The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 17, Ed. 1 Monday, July 6, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
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MONDAY, JULY
«: •
,» .^1
TRSSLftrft.t±a5J
news services and newspapers «t forced to
do in compliance with remmrehip imposed by
OU «^EWHEKK 'iN TEXAS, July 3 (ttfc-
Two km*-r»ng» Consolidated Liberators w»
ready today to carry the names of Fort ------------%--------—
a hangar at the Ooneolidatod eompcny* huge States.;......__ ’.’ ' „ ' ;
TT
»»w,l rwanyet. Crossword Puzzle
Romance Thumbs a Ri<
—1 ^h .r-,'Jilt'i ~ w
■■ -—
„ Street, fieeee twet, T«e»
-iSaumOff RATES;
I
^SMSK*
___.a.M..e.M^- 'awrssKtf*"'"
a-Wfa* aaier the act a< Cw«»«. Msirt «. tut Do you nedd three guesses?,
” yyHAT ARE CONDITIONS in the Aleutian
halted there our lines of coromunicatlob to
Siberia, where we undoubtedly eventually will
desire to help the Russians, have been cut
Alan, the Japa on the.outer end of thla long
chain of Wanda are across the route bomber#
would take en route to Tokyo and other Jap
tUm, ' ■ •
thk I* only a pari of the picture. The
Jape on Atlu and Kleku have established step*
*Y AHen
InS^ ,be
A MM* thought for Today
. JH difficult, the last' report Mid.
But the Japt-ewe operating in the same
aort of weather.
Difficult or not the Jape mint be stopped
la that sector and they ought to be kicked
r ACROSS 6 Mandate
j I. Decayed 7 Erase
8. Line of bold 8 Persian elf
cliffs 8 Resonant
». Even ■ UU t ° Omiir.n.o
' |1. Fodder vats 12 Division of
13. Manaclca €> ' a fugue a*‘
14 Smell 18 Enclosure
18. Earth , If 18 Seaman
18. Kettle 20 Sphere
17 Conjunction 21 Paving
24 Feelers
2o. Ancient
27 Demand
lyment
18Local
positions
paym
'mSm
32. Sloped
33. TV) accent
33 Walked
37 Cans
38. Sum up
40 Festive
41 Competent
DJAN- WESTON, »n Ardendale
girl, who has Just been Jilted,
more or less socldentolly meeto
__-2T _• * vatn \f..» Vnvu OFT>
1st, who has just been Jilted
CLAIREy LESTER Claire has
turned down Bill. »ayi"B that
She has discovered »>»Jovcs
PAUL PETERS, a local boy. who
is now an engineer.
breakfast. It’ll be cold u jl
A little later, after Disc?
washed up, and was facing i
aunt across the breakfast* ’
Miss Martha eyed her
. “You’ve got a smudge' ^
nose," she said. “And your |
a mess.”
'TH fix up when I’m'--
ON A MORE KFHMTCAI. 1
further advances bp the Japs. They first oc-
cupied the small and relatively unimportant
island of Attu, The latest report mads public
21 Like
23. Winr.ow
gr.&rtJSJFs/MjlSsSi *-T"•“*“**"K““
that are me are toeapow*. b* The Aleutian Wanda are «f major impor-
ut eternal -II Our. 4.18. tance to out country from the standpoint of
.................. • offense and drflkse. With the Japs edtab*
that are no! tees at*)
Strengrt for Twfay
-Be*, i . m m.n
portant to the welfare of American*
than tiie tattle of Egypt-more im-
portant to the people of til the United
By Eorf L Douglas, 9. D.
portant totta people
Sw.
» to the tattfe over economic poU-
dea. In a smaller range, it to the tattle
between Price-Fixer Henderson and
congress. Bat it also includes the tat-
tle between
tr
----------prowure groups, the bat-
tle between the farm bloc and the
labor bloc, the battle totween both
and industry and all the little tatties
between special interests.
At itafce to the question of whether
our country shall be swept by devas-
tating inflation or whether it will ta
' HANDS OF THE rATHEE
Rembrandt’s last picture is entitled, The
Return of the Prodigal.” When hr painted it
he was an undischarged debtor owning noth-
ing hut the ritAhea on ht* bat k and the ma-
terials with which he made the picture. He
had been something of a prodigal himself.
j-fife had often been wounded
by the sharp barb of Injus-
tice. He might have depart-
ed life amid bitterness, but
Just a short time before his
death he painted this re-
markable picture.
‘ Now the outstanding
characteristic of this pic-
ture is the hands of the fa-
ther U show* the prodigal
J:*K» ■
enin j a Houaton truck driver who was going
about his usual tasks or selling pastry to. M Srt pf
MThe case attracted plenty of attention he- m
cause of the fact that -the O'Daniel labor law M Therrfore
was the Judicial vehicle upon which the in- n™iZ,.V,L.
dictment and proaecution were baaed. - .«
The defendant, an official in a truck shelter*
drivers* union and a man with a penitentiary ,4 nrma j-
record’!'tn another state, was convicted and 35 Vast** •
sentenced to a term in prison. Wh,at*„
His attorneys promptly appiaied. no- woewen
• Monday a ruling was handed down hy the
court of criminal appeals that is positive proof
that something is going to have to happen in
this country to awaken the public to the
weaknesses in our system of life; including
our system of justice
The decision of the 12 jurors who heard the
testimony was. reversed and the case remand-
ed because it was brought but at the trial that
the complaining witness was a bread sales-
man, when in reality lie sold sweet bread and
cake.
Not a word about whether the defendant
was guilty or not guilty. Not a word about
that. Only-a technicality a shrewd lawyer was
able to find. ............^------------- r?—
flout
38. Authorized
41. Tart >
42 Region
43 Mix
44. Having no
rest s
46 A lecture
DOWN
1. Tastes
2 Ample t;
3 Lubricates
4 Exists
5 Ropes, as
ahorse
i
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2
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yam
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20
21
Sr
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5T
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Sr
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25
.’t
M
27
.- -»•:
2£
M
w
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sr
w
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34
F
35”
37
44
35“
3T
42
F
1
if
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1
eating," Plan said,
“Well, 1 should Hop*
would! And I want you t, j
on that blue linen frock I,
ened last weef. lt goes w.
with your blond hair.”
“Yes, Aunt Martha, but I
sort of saving that for,
best. If* nice to wear _
the country club when I
YESTERDAY ^Aujd^Malha tells
banker, has been talking to her
about Dian. %V> .
t>«-- • r.
Chapter Eighteen..
, “JEROME CARR discussed., tennis,
you With me” Miss Martha shook “Maybe so,“ Miss Martin l
her head sldly a# she looked at “but if. also Just the thkA
Plan. “Poor* man, he doesn't
really^ know much about how to J^rce Oritl. *
,’iT ?‘“£"r. « »r -.“ J?,.-""1”1
Well, If m “Certainly. I happen tel
liT * — J
'■Now, don’t go flying off the co‘“r- ■, «
■fijrriJSr'! wmm *1
Wan took a swallow of «
will permit It to wwfttar the war *nd
jetch the peace beyond in an orderly
-manner. One economist ha* estimated
failure to check inflation trill add m
met as $62.000,000,000 ( billion) dol-
''%»to the cost of the war. ?
At the bottom of the atruggle to
pure selfishness — one group fitrug-
^ing for ari advantage over the other.
The final Outcome will depend upon
whether our government, including
..... President Roosevelt, coogrews and the
rHtatds of burcuus and agejwies. arc
. willing to forget politicg and personal
tntereMa to tita extent of doing what
to neceggary without regard to its ef-
fect upon their own future.
A half-hearted experiment to being
made with control of Hying costs. It
_______The court is not to blame. The precedent
brimr —hw hwn-sot 'fwover'A'Ccatuiy 'tttot the 'tirr
and the father with his must be interpreted to the dotted I’s and the
hands upon U» boy’s shoul- crossed Ts. The attorney is wot to blame, be-
ders. Art critics tell us that cause he did the one thing be could to insure
the freedom of the defendant. The defendant
is nol to Illume because he is trying to retain
bis freedom and beat a penitentiary sentence.
The public i* to blame-4o Maine because it
will countenance anything like that.
It absolutely frightens the law abiding
among us to think that our highest court of
appeals in the crlminMjsystem is not clothed
with enough authoritymy law to wave aside
such ah assinihe technicality and uphold the
“And I suppose , that’s all you "Don^t start asking fog
needed to upset the beans com- tions, Plan, said Miss
pletely,” said Dian. “Oh, Aunt
Martha, J wish you would leave
me alone. Where Jerome Carr’s
concerned.”
•There; there, Dian, honey,”
Miss Martha soothed, suddenly
>*.»*« zjsz
«* , , . , get Betsy in good shape.?
“Not If Jerome’s going to be „But wJjy this raocn]^
in the picture! you jor0me was going to
T almnly told Mm that Fred phone” . , - -
wasn’t the .man for you after all, c?n tak? ^
Anyway, I’ll probably be
"Oh, yes, and I think you (
to put a touch of ’ blue ml
small white hat you've got]
got a small bunch of —1
ers you can have.”. _
- ‘Thanks, but I'm not in aL
trimming mood.” Dian ted
J DOUGLAS ..... ..................
in sli the history of art no htads have ever
tieen painted that equal the bands of the fa-
ther in this picture. Everythin* Rembrandt
wanted to say about the forgivlngi of God
.for sinful humanity he put into the hands
of that elderly man, welcoming barir -home
again hi* son who still had upon his.gar-
ments the stench of the pigsty.
1 God’s tove manifested through the hands of
•a forgiving father’ This is something for ail
of us who have had our sojourn in the far
before he calls. I got up t
an early start.”
Barclay on Bridge
All Rights Reserved BNS be able, to depend-our criminal code.
Washington Letter »> Charles r. sowan
By Shepard Barclay
GET OUT OF THE WAY t Some of the bidding by that
WHEN YOU see a situation hand-hog in the South, who re-
approaching which is likely to fused to let his partner play the
throw you into the lead When you deal at spades, could be attributed
don’t want it, your Job Is to get to the fact that it was a Com-
^dftfie wSy lf you can and help muters* game and the train was
your partner to have the lead in- nearing the station. But the play!
»*.#
sure winner in the hope that your falling to the A. The spade Q was
1 piWtner has the card immediately covered and the A won. Clubs
beneath it. By doing this, you may should have been finessed next,
enable him to take the crucial but instead the heart 6 was led,
rome looked too happy for Words.
He’s going to telephone, you to-
morrow—or today, rather.” * ,
“What for?” “But you haven’t told sin
;.ircspa* 1
“It’3 about, Grandfather
ton’s paintings."
up to it?”
Griii You know women- c^’t go mornings/*
there without a male escort, and
-i£■ .
“Did you put him
Dian- demanded. - -~
“Dian, what a thing to say!"
"Well, I certainly wouldn’t put
it beyond you.” *
«s pu.miiign.
•Those things! What at
them?”
“There’s a man in towi |
wants to sec them—a man j
knows all about paintings.” ■
Miss Martha got up. “Go to did some quick thinking. 1
sleep now, like a good girl,” she got to tell you that Claire I)
said, fso you'll look all rested introduced me to him. H»
/for tito luncheon date. Oh, yes, man she met in. New York/]
Jerome also said he wanted" me “Couldn’t you show him f
to make 20 pounds of cahdy.” pictures after lunch?” *
“What for. He doesn’t eat T'm< afraid not. He’s onjf|
candy." ing to' be in Ardendale a SB
“For the cMldren in his Sun- time" i > •'
day school class. You kiiow, to “Oh, that reminds me,” ]
celebrate his tenth year of teach- Martha said. "Speaking of 0
Ing.” I^heard at the meeting last !
•S’iSS," KiKSiglftiS-
m tM toft ttat Swept Gcnnsny jeetive, after attending to the would-be mur- this war ends? ‘ particular winning card you hope the heart 9, and then the diamond Miss Martha sighed. T hear mal{e up and get maffa^
‘bi3 The^anti-Axis folk agree that it won’t, he has. - 4, so he. put out the diamond 2 that being in love often makes
World War 1 will be the result,
: It ig elemental that price control
JecUvfe, after attending
derer*. is to make __
planet a safe, pleasant place
oniLtf ISS?,” ** JW!rftSTJKnfi
- . eontnbute to cost are rigidly COB- as well as the United ones,
.^trotting all the fatoni that determine vice president Henry a.
m toata r : Wallace made a speech on
The farm bloc in congresa haa re- band,' 'slate
fused to permit-ttR&anabk' ceilings on Undersecretary Rumne
are the two principal threats to price-
fixing. President Roosevelt has casti-
gated the farm bloc—hc has done
particular winning card you hope
hebas.
A A 109 4 3
f J107 6
♦ K5
♦ 86*2
ts..
i
I
nothing about wages beyond calling
for voiunt
ntary detion. But one’ U as
dangenHW «a tiie other—-if anythlngj
was more impressive than |
Henry’s, because Henry al-
ways has been a dyed-in-
the-wooi altruist, whereas
Sumnei^has gone in quite
vely tor pmctfeal diplomacy. What
is what he HOPES for, Sumner
_jL
Sumner Welle,
friLrwtoy*hes definitely FIGURING on.
piss
There’s much economic chat also.
by.
rue uiaiiK, in nenut'l
gross, shared hy a large t
public is a sideshow, The i
inflation. If Henderson is
farm problem. Labor re|
larger portion of living cost
products V .y ..... MP
The disHke of Henderson in con-
portion of the
main event is
derson is not the man
to make price control effective there
are other men for the job. It is en-
that whoever undertaktt it
ta thoroug^^fffliiked: '
If President Roosevelt, and congress
and the bureaus want to eontrol wices
and prevent inflatk)h,ftet them gp all
the way and place a ceiling on all
costs, farm labor, transportation,
manufacture—everything.
To do it will require a spirit of self-
sacrifice. But America in the future
will bless them if they have the, nerve
to take the necessary steps. And ,
America is worth more than the per*}
•anal and political ambitions of any i
individual or group.
The anti-Axis folk agree that it won’t,
without any argunteht,
Heck, no! concur, prephsto hko Henry
Wallace and Sumner Welles; it’ll have to be
polked indefinitely. That’s what’ll occupy
some millions of demncratic troops, on into a
few generations at least -keeping those Ger-
mans squelched until their current meant)fes
wrere off from *em-lf it can do it, everlaat- , #10 9 8 6 ^ ^
It probably can wear off from the Italians, ’ . n •- »
They can get civilized. ’ #?**■
The miscellaneous Europeans, In spots,
aren’t numerous enough to assess!
Tbe Russians arc a problem, T%t’S afl l«t»
of one generation or more. ; ■ ■■ ■ ^
We and the English? "We’re faccidentally
one and the same aggregation, f
We ll get along. .
We Can Get Along ; ’
We ll get on .with the United Nations, Well
get on with the New World folk. Well get
on with the Old World folk that the Nazis
and club i! leaving himself a dla- men. dike’'that,” ahe said. "Ar\y-
mond and the club A-Q-J. He thcn , way, I could make good use out
* * at the farm/ so I’ll make a sup-
48 7 6
♦ K94
8 K J 4 3
4AQ72
'j^LulL. #AQ j* ......
(Dealer; B&at. Neither side vul-
nerable*’'''”' ■
East South West North
Pas* 1# Pas* 1#
Pass 2*. Pass 3R
Pass 4 NT...... F*m; 5#
Pas* .. 8NT • Fta*-' .»♦
Pass 6 NT Pass Pass
m
iake )
St.” >>Y.~ -
“Probably. Paul’s been bl
__ with her for years." ;M
finessed the club J and made a at the farm, so 1 11 make a sup- “And heaven alone knows\
lead-throwifig end-play, by put- j,iy ot walnut fudge, and some of M. there ever was a fickle, h
ting forth the diamond 7. East that divinity—you know, the kind less beauty, Claire is it.”
had to win with the J, so could you Hke. I’ll want you to help she’s the type men 1
»nl^^iL!1U^i?^heienaCea? roe.-too, Dian. Twenty pounds Is “» *
East had discarded his diamond J, a nretty laree order,” why the artist from-New
West would "teve won .any _ dla- ^es.AunfMartha,’’said Dian. > down here. He-came d«
mond lead and scored the setting «i usually do help you, don’t I?” seo dairc.”
trick with another diamond. . -0f course." Miss Martha
• * * smiled. “But if Jerome Carr Chapter Nineteen ____a
starts giving you a rush, you “WHEN DID you meet thill
------------------* a.borf Mio. Ul4
thap that doe#, upon the situation we’ll find have stung. We’ll get on with, the imitation',
our V. SI, selves in. as we try to get baek to They'll want to get along with us. anyway.
h fresh #i#il of •■normalcy’’-Warren G. Hard- ally totalitarian group like Italy and Spain,
ing’s term. . * But WE won’t want to do it __ ,
Hrntobitiring Now, how’s thc world going to be Ho happy ? _
Germany's to be OCCUPIED. We're to boss
it absolutely!
And the; theory is that it’il make for in-
fernationa! harmony,
Vlee President Wallace and Secretary are powerful enough
fa? ssw.atmjm*3g*
Your Week-End Lesson may not have mucn time Qn yQUr York artist?" asked Miss Mill
• What is the usual meaning of a hands.” : < “Last night,” said Dian. “II
dealer's bid of 2-No Trumps With “Oh, Lord!” Dian groaned. out’ for a while, and rsn f
most top rank players? What «0bwi hight, plan, honey -L ClMre and him. His name’f
meaning do they usually attach sweet dreams.”, • - liazii Rollins," 7^
to a rpp«to of three In a major “Thanks, Aunt Martha,^"-Dian > Miss Martha shrugged
suit? Three in a minor? Ftwr in agid, “but I'll probably have should thtok having him in I
a major? Four to a ndnor? Five nightmares.” while Paul’s here would r*
in a minor?
'it
_...The question arises;. -
Won't it disorganize Us like fury when we
come to demobilize, back into civil life, four
to 10 millions (depending on how long the
scrap last*! of doughboys, blur jackets, ma-
.rlaaq,. awineniiira .gviatom and amnriid,
branches of our belligerent subdivisiona (I
trust I haven't omitted any of ’em>?
The answer is; / './-"f-.V
By no means. •
it seems we shan’t demobilise at any such
rate. Why not? Why, because, we'll have to
Miss Martha tiptoed out. Dian, compUCate matteri ”
left atone, sat up in bed” and Dian laughed. “It does,!
gazed out of the window. Jerome said. She pushed back her r
OPENING 2-NO TRUMPS Trumps; with .about a half a Carr, telephoning to ask her to “I’ll run up and do my 1
AMONG PLAYERS of the top trick in honor cards, like a K. Q-J lunch with him at the Chamber then get started,'’
group, an opening bid of 2-No or a Q and a J and a 10. you need of Commerce grill, and Bill Rol- "I think," said Miss *
Trump* is used on those hand* of a five-card suit, whether major or lins telephoning to find out .if “that you’re going out.tgJH
evenly distributed strength which minor, and rebld It only if it la a he was to go out to the farm this morning Just to annoyr
are nowerful enoueh to’ make six-card maior if vour oartner --'*•- -» — „«»>«._ *--- *
iQ^TellingLMe
^ By WHom Ritt
Grab Bag
ttf make aix-card major U your partner wlth tref^ Y01*1* -beck of a ait- "WhEl^^fcBaLrMwths!
dowo,. preuinUy,
■P to sleep hoping
a half a'trick In honors, such that she could get •’BeUy" stort-
Why, Aunt
gtm* opposite a partner who could. . then-cgUa 3-No Trumpsr without uatlon. “'7:*: thing to say!”
g5^jgphrg^ sun Iay,-i«clt..do«rn prwently, „
and drifted off to sleep honing your rushing but there
Easy Knowledge
Speaking bf a high overhead, wc’vc Just
read an advertisement telling of straw hats
that cost up to $150 per copy. .
fc-..
Five Years Ago
IjBpaiMStoifriiTiiji^ fijii ’j Wr . 1
One Mimtir Tret • -
I. Who said. "Everyone talk* about the
aj-.ither but no one eycr docs anything about
% What two South American eountries
are “United State*"’
In Hit Tri-Cities
Words «rf Wlwtom
When Aristotle
M My «, 1937)
oouM gate by tsUlng a falsahuod, h* reptlsd.
When he Speaks^
WA O.MJ
fltHl T Amrii.-
ta the track
' -fit;
The United States consumes 287,000,000,000 ’
machcs annually, according to, Factographs.
And yet there’s always Hie guy who needs a
light.
. — ..... . ------------_ hack.down.j
of one open, yet could not make unless you have a bit more than and drifted off to sleep .---------. .
game opposite an utterly blank a half a’trick ta honors, such afp that she could get "Betsy” suurt- morning you know Jerome*P
hand With them, every suit must No. 7, With the equivalent of a ed and on tpe road- to the farm ' to telephone.” » : . :
be positively stopped at least once, couple of tricks in high cards, or before Jerome Carr had time to "I told you/’ Dian saldj
In fket they seldom make the bid more, you Invite a slam, as with give his attention to matters oth- the man who wants to
unlew any singly-stopped suit is No 8. er than those concerning hU be- paintings is here tor MfljH
at least four cards in length and 80 your first response, with loved bank. time. I can’t put off showinijj
rjr?r*"rtAK ratyautf «a aftjftrssti
K Q 10 - . ♦ K J 10 7- 3”No Trumps; ^8, 5-Spades, but -morning, Dian waa up at 7. And certainly need to Pj1
A 9 6 4 ♦ A Q 6 4 if the suit were of only four cards, how. with the caressing warmth Aunt Martha. You knoWJ
AKJ «KQ93 i*f,° of thc sun "I™ her back, she do' _
8. Of what country is Bogota the capital?' «* Around.
Switzerland is one country that shouldn’t 6. 1
need air raid sirens what with all those yodpl- -
,875432
,96
>864 2
4 #8 7 8 4 2
cept for slam purposes, higher was busy at work on the’ car. “of coursc I do- B“i.
suit resnAnsae than Ihrcc am ma# * * ^ *....... . Mrth umillri want tO bl
5;4.2 gUjt responses than three are not she had definitclv made un her earth would want
made; when four or more, the suit; mind to drive Bill Rollins out th*^ P“int®d^,
to buy I
t
; 8-7 5 4 2
, te considered an obllgatonr trump/, ^
i i_sx . .^7
was asked what
tMOu*
■’ ■
Utah, on Kliquellr
When you use a tagi. Up r
lime no matter how short thc ride, and. from
t of the MR’oi
Before Canadian golfers, asked to help hat- . ..... i A't a a s «
vest the crops, agree to do so well bet theyiil 7,f”M -11 « 2
want to know how many strokes is parTor JMjr
*»««• irosVa ♦KJ“
#953
*864 2
L # 8 7 6 4 Tomorrow’s Problem
♦ K 5 3 2 i* KQ63
♦ A 8 3’ .
. .T.r,.sisr,r.„!
- -- ---- thing her Aunt Martha might thC hall. “®
# K Q J 2 ftoally daciiM to'mSnd to her “Lfhifc "^0^
♦ ’ ; roany urgmgs _ inntods to purring, but
. .-*■ /•'
not 1ms than a
<8 to 10 per cent .......
W.B^-
■i
wd fine arts are the 4
•eristlcsjif the persons wto
Raccoons, we reed, like to wander around at
night. Is that why they have those big circles
mound their eyes?
/on longer rides. '"What’ll* become of that old radio orator,
Benito Mussolini, afed his boast-to-boast
broadcasts? /
caL.$ashod* Ais eeuntry
awl A tawe of'literature
*10873 *108
Hands 1 and 2 above are sound
exariiples of the kinds which lead-
ing players open with 2-No
mWSmtf. The other* are examp.es
of various type* ot responses
Numbers 3.8 and 7 call for bids,
4! and 6 for passes. Here is a sim-
♦ J 8 7 6
#10 3
*97602
»»■ 25
*S S -*•
# A 65 4
*K 83
to purring, but II
her chin' and gave her R m
needed *|
#J*8
♦ 1095 4
#9 8 7
*AQ J
■* * ‘2
v . , ■ ..
, (Dealer: Easl I^gttarMde vi*.-:
|Mr§
«d are
opportunists availing” toemaelvre unfailingly
opportunities to'iMli%pi» .|h>A>*alto>7]
. toe nest year, provided they
watch against Imposition or^ nda-
wear beards. Zadok Dumbkopf sus-
pect* Alex must have had quite a bloc of
stock ta a string of barber shops.
fa ancient Greece, according to Facto-
grephs, a Jury usually constated of about 668
^reb’ren^lto ^trto
pie rule to measure them: With nerahie.)
complicated and puzzling eon- —-"'Raid Miw »
giomeratton of xag^er- g0 look. I *
StKSkfllt you do know hovv to tab.;
better show you something about Dian walted until she
down to me all the time." And
closing of the wwk ^•t
then she glanced at her ’
wasn’t 9 ^o’clock yet.
least a six-card suit, and should
rebld it. whether major or minor,
if yAur partner then call* 3-No
”
Distributed by King Features Syndieato toe.
spark-plug there, and give Betsy
general diagnosis.
soundest course of the bidding on
this deal?
: ;
STAMPS CITIZEN OF THE WORLD NOW
CRUZ, Calif. (tUti- Mrs. GRANTS PASS, Ore. UIB-Here
Osnepa, mother of five is a unique excuse tor failing to
Wgtatos A* an alien. A Gertnan
And th«»^taat like that—the
weponded. ,7|ta old engine
coughed a couple of times, and
then settled down to a gentle
purring; s'sound that was music
to Dian’s car*. “
"Dian!" Aunt Martha called
from the 'back door. “Dian, what
on earth are you doing*”
"Givinv T
from what she was about I
She picked up the telep
asked for the number of
dendale Inn. ,
"May I speak with Mr.
Rolitas?” she asked "
clerk at the Inn
is Miss Dian Weston <
JTipnSf.q
t him.”
r*t all
' V ’ ■' -
jay, m
ftONPERRY- m0^1
■ July 6 Vn1
■ t«sei» “re beln**
•tile of the ^
^nMI-stlonaLbr
Booths by TBSJ]
Ion the northca
|'nrw base, *
■ hundreds of. A.
five months
jar, ha* been
a jobs here
•compiished morel
(.Queenatown hal
fcdcan warehilN
f out of the na
■oe by With
Ito keep the sea
V raiders. ,
toy's record of nl
r g troopehlp. ■
, of the tremer
H-vting with the
first shipload of
Eh, , were disclose.
then the navy off]
Jon.- .. : L
commissioned!
repairing wa>
f previously.
navy spent $5,0C
jabor, and millipnsl
[uuipment and **f
kls of highly-ikilll
.rought -from th
. At one time, 8(
•s were budding -
*an marines and _
[hsttlc of the’ All
Xitly before all. 4iyg
Thcadquartcrs, wtiicl
>Se of Allied coopel
ilsntic. On a large,I
d map in a wcll-J
I the course of evl
with the pool
keep flowitg th
supply of men 1
[ base was started
ie United" 8!tate« i
-var, and five wee|
■ Harbor it had n
1 “customer,” the
I sweeper AlbatrosJ
tripped, and nearly!
[before it reached tl
1 food and water.. I
L BUY WAR BONDS * I
r *' I
[Congressmen
Gas Carl
ffGTON. July 3 01
and 58 congress!
lentatives and '46 seil
unlimited “X” J
Bog cards, an examinl
Ipg board tiles hcl
today...
.the representatives v.
Ited gasoline ratioil
[Democrats, 98 Repu
[me Progressive, oui
louse membership.of!
iate, 32 Democrats, |
ns and one Progres
; “X” cards. The sen
bbership of 96.,
J rationing officials
bat figures compiled!
-who were allowed1
_j the flies were not _
[of thc congressmen |
‘s'for cars owned t
pesentative3 reieivin
[ included: Gossett,
, Mansfield, Patmail
ge South’and Tho
I
ffy Knit Jerl
[iffy knit J
[lor colleg
come on in
[tl I
to yonr I
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 17, Ed. 1 Monday, July 6, 1942, newspaper, July 6, 1942; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101105/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.