail, wholesale,
manufacturer, and so on has been predicted
freely since the days of NRA.
It is with some surprise that the economic
experts behold the numerous small businesses
stin alive and kicking. It is Surprising, sure
enough. There is amazing vitality in the small
business establishment from the cross roads
up to the city of New York,
NRA was certainly no friend of the little
business. The various governmental regu-
latory devices since 1933, apart from NKA,
have not been very helpful to the profits of
the little businesses. The present tightly reg-
ulated war economy squeezes little businesses
harder than the big ones.
We talk of social security as a great bless-
ing to millions of employes. But where is the
social security for the thousands of little busi-
ness establishments?)that support many an
employer's family and still far more employ-
es' families?
This same social security would be extend-
ed widely under the aspirations of some.
Among these is Mr. Altmyer, executive head
of the Social Security System of the U. S. A.
The other night Mr. Altmyer proposed social
security taxes of 12 per cent—six per cent to
be paid by employers, six per cent by employ-
es.
If such a social security tax were imposed,
many a little business would at last give up
the ghost. It couldn't be that tough.
We know a a small life insurance company
in East Texas. It's less than ten years old.
Some of the most responsible persons make
up its officers. For the past year it has been
literally hounded by a Federal regulatory
agency. Large sums of money that it could
ill afford have been required to defend it-
self. No case has been made against it. It
-wouldn't take much of such regulation to end
the life of that business, even if it is tough.
It's rugged little business that made this
country. The Ford Motor Company not so
many years ago was but a little bicycle re-
pair shop. —
to the earth; what is of true and eternal val-
ue will continue.
The poisoned cups! There are plenty of
them. Parents have warned us, experienceJ
has taught us, of their lurking danger. Say
the word of Christ over them and they will
fall shattered .at your feet.
All Rights Reserved— BNS.
- ' te|
much of forced labor in the axis countries or
of the collectivism of Russia. The soldiers
should be paid for this work at the same rales
of pay the farmers would have to give to any
other wjrkers.
WRIGHT PATMAN
YAIRIGHT PATMAN Is an outstanding mem-
'' her of thb Texas delegation in congress
and is known as a man who has a mind of
his own and who speaks it freely.
Yet, he was not always that way, according
to Dale Carnegie of "How to Win Friends
and Influence Pebplo” fame. Carnegie told
Patman's storv/in Your Life Magazine.
The son oyn sharecropper, according to
Carnegie, Rdtman plowed cotton at 50 cents
a day, studied a law course by correspond-
ence at night, saved his money and attended -
Cumberland University law school
Witten he was elected to congress, Patman
told Carnegie, thoughts of the wealthy and
famous men he would meet in Washington
made him nervous.
"I resolved to do something about it, "Pat-
man said.
I got a book containing pictures and bio-
graphical facts about all the members of
congress.”
He studied the book and learned something
interesting about all the men he had feared ■
to meet.
"It cured me of my timidity," he is quoted
as saying. "After memorizing those facts I no
longer dreaded to meet these men. In fact,
I could hardly wait to meet them. I knew I
could make each one of them happy and 1
did.
Carnegie points out that Patman soon be-
came one of the most lnfliicntuul memebrs
of congress.
PEACE FOR FINLAND
j.'INLAND WANTS peace with Russia, but,
according to a radio broadcast heard in
New York, Russia never has made the little
country an offer. -
The time has passed when getting Finland
out' of the war could have been of greatest
value to-the United Nations, but it still would
be helpful since it probably would release a
considerable number of Russian soldiers that
could be thrown into the offensive against the
Nazis.
Time was when there was a general sym-
pathy for Finland in the United States and
in other countries now fighting the axis. This
feeling still exists, but it is not as strong as
it once was. The Finns have been playing the
axis game too consistently not to have suf-
fered in world opinion.
The Russian attack on the little country at
firsFappeared to be entirely unprovoked and
intended purely as a campaign to gain more
territory. In the Hjgttit of later developments,
it now appears that Sytfin- may have realized
Nazi designs on the little country as a base
from which to operate against him in the far
north. "
If the Russians want Finland out of the
war, they ought to offer the most reasonable
peace terms possible under present conditions.
I! Where Contentment Li,
Susan Shen
telling
melon, listening to
Popping peas gop„° lh«
ouu-ner just which ’em
she wanted. -ippin ut «.
un car of corn or r I11*
have to learn 1
looking for when «L 8hc
and peered and »»
rnr'
Chapter Thirty "
KAY WONDERED just how
attractive she was to Jake in
cotton dresses, bare legs, unpol-
ished nails. She had given up
housework chipped them so
quickly and she was inept at
putting tha. polish on herself. The
one lucky uifhg in her favor was
that she had always worn her
sleek hair uncurled, so that her
head looked about the same—
except that it wasn't framed in
furs or flattered by a chic hat b7 the"bui*
and veil.. , JJ ' s^.2»a«
“No immediate prospects of washed
reaching the stage where I can't
bear the sight of you," Jake told
Kay reassuringly. "But then, wc
haven't had to dig in for the
winter yet. When we’re snow-
bound we’ll probably both reach
ened.
do it withS.. „„
and a critical eye.
But somehow u,»t
her schedule got badly
dusted and ^cLd'‘up ub
—^ ti the
rneir oeds made, the tub „
ed, It was time for |u5 1
no marketing done
Luckily there waa
whole ham that ma
thoughtfully left,"" some "I**
Kay could slice, butter h
bread. That was because ,
burnt toast. And
bread with cold
LATEST BOOK OF ETIQUETTE
Barclay on Bridge
He seemed to be having looked in the supply I
he worked, he only things she could 2
some cocktail crackers J
s? -4f
She fixed up
it outside. It
tr»y and I
was -
By Shepard Barclay
SPEED CAN BE COSTLY
MORE CONTRACTS are lost
by quick play of the declarer on
the first trick than by any othet
kind of mistake you see made at
the bridge table. So often the first
play seems obvious when it is not.
The best habit you can get in
bridge—if you are going to have
any fixed habit at all—is to stujly; with the K, gave up another spade
the dummy and your own hand— to the K, took the third diamond.
’ most without looking, the declarer
put on the dummy’* J and his own
8. Right there he was beaten, hy
a single play. Noting immediately
that he had blocked his own club
suit, he struggled the best he
could. He laid down the club A.
the spade A, gave up a spade to
the Q. wen the returned diamond
whether you are the declarer or a
defender—before you play any
card. Decide what is-your general
plan for the hand first, and then
make your initial play fit into
that plan.
♦ 74
*74 2
♦ Q J
4 K Q J 10 9 8
♦ K 10 9
4 A J 16
♦ 10 9 7 6
5
432
♦ Q 8 6
0 9 8 6
44 3 2
47654
cashed two set-up spades, giving
him seven tricks, and then led the
heart K to the A. West set him
then with two more diamonds.
All that South had to do was put
his own A or K on the diamond
,lead, score the club A, lead the
diamond 8 to the Q, run the cluba
and lead a heart to the Q and A.
That would have enabled him to
collect six tricks In clubs, three in
the screaming point.'
"I'll worry about that when
the time comes. But you're real-
ly enjoying yourself now, aren’t
you?” He seemed to be having
fun. He sang as he worked, he
joked with Anna; he hadn't been
rcetlfss or looked discontented.
"Any change is fun for a
while," he replied.
The time came for Anna to - ------- „tt5 a ,
leave, a moment Kay dreaded, day with the sun choerint
She was going go miss her. And soul warming. ™
she didn’t feel as though she
knew nearly enough to cope with
the housekeeping alone. But she
knew if she once put off Anna's
going, it would be fatal, Anna
would never go then. She had
begged to be allowed to stay op
without any salary. She even
said she’d pay for her food. But
Kay was firm. So Anna said
sue d go if she had to, but she
wasn't going to take another
job. And any time Miss Kay
needed her she'd come back.
“If you get sick, or you're
alone, or in any kind of trouble
you just wire me, Miss Kay. I ll
fly here if necessary. Don t go
thinking about whether you can
pay me. You just remember that
you're my baby. I couldn’t love,
you more if you were my own.
And .you're doing a crazy thing.”
Tears filled her kind old &ycs. ■ Lets see now good
She shook her head impatiently, What's for lunch?' He sai
trying to shake, them off. looked at the tray, made a
Kay and Jake drove Anna to 'That looks, wonderful,
ing. Hcnry’d better wateb'i
"Come on, Jake,' she
out. “Lunch is ready." The J
looked attractive with a
bright cloth and a little r
of flowers. But the mtt
definitely on the skimpy
,, "Fine! I’m starved," Jake
swered, coming out of the
He was getting along vtell
his new room. He -ave
kiss, threw himself down „
ground, rolled over with hij
to the sun.
“How's it been
morning 7" he asked.
"Oh, all right, but
everything takes a long timi
respect for Anna inert
the second.”
"Not weakening, are you
"Goodness no,’! she
staunchly.' "I'm just
ing, not complaining.”
going
the station in town. When the
train pulled out. Kay could nard-
♦ A J 5 3 2
4 K Q 5 3
♦ A K 8
+ A
_ He’s got some pretty keen
diamonds and One In each maior ly kcep from crying herself. The petition " He laughed,
oran-ionas ana one in eacn major ]aat Ue „.ilh het. old wor,d was particular part of the mi
broken.
"Gome <5h, darling," Jake, said,
drawing her arni through his,
♦ K 48 - "This is Sort -of a tough night
410 9 8 ----- ___-for you. Let!* go op a bat. Well
for a total of five-odd.
* * *
Tomorrow’s Problem
(Dealer: North. Both sides vul- 4 3 * 7 3
4QJ975
Under The Dome At Austin
By GORDON K. SHEARER
Fnited Press Staff Correspondent
AUSTIN, Feb. 25. (USt—Folks who watch pro-
ceedings at Austin are beginning to wonder
if “taxless session” isn't a phoney name for
the 48th legislature.
While
islature still will not levy any new tax, ap-
nerable.)
North East South West
Pass i Pass 14 Pass
2 4 Pass 24 Pass
3 4 Pass 3 NT
Talk about conservative bid-
ding. Or perhaps under-bidding
would be a better expression to
describe what South did with that
Confederate pension tax is the only tax-re- powerhouse. But then to see him
dueing proposal before the session. fail to make that contract is aJ-
It was first proposed to reduce the tax from most one for the book. Just a little
4J5
♦ Q J 10 6
5
4A3
♦ 10 8 8
476432
♦ 8 7 2
4K2
work couldn’t have con*i
vast amount, of time. I
you're saving your skill fori
ncr. Well be ready for a f
one." -■
'.Too much lunch Isn’t ;
you. Its bud for your.
rt t
By Gordon K. Shearer
seven cents to. half a cent on $100 worth of
property. It was put at one cent on a report
that calculating a half bent tax put too much
prospects still arc good that the leg- “ °n county Ux assessors' phrwess in
still will not levy any new tax. ap- ^ith.mcti.c,' Now therc “* Pr°P°sal ,makc
propriations are being favored at a rate that
will threaten to have the same effect on the
taxpayer by piling up a deficit that he will
have to pay off some time.
The constitutional amendment by which the
people hoped to put the state on a pay-as-
you-go basis does not curb' the expenditures
of this session. It does not take effect until
Jan. 1, 1945. After that time legislators can-
not pass an appropriation unless the stale
comptroller certifies that funds will be ready
to pay the cost—unless four-fifths of the
membership votes to pile up the debt.
the tax three cents on the ground that one
cent is not enough.
There is a big surplus in the confederate
pension fund but a senate-passed bill proposes
to fake $1,500,000 of this and put it in the state
general revenue because the state .spent more
tnan that out of its general revenue to main-
tain the confederate homes. The. attorney-
general is being asked to rule on validity of
takinglthc $1,500,000.
4AQ5
»AKQ
4 A 9 3
410864
(Dealer: West. Neither side vul-
nerable.)
j With normal play of this deal
at 3-No Trumps by South, what
too much speed at the start ; old-fashioned Whist maxim should
wrecked him. ' East violate in order to follow the
. West led his diamond 6 and. al- rule of common-sense defense?
Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Is*.
Crossword Puzzle
"The only thing that
my heart and blood pfcsmiJ
you, honey. But I'm only]
ding about the lunch. It
delicious." He carved lliem|
Without mentioning taxes a bill lias gotten
a start with senatorial comm.itte approval to
, boost the state per capita aid to school dis-
So far, the session has appropriated $70,000 tric‘8' Now the*'e is “ of *22.50 a year
to increase the money available for old age on the Dcr caDlla- oermits $2o and
assistance and .is in a fair way to add $1,500,-
000 to expendable old age assistance funds.
There is pending also a bill to take the lid
off $1,750,000 a month off the state expen-
diture for old age aid and to double Confed-
erate pensions.
The increased aid to Confederate veterans
will not amount to much as the rolls rapidly
are dwindling and besides a reduction in the
Grab Bag
Easy Knowledge
Five Years Ago
in the Tri-Cities
From the Hies of the Dally Sun, Feb. 25, 193*
The Tri-Cities Young Democrats launched
a campaign asking an investigation of the
handling of the local old age pension office.
Baytown residents were warned that they
would not be given city mail delivery unless
proper mail boxes were installed.
Commissioner Beatrice Massey announced
that she had won a fight to insure a six-day-
week for Harris County ferry employees to
replace the previous seven-day week sched-
ule.
Front page art by Johnny Mercer Illustrat-
ive start of work on Goose Creek's $12.0000
sidewalk, curb and gutter improve-
t program.
One-Minute Test
1. What United States president compiled a
Bible for his own use ?
2. What president was preceded and suc-
ceeded by the same man ?
3. What president took the oath of office
from his fatjier?
Words of Wisdom
Oh, beware of jealousy; it is the green-eyed
monster, which doth mock the meat it feeds
on.—Shakespeare.
-1 „ -v-., i
e candidates
announced for vacan-
cies on the Pellr board of aldermen. The
candidates were J. R. Hearle, W. H. Darby,
and O. O. Dorris.
Leigh Crabb. was installed a* president of
the Baytown Chamber of Commerce to suc-
--- the resigned Jack Saunders.
were set for the new
t church on East James Ave-
Creek.
Hints on Etiquette
Don't use large words, or you may make
yourself ridiculous. Choose your words care-
fully and use simple, but familiar, but expres-
sive phrases.
Today’s Horoscope
You are endowed with keen intelligence and
a very active imagination, if you are celebra-
ting a birthday today. Your memory is excep-
tionally good and you are considerate of oth-
ers. Your judgment of people is usually sound
and fair. You are inclined to be impulsive in
speech and action, and will marry after a
bricfNcourtship. On this, your birthday, get
things done in orderly fashion. If you have
to talk to public officials, it is probable that
those in authority will give you the necessary
help. Stick to the old and familiar today, but
do not be prejudiced against the new. It may
do not fret about It. Deliberately mischievous
be necessary to put off or cancel a trip, but
scandal may be inculcated about someone you
love. Pay no attention to such a malicious
tale. Read a romantic novel and listen to soft
music as a preliminary to pleasant sleep.
One-Minute Teat Answers
1. Thomas Jefferson.
2. Benjamin Harrison, who served between
Cleveland’s two terms.
3. Calvin Coolidge. ^
the per capita. The bill permits $25 and
there are more than 1,500,000 school cmIdren.
The state school tax probably would be
raised under this advance in the per capita.
The school tax is calculated automatically to
produce enough to pay school expenses, pro-
vided that it cannot exceed $5 cents on $100.*
The school lax is within two cents of the
limit. I ' i
The usual appropriations for rural school
aid, state departments, courts, eleemosynary
institutions and colleges are yet in the forma-
tive committee stage.
Cong. Hatton W. Sumners of Dallas proved
to Austin audience of legislators lhat he is
not camera shy. While he was talking from
the house speaker's stand in front of a micro-
phone, a woman photographer from.an Austin
newspaper tried to take his picture. Her
view was impaired by the microphone stand.
Sumners stopped, took off his glasses und
smiled. ' . . e
"Shoot, young lady, T can't keep my mind
on my business when I look down aLa pretty
tedy," he said.
The photographer got the picture, but for
fear it wasn't good, she again tried to get the
congressman in the camera's focus.
“Child, do you want another picture of me?"
he asked. "You can have just as many as
you please. >, . '\
Unruffled at having interrupted the speak-
ing, the woman suggested Gov. Coke R. Stev-
enson pose with Sumners.
"Don’t do it, governor, you might want to .
run for re-election," Sumners said.
Bui Stevenson posed, the picture was snap-
ped and Sumners resumed his address on
states’ rights. ‘ ■ ’!
You're Telling Me
By William Ritt
ACROSS
1. Jumps on
one foot
5; Decays
9.' Incite
10. Send forth
11. Sphere of
action
12 Bills of far?
14 Cant
15 to fish
16 Tree
6. Foretoken 24. Girl's
7. Color nickname
slightly 26 Hawaiian
8. Timber sup- food
port in mine 27. Skill
11. King of 28. Thing, in
Judah law
•13. Body of 30.' A salt of
17 A deity
19 Guido's
water supheric
IS, Abounding acid
in ore 32. A wing
20 Pennies 34. Stress
21. Covered 35, Perform
with grit 36. Male name
highest note 22. Queer 37. Proclaim
20 Goddess of 23. Portuguese loudly
vegetation coin 39. Pastime
22. Hard to
manage
25. Armadillo
29. School
officials
30. Sleep noise
31. Force
32. Examines
and verifies
33. Leap forth
35. Warp-yarn
38. Grown
39. Mournful
42. Abdominal
pain
<4. Cheerful
46! Sign
47. Sprung up
48 Metal
49 Weary
50 Dispatched
51. Devours
DOWN
1. Road
scrapers
2. Form of
sorcery
3. Foqnded
Pennsylvania
4. Reels
5. Constructed
again
have dinner here and go to a
Kay was surprised how excit- blood pressure, heart,1
ing the prospect of such an even- tested,
ing seemed.
"Can wc afford it?" she asked.
“Oh, yes,* we're very flush now.
Taxes uot due until the first of
the- year, and no heat until— ...„ ...v.„
whenever you do starting heat- 1 a generous helping of ham,
1-~ ■■ u—“" u“ —r" ed their plates with tomr‘
“You forgot the brea
said. "I'll run in ami get j
“I didn’t forget it, Jake, f
isn’t any. We ran oat,"'I
was ashamed to admit (t.m
‘It looks as .though i»yT
high-priced executive is
havfc to do some organa
• teased her.; ‘This is, as 1
the notion! buyer's running!
of white cotton thread,"
"I can sic there's more; t
business iof housework
meet* the/ eye," she ackh
ed. The first thing she dio
lunch was add a hugs lb
groceries to her order snd'J
phone it in. It took her
an hour again to do .the, d|
Then she rirfsed out the |
towels, swept the front pore
then it was 4 o'clock am
thought She'd sit in a. deck j
and read for halt an hotir t|
her mind composed for 1
problem of getting dinner, j
But when she went upsW
put some lotion on her M,
they felt rough already—sm]
covered that Jake had co
taken off his dirty cloth
Thai
manias ii’aaiie
iTJBE 32JH
Ves’rrdij '• Answer
40. O.’jrch parts ®
41. To color
43. Sacred picture
45. Melody
ing a house." He spate in
mock seriousness, his eyes laugh-
ing.
"If you're sure It's all right.
I’d love It. You’ll have at least
one more meal you can cat.”
• The food in the dining room of
the hotel didn't exactly measure
up to Henry’s, biif neither of
them were so particular now.
Their first meal out in two
weeks was a beano. , ,They
bought a bag of peanuts to eat
in the movies, bad a soda after-
ward. By the time they were
home it was nearly midnight.
Their latest night since they'd
moved.
Kay slept fitfully. Every time
she dozed off she dreamed that
she was getting dinner apd had
scorched it all. With Anna gone,
she had to tackle the. cooking
all by herself. And the idea was
much more bewildering than,
anything she'd ever had to do at
the store.
Breakfast W'asn't so bad. All
they had was fruit juice, toast
and coffee. She did have tip do
the toast three times because she
kept leaving it in the oven too
long. And the coffee was awful-
ly bitter. ^
She got out, a little notebook
and wrote down that, she wanted
to buy a toaster and ask Het
how to make coffee. Either she
couldn't read, or the cook book
was wrong.
It -took her an hour to do the
breakfast dishes and then she
wasn’t sure the coffee pot was
dean. Next she made up her
grocery list. She'd have to trust
that Anna had left her well sup-
plied with groceries, because she
wasn’t sure yet where all the
things were kent.
She’d planned to go to market
herself. Her ideal picture of
herself as a housekeeper always
had her carefully punching each
had a tub.
the whole room had to be |
up again. Jake was a *tr]
And the bathtub washed,
he’d left muddy smears at
the tiled floor, so she
those up as well as she
Tomorrow morning shed
this floor and the kitchen!
leum. Jake was also a trr
v.nen she got downstaifi
groceries and meat had <**]
she had to find room for <“
stuff she’d ordered. “
time she had to bc8m
She felt as though this v
most fateful moment in n
eer. An ex-vice present]
couldn't ruin her
Or could she?
(To Be Continued)
first
SCOTT’S SCRAP BOOK
laiu;l
OAK Units
WILL
fUkHlStl EHOU4K
ACORMi-ib
provide, as
, MUCK
HOC, FtEOASl
AH ACRE
os cork
By R. L.
l\
/i
The uncivilized tribes of Colombia, accord- |
ing to an item, use cubes of sugar for money.
What do they mean "uncivilized”?
A ceiling for pies. But docs this include
the open-face apple variety?
Until Goering, Goebbcls and Co., whipped *
out their crying towels, the Artie whale was
our chief source of blubber. ,
No. Agnella, that newly-coined phrase. . ter f
“giobaloney." has nothing to do with the cur- 1 Failure to' take out the ration-
*JllS*books, he said, would only re-
G&ernor Urges
AUSTIN, Feb. 25. HlPi Oov. Coke
R. Stevenson, opponent of ration-
ing as a policy, nevertheless
ur$dd all Texans today to regis-
for rationing books.
All To Get Ration Books
meat shortage.
suit in the state being deprived
of its proper share of food sup-
plier and having them distributed
elsewhere.
... — BUY WAR BONDS » STAMM
Pre-marriage health tests arc
required in 24 states.
1/
4440U5AN05 OP CHmESE V»4
vKomen w*re atippled B/ i-si
A Sme. FEEf OF FEMALES
RICH families WERE BOUUD iM
OKI
«Ei
i^EAT TOE.
iiSiS
JAAPS'-
^tloW LSHi; WILL
t<OME7»KEAD <EEp
wifdeut' PR-YikC
APOll.INC, ? -
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 216, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1943, newspaper, February 25, 1943; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101022/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.