The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 18, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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OPA Called Gestapo By Case Of Gulf Hotel
Mew Mexico Sotermr fire How Revealed
FRIDAY, SEPTIMBt*
Ill ^mblero *«|'
v dimes H0rf
There *“t?llwl Fwamum pj*-
.1— public «aai— 1
/ the tii# n<wwi
Add,
need fpt
Keam-T
a- ^
•aid «y of the Pran
CWI court,, secured
exlpo PW the field «w2
fiecated slot
machitM.
= Do 'Plated
ft I Bother yl
It your "Gl^HS" iteh ,
-W you ducomfoT1
|ae£w^fg4
5S- Goose Creek Ph;,r “
16 AND REPAI
IS been servicing the Goose i
r- past fivj years, will 7i^
to xj?rr tL cS%”sui*,<v 1
NOW
MORE
THAN
EVER
IES THAT
mruL;;
mmm
Forecast
L l.ltlle temperature chin Jr
Jjpimm-iwridW •■M «*■<■! f< rc-
Ihi* afternoon »nd Iqnighl.
(LOME 2 6 No.— 8 7
'J'*' ......J" '
;
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS SATIHtDAY, SEPTEMIER 18. 1943
T
—
wiF-ayt**
Maks It par east
h»l a Storting
Pshrt
By Mail or Carrier —75c Moatfi
URRICANE REMAINS 'DANGER
tSIVE OfGAMCE
SHAW "BUT
:hipped
l2Wn>T.»» *»
US
burth Quarter Touchdown Gives lee 7 To 0 Victory
SW-Mile Wind StirS
Hard Rain
Line's Only Touchdown
bme$Oh73?f a rd Osfve
[final Quarter • /•
I HffiD IIABTSMN . /
day before Pearl Harbor
i been avenged. /
Inly one Gander 'wnif' in the
Lp that December 6 afternoon
Houston who carried the
ties of Lee here Wist night on
, Held in- one at the mon
hed nights a schoolboy foot
ier a football bur
happelftd
ITALIAN ISLES TAKEN
This Has
All Marks Of
Inside Job
HOUSTON, Sept. 1*. tC.Ri—Tf
lice were investigating the
they would probably call it
w «™f*s ™»»
Tl» am gjW nmm
Inside the big egg was. one of
normal, size.
KMbMyfe g"£*3&£5^ T* Wcfory
Ensnared In On Toward Selerno
^ Crimea Trap
1 an Reds Drive For Rail
Of Texas Late Today
defeated the Ganders
■nr—not
iHad
> never knows how well he can
Pimtjl the going gets tough.
Hr will answer to the npme sf
orge Walmsley. whether yjgu
I the name from the roof tojis
Iwhisper it In the shadows.
V trn Wtiaerw'" yror
gMr^rncifn f&fTIte
The score was 7 to- 0. Tire
Vwrc reversed here last
it: •tee’ won I this. t ube. *Thc
£rc again was 7 to 0.
was a 34-yard ..sprint by
nsley in . the fourth .quarter
jr whs in difference.
teams had battled on even
• for three quarters in a
|\mg rain.
fourth quarter, cut to 10
ps by agreement of the
ichfs, was ready t«. begin. lav
Ined the ball on its own 27 yar 1
ftaMthing happened to set the
aider. on fire. They went the
73 yards on 1! plays to
the games only marker,
wgr went the flnat 34 on a
run inside the enemy left
Hr-Wii tdUTBI MPK" «| 1M
^>kc through a big hole in the
thahiu to a great block by
fomas Peacock that paved the
A 1.Umar Halfback chat-
(tsed. but he was side stepped
Lunar safety merely chased
We ace- across the double
hpe,
> N»rtu Drite
Ellis, co-hero of the drive,
kicked the drenched plg-
i ah* ml hr thr wry
IPOI.T
. *.* really Ellis, oa mueh aa
who Was responsible
the drive. Five time* the I/re
Line To Cut Off German
Only Escape Route
A 1/ !/ I E D HEADQUARTERS.
North Africa, Bept. fFTFJP -sr Al-
lied forces have seized two more
islands off the Italian west coast,
one only 12 miles from Naples
and the other within 70 miles of
Home, and the .Fifth army has
smashed another two miles inland
frdm ISalerhd gulf tOPHV ROd^
cadaspide, it'was amiounced to-
a»r. •------:—-——:--
(A German communique broad-
cast by the Berlin radio said fierce __ „
allied attacks, supported py now- gulf bridgehead
Long Step To
Philippines
•rp:n
Badoglio Escapes
'■'• -1 .. -Mp.-nn'w • * ro^..
rronr Germans no
Allied Territory
Eisenhower Reveals That
Italian Leader Is Safe •
LONDON, Sept. IX ri p' - Premier
Marshal Pietro Hadnglio escaped
through German lines aroifmi
Kamo, it was revealed authorita-
tively today, and in safe in Al-
lied-held territory' in Italy, where
he is negotiating economic, finan-
cial and political phases of the
Iiauan armistice.
Holds Top Post
First word on the whereabouts
of 7WT0jfTttVxtTTTT the German «e-
iup.il ion of Rome Sept 10 was
contained in V cenwvr-approvsd
dispateh fHclined '"Witn -Gek
Eisenhower at an advanced Al/
lied command post" in the Medi-
terranean. It said the Allies
recognized Badoglio as the head
of the Italian government fully
competent l« carry op post-
armistice negotiations.
BadoqUo was known t o have left
TOmi'UTmosl'M^HcVttiAn troops Iai3
siege to the capital. Since then,
neoirsl and Asu reports had
speculated variously that he had
escaped with King Victor Em-
(The German Transocen a
agency reported in a Berlin broad-
cast thar Nazi troops hsve oc-
cupied Elba Island, off the Italian
west coast 50 miles south of Leg-
horn.)
Fifth Takrs Bocradaspidr
The ratlTSmy made its deep-
est penetration- y#t of the Ital-
ian mainland with the rapture of
Roccndinpide, 13 miles inland a I, L I E n HEAnqiiARTEns,
from Agropoli at the southern Southwest Pacific. Sept. I» CP)
end of the 26-mUe-long Salerno Allied capture of bomb-wrecked
" J a<s # ’ — one# Japan's greatest New'
Japs Renew Bid For Air
Superiority In Spite Of
Recent Heavy Losses
MOSCO, SSpt. 18 U’.P) — Red
armies pushed to within 40 miles
of the Zaphorozhtsgevastopol rail-
road today in a Sevetoping offen- ly-lnnded forces, gained in volume Front dispatches said the Ger- Guinea base, wag announced in a
sive .to trap the German garrison M southeastern seetor of the -juana-Jjad, beguit -pulling back communique let Cay, and CisR.
i-arosaassw^aat--_
"■ ............
"■Wfal»fiwAoafo «4« tes. ^Mlai ffc ^a' "
coeet in the “FVeeport-Galveeton tree" UMe efterooon or
tonight, according to the weather bureau, alter a high np _
lure area had hwd it the- better-purt of three 4»y ~dlwMth
east of Corpus Chriati.
The Mona coven a wide ares sod hurricaae winds will
■weep the TrFCtties, probably ranging i^Rto 75 mOes per
hour, if the center passe* anywhere along the Texas coast,
according to the latest ad-
visory issued by the weather
bureau Strong wind# were pre-
dicted ss far away as R«ns
Fla
100 Mile Wind ---------------
winds SM
with gusts up to 100 V
hour, still were forccaat for the
center of the i
This is s dangerous
« Phrase which has ap|
Death Td Now
Stands At 24 In
Naval Bale Blast
Wav* U VW*‘m; Others
Of 250 Hurt M»r^' "
lue. 43.'mi&i' *>.» "of t.uv ,h# OuIf of BaHwio bv German >- plunging inland
'Gaichur, 43- mit^s east 'of’ litk,
Zaporozhe railroad .Junction, mi l
Oaipenkb, last port on 'the Sea of
Azov cunt of the railroad.
Osipenko Captured ---------
The capture of Osipenko, a city
of 52,000 formerly known an-Bor-
dyansk. carried the Russians to
within K5 miles of the Melitopol
railroad station. Capture of ciliie.-
Zaporothe or Melitopol would cut
the main escape route for the
axis Crimean armies, us well as
ihose in the dwindling Caucasian
bridgehead across Kerchenski
strait:
Altogether more than 60 towns
and villages were overrun in ad-
vances of up to 7'» miles toward
Zaporozhe and Melitopol yestcr-
(See German* racing Rage j)
planes op to Sept.. 15).
«(erman* Seize Elba
The. occupation of Procida, a
• tst'o-mile-Iong volcanic island 12
miles southwest of Naples, pliued
the allieq within lbn«t-ranze ar-
tillery rsnge of Italy's biggest port
and one of'the prime objectives
of the liurd-«#qn landing on the
Salerno gulf, some 30 miles to iiie
south. J’onza island, which also
has been occupied, lies 67 miles
almost due west of Naples
tnvaoers were.'
with gathering
irtotni.nturfj.
The Fifth army now .was in
full contact with Gen. Sir Bern-
ard L. Montgomery's Eighth
army, which had driven 200 miles
up the Italian west coast in two
Weeks, *aml their combined forces
were expected to speed an offen-
sive aimed squarely at Naples
and Rome, then northern Ituly.
Forres 1'our Ashore
A naval communique said
(Nee Italian Island* Rage •)
nes.
God’s help." MacArtmir
r arc mailing our , w*;?
Guerrillas Ready To March
5673 Young Slavs Join New Army
I that march he netted 34 yards
Mustsans
pf fsiMd to work for yardage
■•*1 the istmar left aide, but
| hriped to set up Walmsley a
Umberto to Sicily
take* to Afrloik____________
.sew Uovernmetil Fates
Swiss Reports said that Or-
man efforts to art up is new
Fascist puppet government in
—ybhhUM—'«6AMri»> lUiq Ud
- MMidwinl pngamr iii|iz r '
i See Badoglio Fseapes, Rage tl
(By United Press) ' , -
Voting men of Yugoslavia, he
tween the ages of 21 and 23, have
< been conscripted by Gen. Draja
Mikhailovitch, feuerrilln leader, to
help prepare an army to aid the
coming "battle of the Balkans." a
correspondent for the Democrat l •
."r«i-»KS.ncx.2f JlaJWllsm .saJ
today.
A total of 5.673 of. these youths,
born in 1930, 1921 and 1982. to k
the oa*h of aitegisnre toKli-g
Peter II between Aug 15 and
■Sept. 10, in military and religious
TWBfBHtW lwht m a free mrnrn-
tain hideout in Western Serbia,
he added. » -
, Tl wai the Tim Time SiHcF th?
of the Central Baptist chureh ot 'collapse of Yugoslavia that. Mik-
Pelly. officiating Burial will be haiiovltrh ordered the conscrip-
unjlse' lion of young men.
■ - -----
W. T. Gunn, Pelly
Pioneer, Is Dead
Funeral Service* Set
For 2 P.-M Sunday" “
William ThomaSi Gunn, in. died
at hts home at 115. Willow, Pelly,
ut 7 a. m today.
He was a pioneer of Peny. hay
Funeral services will be held
at I p jja-Buinday »t nha reMdtmn
with Rev J. I F Tharp, paito:
jnd town
Cke Tri-t itirs: Our vole as
r sattest Gander supporter
. Ml,., „ Mrs Ijeorr Treork-
' Not voUng for your-
•hn Is yours . . Soldier
r*?h Mosk Mow |nto town
Is.k Osgg, a Florida-based
wjn »o!dler, also was at the
Meyer Lea Aron left
I this mornina for sunny
■ Texas Aggie Jim-
*• •« home lor a few
Dr N 8 Holland head-
the postofflc* foe the
I mail ... Tom Cronford
■ a. slop on hit way home Ton
I OBmet Brown ons of tboae det,
Mothef Of LW. Bruce
Is Dnd At Commerce
. £. W. Bruce was fioUHca this
morning of the death of his
mother. Mrs. Ann Brvee. 78. -d
her bom* in Commerce after an
illneas of two years She had
been seriously iU sine* May
Mr and Mrs Bruce left im-
mediately to attend the funeral
Sandrors include the husband.
T. J Bruce, throe eons. E W. Dr
Robert O Bruce and Eugene
Bruce, and four daughters, Mrs.
ToM Williams, Mrs Kyle Alexan-
Mrs Vergia Edwarda snJ
in Hill at Real cemetery unjl
‘SS&WiSESSggS
Gunn la survived by his wife,
Mrs Eddie O Glenn of Pelly; two
sons. T W and W E. Gunn, bvh
of Rally, two aiauro, MraVLu
Gary and Mrs Dora Mae AiVn.
both of Pelly Wve grandohilu en
alio survive
Pallbearers will be Oscar Oil-
leman. Erk- Thibodau*. Jeaale
Newton and Janrn Weir.
atantly wTHt The Trews Trf the »«e-
cesXof the allied armic>:.
"From all side* rcporia are
reaching us about the conflicts
between the Yugoslavian arhiv
and troops"«f the occupator who
have been confused and surprised
by the skilled plans and rein-
forced activities of general Mik-
hailoHtcb’a. srmy. ’ br said.
____Ha flagleaid Itusr 'one unit 0T~
the Yugoslav army engaged a
strong German force tor two
days on- the slopes of Budnik
mbdhtaih In Serbia * fhte las'
mmhh. Forty-four- Gcrnrsns Were
killed the firs} day. a "great;;
number wounded and 23 captured'-,
the eorroopondrnt said.
Mikhailovitch «ajttaa:lv* fckled.-
rhat htv rote mrw ts he burden
the Gormans with sporadic blow:,
to confuse them', to disrupt their
thoir means
is not easy to realize that it might
be (possible under an invader
like (he Germans and Bulgarians
to- otdac tbo onnatmpGon. iat
addde.
Tbs correspondent reported that
the tenseness among the people
of Yugoalavia wm growing con-
said,
bark
leu- fell Thursday- to American
and Atisrraiian troops who i.ot
seize line* around it In amphibjm «
and aertnl operations starting 12
'days before Its beaten garrison
Red for the fulls without hope of
escape ' *
.Serious Blow
The trtunifiph. roliihg the Jap-
anese from nearly do miles of the
New Guinea roast, came as a
hurst of aerial activity in the
Holomon* signified a biller—anJ
possibly climatic - struggle for
control of the air lanes in tha*
area
Ma( Arthur, supreme allied com*
fflre MacArthur Hall* Page «>
Berlin Blasted
By Raiding RAF
New Formation* Head
For Diepfya Saction
l/ONDON. Kept. Ut BJU Oeroeal
large formation* of bombers roar-
ed over the channel at a high al-
titude this morning only a few
lumrs after RAF Mosquito bomb-
(fS|hsd returned fronTtjwtr^thirJ
^Tb* *bimbers. which were'unes-
rortrtf. «rossed the. ehannel tn ibe
direction of Ifie Dieppe area.
Earlier large fighter farmalkma
raced toward the continent in the
asms direction ^*g»e Berlin j-ald
are .dead today following a mighty
erpfoiftm ar“TH« rillvif air base
here. ai|d it is feared more of the
*50 tnjuiVd may succumb before
the day Is over
The explosion, which was cause I
by "ammunition in transtt." rock-
ejl the,city of Norfolk yesterday
morning, shattered windows twi
mile* "away and could be heard
at Suffolk. *0 mile, from IU point
of origin.
Rrobers Nllent
There has been no report aa yet
from a four-man naval board up-
pointed to investigate the trageoy,
nor would the navy dtseloee an>
further drUlls.
FJro following the eaplnsl m de-
stroyed three hangars at the a if
station, and other butldi ngs were
damaged. Windows at the poet am.
Ihroughum the northern aectioa
of the rity were broken by the,
concussion
First Have Killed
.The number of dead, first re-
•ported to be seventeen, rapidly
mounted during the afternoon aa
tbcae most seriously Injured disd
in r.ospitsls bringing the total to
warnings wen continued aq
rp-vT>
IMW **
7
heard movement pt the
%"zisZ' ax
Hpi at « ran if
»t mllaa per honr, tin
1 It pwpitiil the cm-
roach the ooaet laid
oon or tanlgbt."
The .forward
blow was
and tt now
to north
six to eight miles
bureau said It
ter would
this afternoon
labeller* Available
Meanwhile preparations w*ra
complete hero to open school
buildings to people who wish to
seek safety away from home
The Red Oram disaster rtllef.
commute* and tha civilian da-
fens* organise! k
provide for the comfort of HI
who in tn pvbijc buildings Some
no cots have bora distributed, fiat
aid hits have been provKMd
civilian defense, according to
'Nee Hurricane mill. Page I)
the present figure of M • all en-
listed personnel.
The number of Inured, Includ-
ing some civilians, stands at J9t>.
with IS enlisted men considered
to be In critical condition.
The WAVE. Beaman 2nd CUms
Elizabeth Koren.hr, Philadelphia.
Is believed to be the first member
of the naval womens auxiliary
to be killed In-Une of duty
Two Trxaa* Die
Dead and iajurod Nate tecMM.
Destroyer Rowan
Sunk At Salerno ^
Nazi U-Boat* Attack
Allied Supply Line*
WASHINGTON. Sept If ««> _
Strong prnbsbtllty that German
submaria** arc now atrtkhw at
anrtrig I.--a. tlel* —a—
seen today hi th* Davy announc*-
menf of tha ataktog of th* U t.
water rntploatoa*
The Rowan,
tepL 1L
Mans mo
Soldi**. ‘ 551
^aid. waro "Impalienlly wtltlng.for Hmrr(Xg raid.'by (he .per,!,. JgwTA » Karstendirt I
boat base* tm Northern
awitbaro Prone*, and IteWtfkJpt
man* a
them between the Yugoslav.tn
army and th* diaeinbarked aL'Vl
roaataH
I N». cornea Prof. W_W
•W a yam OkH
P pounds • . |
^ Ttyfor hlrmi”i T
■j* #teh* ta uia Omb WM
iJi**** •#, yon know . J
L
r,^ h* la rvadly having
favor victims Mrs Morris Tlttl*.
NEM AIR ROTTEN
WASHINGTON. Sept II CJA_
Trkas-New Mexico Airline*.
Amarillo. TV*. has applied to jh*
civil aeronautics board for per-
mission to establish eight route*
from Amarillo to Tucumcart and
Clovis. N M, Ixbhock. ClUld-
rees. Shamrock. Chaadlan. Per-
rjlon, and Dalhart. Tex
Sinatra Faces New Nemesis
Perry Como Enters "Swooher Field"
bunt along
liquid • eyed Perry can cop the
(montr’s crown with his first
rrntiew picture With a seven
tear contract Cbmo is to make
hi* first picture—st 135.000 per—
Stocks Close Today
AIM Ol or**
Packard Mootro
• **t•*f•*: 1
ms
m Tr «
tM
IT%
_____ ____
CKlsa Srrricr ......J*
n---- Mroat .......
Owitdtdawd Atrrroft ....... 14V
mi'mam"". •%
SS^ptr^dtteh*
Gent nl Brrtrte ..**••• row y^e
GroaTOl Maatza -xas
outer* jmggd .....
.......J*
n dMi
Islb
NEW YORK, Sept IS
I jo -note trmp**t
Broad* ay Ux’.iy as Perry
became “crooner of ihc year of
Swoon*rs, Inc, and th* odds in
the Sinatra iweapatakes look an-
other jolt. ‘ The only hitch i* Betty
The hepcat warfare over the '.rsble’i baby." Como said
crooner* crown firm came into Twentieth Century Fro wants to
th* open when a Broadway col- Mart m* off with bee- and she
umnist ashed the question "I* asnte- to retire until the baby
Smalra here t* suy*“ Cbmo is bom If 1 have to wait six
r> oaths for th* baby, anything
Iran happen "
Irdn a rloar second Now singing at the swank Oap-
Swoon*ra. Inc. a band of teen- acaboM where tebW card* an-
age girt* who guarani**
bar* a (wanning andlano* at any > Otero, a
w*.tail - ------------- F(lfro B. . nainsawraal ttmmil
ioyalty ts cam* because "ha arnds **y to tea montha PWmartv a
mm. as room- smgar wfth TVd Wsaros In Cht-
Aesldet forcing the Nasi* to
lugbt fighters around theiz rapt-
tat not to speak of the effect on
jittery Bertlnara a ho never know
whether a heavy attack Is de-
veloping. the Mosquito, return
regularly with valuable informa-
tion on defense dispositions
Fighter command Whirlwinds
and Mosquitoes an offensive pa-
trols attacked railway target, la
Northern Franco last Bight, dam-
aging several locomotive.
Ail phtoaa retimed safety ■ -
The KA> 8 four-engined bomb-
er. apparently were grounded by
OPA Invesfigafes sr?r^
Wgh Rents Hero
•roa aapL k and tiro
I tag ol* Nava)* dw
The rental control dirt .ton cf
th* offle* of p*Ke administration
In^Hb* TtriOu^"Irro te*rwl*.
apartments and house, which are
not gowned by thi March I M3
rent freeze ”
W Ckek Siaakm, aroa dkaetor.
aaM tar*«(tgator* waro eksekteg
tha rontngm Hm mam pteero and
wharo they aa* found to be ex
roateTO, tkay win ha tomarod. h*
tarn of th* mg
the Itouth Paaift* OapLIX
Host Of Tens Enjoys
Brisk, Sony Weather
iS'Sr~M
W SakSp SMk . * mm tmmd-«tete*o bald. tReroteti Oiiif aa— aromiaditr
Storm Near S750 000 ?«.'*: ZJZL-* • ^
«#• W fllf I’VIP awVjVVV iMP M9. for UO M put. HI PUtMI.
i proa ray to*«
8b*p WA8HINGTOX »*pt td €Jb—
llW# fwkJTteSrqj—£a"ha~ ^
Ss? ^
rftSSSr*s it
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 18, 1943, newspaper, September 18, 1943; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027532/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.