The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 251, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1940 Page: 1 of 6
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21-NO.
251
GOOSE
CREEK. TEXAS,
WEDNESDAY,
TROOPS IN NARVIK FACT ANNIHILATE
— ■ „ ■ -, r-: a -
D ■Ham Ci — Im Ji Dmm
17, 1940
m
!i...
-;............ »......
_
'
- - V
Serving Th# TH-CItte*
—of Goose Creek, Felly, Baytown and
nearby communities! The Dally Sun at-
tempts to be the “home-town” newspaper
for the entire Trl-Citles Area! , tJ
50c Month
Hty To Close Curb, Gutter Gaps Allies Dispatch Pres
I* To Be Placed Against Property Forces To Norway Fl
We have to
solid on every street before
[That full advantage might oe
L of a $170,000 street and
TL improvement program.
I, Attorney Ervin Flowers
(Monday, night will present
L commission an ordinance
Irtich the city will execute a
1 imt,vacant Jots, and rent f
rty if the owner .refuses to
rids share of the cost. Un-
t the program, the VVPA is
9 ting the labor and the
(ty owner can get curb and
r 60 per,cent under the or- •
j cost. .
|Ust Night - ■ »
Jy Manager John W. Harkins,
Ij meeting last night of the
Iwpiission with lS east side
Be owners, explained that tin- •
~ i curb ftrvd gutter program
jured of completion, the
& will,not inaugurate a pro-
jj, already approved, for cut-
| down street grades, Install- Advocated By Admiral
*tonercte drainage dips ar '
( intersections, and other inv WASHINGTON, April 17.
Under the current curb and
gutter- program, - the property
or the materials omy.
clty of Goose Creek today the homeowners on the east aide can get the street improvement
preparing steps to torce have signed or agreed to sign, and drainage work started."
.owners on the east side and those present last night indi-
ll curb and gutter in . or- cated they would assume the re- owner pay.
full advantage might he sportsibllity of getting the other ftje city ^royfdes th^. sponsor-
10 per cent to .sign. ship and supervision, and the
Must Be Sold . . WPA provides the labor,
„Tf,„ „ - ______„ . . Under the ordinance to be subi-
Its a few owners of vacant mittcd Monday night> the clty
and rent porperty who are hold- will pay for the materials and
,ing. $jt against the program," take a lien against property
Showdown With Germany
Huge Aerial Armada Is Reported Ready To
Take Off For Challenge Of Nazi Birdmen
Nazi Naval
Chief Killed
In Sea Fight
Berlin Claims British
#1Ba+tleshipAnd Troop
Transport Are Sunk
Bitter Fight Rag<
In Streets; 40 Vessels
Are Sunk In Harbor
?r
:....... ;
BERLIN, April 17. (EH) _ The ^l^tlmst^U of Narvik.
LONDON, April 17. ft'Ri-Rettfbreements for-the British expedi- hish command announced today • - * ■ '
--v - »,— .------ r-r..-g tiinary force were reported pouring across the North Sea today in that Commodore Bonte, com-
WPA wbo” own*r refn“s tfl »**«• ThP. British. French and Polish ships while the,British air force prepared mander of the German destroyer
quires that there be no gaps, property then-will be subject to for ft major campaign over Norway to obtain landing places. flotilla at Narvik, Norway, had
have every block foreclosure if payment is not w A fierc^ strugfle' Tdr air supremacy was forecast*—one that prob- been killed in action “In a heroic
made. * abiy will provide a test for former Air'Minister Sir Kingsley Wood’s
. - , „ claim that the Allied air forces
• t
.....||........P | ...........|
KIRUNA, Sweden, April 17.-(E,p)«»*(l|)r telephone to Stockholm)—A Ger-
man force of between 2,000 ftnd '2,500 men today faced the, choice of
annihilation; surrender or a fighting retreat into. Sweden from Narvik,
the Norwegian iron ore port and the northern outpost of the German
occupation army.
German troops and British occupation forces were reported flght-
World's Biggest Woman Gang Chief Jailed
Navy Is Ury6d For Murder Of Mobster Charged
U. S. By Stark
25 Per Cent Increase
Jits,
iximately 90
per cent of
(Chief Thanks
'For Support
Leaf Post Receives
■tter From Hoover
Edgar Hoover, chief of the
tail Bureau of Investigation,
It persons! letter to the Robert
(EE) _
Admiral Harold B. Stark, chief of
naval operations, today asked the
senate naval affairs committee ,to
authorize the United States to
build ‘the world's largest navy.
The construction he proposed
w'ouW cost $3,486,000,000.
SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 17.
(ER)—Deputy District Attorney J.
Francis O’Shea today filed first
degree murder charges against
Mrs. Juanita (the Duchess) Spi-
nclli and three members of her
gang for the slaying of Robert
Sherrod, 18, because he talked too
much.
Albert Ives, ,23, trigger man;
Mike Simeone, 32, who selected
places ffcr the gang to rob, and
Gordon Hawkins, 21, a 'mechanic
who stole automobiles for “jobs,’’
San Francisco barbecue stand.
Ives told- O’Shea that Cash had
resisted and ‘‘I plugged him.”
The committee is considering a wjh be charged with her, Q’Qhea
bill to .authorize in'll -per • edit"' gftM, •>--*•?-
increase in the U S. fleet. But - pretty Lorraine (Gypsy) Spinel-
iO.tioov.Al/l do iwvhfnv
Stark urged the committee to in-
crease the nation's naval strength
already second in the wOrldrby
at least 25 per cent and tb expe-
dite construction of previously
TOBI letter w me nuoen authorized ships,
pest ef the - VetCrans- of R(^, Amwen
Wars, today hftd express- ,stark rcadjng
I <■ ml)' '
■played.
|e t,ft
Trajht-g
er) Joe i
more answers
prepared by navy experts to a
.questionnaire drafted by Com-
mittee Chairman David I. Walsh,
D., Mass., also said the navy "has
had, under exhaustive study for
(See World’s Biggest page 2)
!i, 19-year-old daughter of “The
Duchess,” who lured men into al-
leys where the gang could rob
them, will not’ be charged imme-
diately, but will be held; for fur-
ther questioning, -y.
— The body of Sherrod, former in-
mate of the Sonoma home for
the feeble-minded and a flunky
for the gang, was recovered late
yesterday from the Sacramento
river. He had witnessed a week
ago the holdup killing of Deland
S. Cash, 55-year-old operator of a
. - * * -
HERMAN JONASSEN,
is premier
above,
of Iceland, whose
country is being watched close-
ly because of the invasion of
Denmark by the Germans.
Tifll
OGHAM
phi) appreciation for the reso-
; adopted Sy the post and
to Washington,
resolution, addressed to
i Morris Shepard and Tom
illy and Congressman Albert
l a copy of which was sent
(Ver, endorsed the work Of
IP in its campaign against
ftve influences in the Unit-
*M» letter, addressed to H. W.
post- commander of the
I ff:, Hoover stated that the
i of the post was gratifying,
irecent criticisms of the FBI
f discouraging, that it under-
i confiden- e in work of the
that, the FBI needs the
t of all patriotic, individuals
' stions, and the "action
|;Je«r post is deeply appre-
letter was read to post
at their meeting last
B 27 was set as the date Tor
etion of new officers for the
I«d the Udics Auxiliary. W.
sum, of Galveston, adjutant
PgUMtermaster for the Texas
#»«tt of the V. F. W„ will
iml15Mrm'<]rS’Jill■ «... i ‘'S'"’ Harriman’s attorneys were expected to complete their defense today
Wheid Thiir.il. *®*vic«» of the .state welfare “J® _ against charges that she Violated U, S. anti-lottery laws—a crime pun-
frV mcmbers wTre urg- tSTtS'totZ£w!& loss of ishab,e by a maximum Sentence °f tW0 years and a ^O’000 «ne’
*; Sftend the ceremonies at its revenue would cause' unneces- ATLANTA, Gn., April 17 (U.P.)—The Ku Klux Klim was unmasked to-
ff ® Lee high school at 10 *ary human want before the new day in one of a series of edicts by Imperial Wizard James A. Colescott
PKsrday when the Tri-Cities legislature could enact substi- which entirely reorganized., the ritual of the once-dreaded robed , and
the American Legion Will finance measures. hooded order.
'* ,ffun to tho _, .
Louisiana Keeps
Welfare Tax
NEW ORLEANS. April 17. (ER)—
Sani Houston Jones, the Lake
Charles political unknown who
defeated the heirs of the late
Kingfish Huey P. Long for. con-
trol of Louisiana, was govcrnoi -
elect today.
Jones and his state ticket, nom-
inated in February on a reform
platform, swept the general elec-
tions yesterday, incomplete re-
turns showed. W. W. Tuttle, Re-
publican gubernatorial nominee,
received comparatively few votes.
The incomplete returns indi-
cated that voters Overwhelmingly
rejected 4 constitutional amend-
ments, including one for repeal
of the state welfare or sales tax.
HOT OFF THE WIRES
PARIS, April 17 (U P.)—.The Senate resumed war policy debate in se-
cret session today in the presence of War Minister Edouard Daladier.
French military dispatches reported that German infantrymen
launched a strong attack on two British advance posts in an unspeci-.
fied sector early this morning.
STOCKHOLM, April l7 (U.P.)—German troops were reported in press
dispatches today to have cut completely across Norway from Trond-
'heim to the Swedish frontier and to have struck northward ngain stiff
Norwegian resistance toward the Namsos zone, where the newspaper
Allehanda said British forces had landed.
BERLIN, April 17 (U.P.)- The war now has entered a ’’decisive stage,”
Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels, German propaganda minister,—jaid^ in a
speech at th£ Berlin sports palace tonight. * . 1 = .
LONDON, April 17 (U.P.)—The air ministry said today that Roy*t Air
Force planes had bombed the Norwegian port of Trondheim, where
there are heavy German troop concentrationi The attack on Trond-
helm airdrome, the ministry said, caused a large fire.
SANTA FE, N. M, April 17 (U. P )-White-haired Mrs. Oliver Grace
now rival Germany’s in men, ma-
chines and production capacity.
Most o.f those already sent, in-
cluding Canadians, had been, espe-
cially trained for warfare in moun-
tainous, snow-bound country in the
expectation that they would cam-
paign as "volunteers" in Finland.
Among other novelties to the cam-
paign, it was said that the '‘Tom-
mies" would use reindeer to haul
heavy equipment over the snow.
Already, two urgent calls , have
been received at headquarters of
the army blood transfusion -serv-
ice, ‘‘for blood needed at' once for
use by British'forces in Norway.”
Headquarters appealed to the pub-
lic and 200 aircraft factory work-
ers were among those who donat-
ed blood. It was . flown imme-
diately across the North Sea.
BELGIUM RECALLS
iBOOPS TO COLORS
BRUSSELS, Belgium, April 17. —
(ER)—Several thousand men, who
had been released from the army
because of age, were recalled to
thC colors today.
These men were detailed to rc-
~TOTorcethe -interior-guard,—.......— .
PITTMAN SAVS U. S.
•CAN STAY OUT OF WAR
REND. April _17. (ER)—The Unit-
ed States wlU not enter the Eu-
ropean war, Senator Key Pitt-
man, D,, Nev., predicted last
night.
"We will stay out of the war.
Let the mothers and fathers of
this country rest in peace,” the
chairman of the senate foreign
relations committee said in radio
address,
The- neutrality act. he said, pro-
hibits this nation from commit-
ting acts which, might involve it
in the conflict.
fight against - superior British
. forces.” fv. *
A high command communique
asserted that a U-boat had* sunk
a British destroyer of the tribal
class (1,890 tons), northeast of
the Shetland islands; that Ger-
man pursuit planes had shot
down a Lockheed-Hudson (Amer-
ican made) British plane and a
British Sunderland flying boat off
the southwest coast of Norway,
and that German plahes had
scored a direct bomb hit on a
transport ship in the North Sea
yesterday.
Claim Cruiser, Sub Sunk
‘ It,said that an Allied submarine
had been sunk 90 miles northwest
of Mold Fjord-, off KriStiansand,
Norway, and that “as previously*
reported (by the official German
news agency) an enemy cruiser
was sunk by heavy, bombs" in
the same region."
It was andourjped also that a
German tank detachment was in
action in the vicinity of Oslo.
The communique admitted Tor
the first time officially that Brit-
ish troops had landed in Nor-
way. It said the landing was on
the island of Hinnqy, 38 miles
north of Narvik, and that "no
ianding attempts were made in
. the'. vicinity of Narvik."
important Casualty
Of the death of Bonte, the most
important casualty in the German
armed forces since Col.-Gen. Wer-
ner Von Fritsch died in action in
the Polish campaign, the com-
munique said:
“In defense of Narvik, destroy-
er leader, Captain and Commo-
dore Bonte fell in a heroic fight
against superior British forces.
About two-thirds of the crews of
the destroyers which were dam-
aged or put out of action at Nar-
vik, and whose ammunition was
exhausted, reinforced occupying
troops in defense of Narvik ”
The communiaue claimed furth-
<»ce Chief Of Page 2)
r« Bi v.'Ui mi j j ... ■
A small German force had fought its way across the rugged snow-
covered mountains to the Swedish frontier.
The main German force'is based on the bluff Rombak heights,
■ ...... 'V___- across the Fjord from NarviS.Tts
line of retreat covered by the big
Simpson Seen
As Best Bet For
Stop-Dewey Move
New York Committeeman
Enters GOP campaign >
PHILADELPHIA, April 17. (U.E)-
Kepublican National, Committee-
man Kenneth F. Simpson today is
a potential recruit for the stop-
Dewey movement,after a promise
here that he will not be deprived
of New York state party leader-
. ship "without a hell of a fight."
Smipson said the supporters of
District Attorney Thomas E. Dew-
ey were attempting to purge him
in New York state in a maneuver
similar to that President Roose-
velt directed against several anti-
New Deal legislators in 1938. New
York casts 92 convention votes.
Willing To Qualify
The New York, national com-
mitteeman’s statement attracted
wide interest. He seemed eager
to qualify it sufficiently to enable
him to go along with the nomi-
nation of Dewey for president if
the Republican,.national conven- — -.....— ----- — ........
tion bolts in that dlrectionr But -and, on. Jhe heights alternatively
guns of British warships.
The way from Narvik to Swed-
en is dotted with German and
Norwegian dead, dying in the
snow.
More than 1,000 German, Nor-
wegian and British dead lie at
the bottom of Narvik harbor.
10 Ships On Bottom
The harbor itself is the grave-
yard of some 40 German, British
and Norwegian warships and Ger-
man, British, Norwegian and neu-
tral merchant ships.
The whole German occupation
force in the Narvik area is com-
pletely cut off from contact with
the main German forces by land
and sea. Their sole hope of sup-
ply in the inhospitable Arctic
snows is the airplane.
By a desperate fight along the
railroad line to Sweden a small
detachment of the Germans have
reached the frontier. Ten of these
at least have crossed into Sweden
to be interned.
May Try To Fight Way Out
The remainder of the Germans ,
may try to fight their way along
this road, leaving a small suicide
party on Rombak heights to coy-
er their retreat into Sweden.
The German, force at Narvik
fee:
he also smiled his consent to"
the inference drawn by his ques-
tioners that he might be leading
a stop-Dewey movement in New
York state before convention time,
June 24.
Republican party leaders, in-
cluding Simpson, came here as a
committee on arrangements for
the Republican national conven-
tion and chose their keynote
speaker and permanent conven-
tion chairman.
Stassen Key-Noter
Thirty-three-year-old Governor
Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota,
(See Sinipson, Page 2)
may try to fight its way either- -
northward toward Tromsoc or
southward toward Bodoe.
In either of these events they
would come- to a dead end road
in a country held by superior
forces of Norwegians reinforced
by British and without food or
other supplies.
May Make Stand
Or they may elect to maos on
Rombak heights for a last-man
fight.
This is the course which those
of the Germans who crossed into
(See German Troops Page 2)
Pr
Jugoslavia Acts
Against Aliens
Extensive Measures
Are Ordered Taken
BELGRADE, Jugoslavia. April 17.
(U.P)—Police authorities today or-
dered extensive measures through-
out the country against foreign-
ers regarded as undesirable. The
measures, are to be completed
within 10 days. In some quarters
Wealth No Driving Test
Auto Held Privilege, Not Right
T4
- tuft also to attend the
... "l Baytown Monday
Baytown'Humble chib
PTrscntation of Goo*
»to urn Robert E.
»d a„d Maroon Brigadiers.
,' . th poppy day
? "»re discussed.
® TOWN:
iJHstles: It’s good to pee
“P and around -again.
j *hLmfnfir S0,ng down the
nga-Tommy
» Is *ervice he really
wanted done.,
way, give us a chance to
'ton your next printing
«» this new type
Our-hitd° _for yottr Print-
.jS^hatf teH" «» the
raster (, Robert Andrew.
P«»» thl.R0^rt Pitt* And
. this column read J. T.
Lfrinki! -
Feller Pitches No-Hit Game- So What?
Aren’t Men Dying Today In Europe's Battles?
it was estimated that as many
as two-thirds of the foreigners in
the country might be expelled.
In many towns in the province
of Vojvodina, which has a large
German minority, it was reported
AUSTIN. April 17. MT> — No
man has an inalienable right to
drive a car simply because he has
the money with which to buy one,
C. J. Rutland of Dallas, president
of the Texas Safety Association,
told the Texas safety conference
here today.
"Too many Texans,, believe
that driving an automobile is an
irrevocable right — that anyone
with the money to buy a car has
the absolute right to drive it,”
Rutland said.
Sidney ,.!. Williams, director of
public safety of the National
Safety Council, told conference
delegates today that an effective
campaign needs mobilized public
support for the official agencies.
Officials, he said, cannot go far
without citizen support. He said
the records of Dallas, Beaumont,.
Cleveland, Evanston, 111., and
Aberdeen, South Dakota, are ex-
amples of how cities have re-
duced traffic apeident rates
through intelligent official admin-
istration ftnd public co-operation. ** by day.”
r,_______» ...... "Thnro
Nazi Torture Of
Priests Charged
Polish Embassy Says
Clerics Buried Alive
ROME, April 17. q.R) _ A
pamphlet on alleged German atro-
cities in German-occupied Poland
issued by the Polish . embassy,
charged today that Catholic
priests had been assassinated or
buried alive; beaten and sentenced -
to death without trial.
The pamphlet said the “fight
against religion is intensified day
ncjv
Dallas and Beaumont were
By Henry MeLemore
(U.P. Staff Correspondent)
NEW YORK. April 17. (UR) —
Robert Feller pitched a no-hit
game on the opening day of
baseball.
Working for the Cleveland In-
dians. this big Iowa-farm boy
achieved the goal that so many
covet and » few attain.
. No fewer than half a million
-words will be published In this
country today on Feller’*,perfect dad, who spent hours teaching his
performance against the Chicago boy how to pitch. There would
White Sox. From here on my k. .n'h™, (fc„
task as a dally sports- columnist farm b responded to the tcach-
becomes very difficult. lng, and. atVn age when most
“It is time for the public to
..........._____..r_____ recognize and admit that driving among cities receiving awards
that th^ police*-• had ordered a is not an inalienable right; that the safety banquet hejd here last
house-to-house search. driving a car" differs"from -the-’-night iff connection w-tt% -the, sate*.
Police orders are for a quick ownership of a car.-Driving isn’t ty. conference. Texas was award-*
countrywide revision of permits of a right; it is a privilege. ed the national second place
sojourn of all foreigners. Those "The public should recognize a award for southern states.
; drinking driver as a potential Beaument received its award as
murderer and treat him as such, second place national winner In
No longer should it bqconside-od cities of 50.000 to 100,000 popu-
o‘r fashion- lation and Dallas - received t h e
In normal times; and under
normal conditions, nothing;,coi|ld,
stop me from wearing out ft
typewriter in telling you of tho
greatness of the Iowa boy. There
wpuld be a paragraph on Feller’s
Stocks Close Today
Courtesy Citisent National Bonk and Trust Company
• -
■*)»!,, ” "Panting" Instead A,l,ea orores . - * ‘ ' ■ ’ ’1 - •> *"
t Our aoolovips' American Radiator .......... 8,V*
in HpllSlow ond W. T. Jones. Anaconda Copper ..........30%
at j^L^repce.• W. J. BetWehsm Steel...... i-•• »
Those
held to be undesirable are to be
expelled on brief notice.
It was understood that those,
who remained would be deprived
5, ~
'• baseball, stepped
into the major
leagues and
made good.
certificates, which
would forbid them to travel
through the interior.
Foreign agents were blamed by
smart “to be reckless
to ignore the possibility of
abl,
injury.
“We should ostracize a reck-
less driver and a drunken driver
just as we ostracize a thief. As
newjpapers for many recent lflejp««SNawrttoBra< fact, ihe thief is by
jus towns, inciud-. far the least harmful of 11
;;
'dents in numerous towns,
ing the distribution of leaflets.
the
three.’’
Texas Safety Association award
for cities of more than 100.000
population. Other Texas cities
-given state association awards
were Amarillo. Harlingen, Brown-
wood, Greenville, San Benito,
Denton, Vernon, Victoria and
GainessiUc ,^,, .- - •
Wear Flour-Sack Cloth Loss Of Submarine Is
And Ashes, Sadler Says Confirmed By Britain
There would
be another para-
graph on how,
perhaps, this
'was' the most
FELLER amazing n o-h i\
game oJ all time. But, dammit,
things have come to pass in this
world which make the perform-
Mur'ray Corporation’....— 'TTT'Hiree of "a* "baseball 'pitcher-very
Nash Kelvtnator .V.. SVi trivial; Commissioner Jerry SSdfeTrTUmy aUinnolly said «4Wiy*.jt«U!?S^u^;_. JSSQQNDIDO, Calif, April 17. if.Ri
National Dairy ..............18 H , assumed oae of the perogatives of marine "Thistle was overdue and _ Mayo?' Fred-foopfr- ■wmplussfid
North Amer Avtation 24;% Let me be called critical, let the governorship for which he is presumed lost. a Hollywood delegation today with
Ohio Oil,,.;. ..J. ..... "fit me be called ' anything, but let a candidate: He proclaimed ‘flour Thistle is ^ t,u90-ton subma- the ultimatum that “neter would
Otis Steel .ilv..11% me tell you this _ only those repentance day.” rine. completed in May 1939. with he allow his fair city to provide
rBUH*Bkrvioe'"'"-8% Packard Motors ;............ weak of paind can really care Referring to the statement of a normal complement of 53 offi- scenery for a movie wherein Lo-
fVimmrrrtsl fledvent ........ 15% Phillips Petroleum .....37%' about a no-hit game, or anythlns Gov- w* ODaniel’s sons, Pat cers and men. 4 retta Young lives with Ray MU-
pure OH...... ...........10% else to do with sport,, when
"There is no. diocese in which
pniestjj-T have not been, assassjpat-
ed without guilt having been pro-
ye_n, ,Jn Pomerania and Poznan
a rea! massacre of priests occifiv-
red and some of those assassin-
ated were buried while still- alive.
"At Chodecz, near Kalisz, a 70-
year-old parish priest, Don Ro-
man Pawlowski, was arrested and;
accused of having hidden in his
parochial house — which already
was occupied by Germftn fliers—
an 'empty rifle cartridge casft
After having been beaten with
the greatest violence by Gestapo
he was deported to Poznan and
there sentence^ to death. He then
was brought to Chod.ez and shot
No Film Sinning There
Marry 'Em First, Says Mayor
enough to spell “no" the way
”V
' bLLhalf'block aw*y •
L1HamHUM his »!! Consolidated Alrerett .......
w^. Elec. Pow„ and Light ......£
.........
mayor pat'it.
The dtrec
land first—and marries him later.
fV'rt,: Kveryb^ylsUlk Glidden Paint ......17% T-P Coal and Oil .......... 7% - woman or child who la more in
p«>«e Dav y Graham Palga .............. 1 United Aircraft ............»* tererted to the staadlne of the
T ’ ’ United Corporation 3K Gtant* In baseball or the Ran-
..... 544 United Gas ........ 114 gers In hockey, or Joe Louis in
........ .. 544 United State* Steel.......... 6114 fighting than be Is in World
Hudson Motors ............. #14 Western Union.............. >3 events needs sympathy, not SB-
Humble Oil .....—No sale White Motors^..UJt llghtenment. This mu* not be
Kroger. Grocery ......... ... 3314 Wilson Oompah? . ......... «H construed as an argument for our
Louisiana Land ............. #% Walworth .................. #14 , (See FeOer’s Fent Page *)
.... . feergr-dispatched- -Miss. ....
GaTi Patrick, third star of the pie-
ture, to see if she could change
his mind. She didn’t. :
When the beauteous Miss Pat- ;j
rick rolled to the mayor's house in i
■a 12-cylinder limousine, his honor
was in his workshop, buildiqg a
library Table., Mrs. Cooper, -who i
was in the side-yard hanging out J
the . wash, stayed behind a sheet*
during the interview. She didn't
even nod.
Mayor Cooper said he, guessed
i **d P"t Pstureau
... Harry Rai,
tomorrow night.
n dl-
about
Graham rtaige ....
Greyhound .....* •• •
Gulf OH , ■ -. *
Houston Oil ^..,...-1.
t, when the and Mike that their flour company The admiralty communique an-
■li tfltlTT • "T......- 114 world is in the condition it is 'had made: no profits because of pouncing Thistles presumed loss This marital procedure, the
OU Indiana 2744 of my colleagues who say thar “l UTg* Pw»P>e ot Texas to The Thistie was the fifth sub- if Columbia Studios want to re-
New Jersey .. 41 this country's interest hi sport wear Hour-sack cloth and ashes marine whose loss was admitted make the picture, bringing In the
^ ____4544 proves that it want* Nothing t» to redeem themselves and urge by the admiralty since the-Euro- preacher first, then, and only
* ' ... 3444 -do with what’s happening on tne the grocers to repent their sins p^an war started. Seahorse. Star- then, will he reconsider.
. . . 1M Other side ^-----“-----the grope* of O’Da.niei f;sh and Uretmc had been' lost in__Director A1 Hall had applied
wrath shall consume them, and I, vicinity of German's Helgoland for permfssro'n Td-fltnr -cxterlor - thc IIollywoo<L-foUa_w<t«_-mca
hereby, proclaim April 20 as flour naval hasp In the North Sea and shots in Escondido, 80 miles south people and he ws* aorry he caus-
repenUnce day." Oxley as the result of on occl- of Hollywood, because of the lux- ed them so much trewhlt. hUMh*t-
--dental explosion. uriant foliage here. The mayor there was sift enough in the work!
WOODRING TO SEE TROOPS —----—demanded to see the script. He without the' movies producing
WASHINGTON, April 17 0>-- BASEBALL POOLS ILLEGAL and Mrs. Cooper, a church leader, more.
Secretary of War Harry M. Wood- AUSTIN. April 17. O)- 8elling read it earofully. portivilarly that “And if Tip wrong, I7n sorry,
ring said totey that he plans to" baseball pools Is a vtototion of part about the non living with ..bu* Tm not changing rfcyjr*"-
law, tbe TexS* court of criminal the woman without benefit of unless you marry 'em first,”
appeals held here today, clergy. There Isn’t type big mayor said. ,
1;
,'4 '
inspect the army maneuvers
volving 71,000 troops
y- 'v. ■ ^-
’ ‘I-
-= v-
'
mm.
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 251, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1940, newspaper, April 17, 1940; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1023525/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.