The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 19, 1941 Page: 2 of 14
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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) THE DAILY SUN-GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS
OF SOLLUM MAY BE INDEX TO FUTURE OF WAR IN NORTH AFRIC,
THURSDAY, JUNE l>,
from Page tl
Muller, director Bryson Filbert
chairman; membership. ' Victor
Northcutt, director t C “W
Nya, chairman. Oieandat Trek,,
Kvatt. director. H 0.
Young, chairman; conveiitkma, T
r Sullivan, director. Jeff Nickel-
eon. chairman. Aitirnr»m«m. J
N Chatfteld, director, L A Hole,
chairmah
Aelotkm. Don 8 Freese, dlw- font .eon. who wa# born shortly -
tor, O. I. Butler chairman, bud-
fet and finance H 8 Fraaier.
ilNwtoe and
chairman. ' public
health. B W. Thomaa. director
■ **- *** '«** e«k--
; safety W. T Por-
ter. director. C W Grantham
chairmen highway*. K B Wil-
liam*. director I A Yount, f halr-
tnan; trade promotion Harry
Bowen, chairman Bert Black,
Chairman welfare, Dr Ms* Levy,
director, Weldon Appel), chair-
man; flea Seoul, chip, W C. Jones,
director. Dr Levy, i hairman. pro-
- farm and entertalnmen'
Freese. dtrertor, W O Weber.
Chairmen, publicity I A Yount,
director, A M Goal. rhaSrman;
" aocratarial William Job*, direc-
tor and chairman, and Christmas
Mai aele B W Thom** director
and chairman ,
typhoid rr,A«r.i»
FORT WORTH June IP
Bed Cram officials today led a S7
<** *• -■■•*** <* JiS&tSTS t!£
attorney, general will . file suit
fever 'cpMhawk- to the
^.......... section* of the 1 lowland#
bring along the *ot fork of the
Trinity river aa the home defense
guard began a 34-hour patrol of
the' prea to guaFd again#* looting
-live atecb lm' Mle. C C Merch-
ant. T-Jtp
la recovering at the Oooee Civek
hospital from an apendectomy
u| -ration undeuon* last bight
Allen Oam mage, of Oooee
Creek, wee to’ have Undergone an.
appendectomy operation title
morning to. the Oooee Creek hoe-
pitot. ■ ■ ■.
Mr* cb. Boncttl. of High-
land*, was admitted to the Lillie-
Duke boepm.l title morning for
ittedicaJ
Mm. Ralph Q Newell and in-
Fate of Entire
Near East Rests
Upon Oirtcome
Shipyard Strike * Guard (huts To
To Be Continued Be Reviewed By
Commander Here
O'Daniel Gets Support of Fergusons
Mann Recalls Saving Texas Submerged Wells
after midnight today, ere matin*
well to'the Goose Creek haapttal
Senate Proposes
To Quit Saturday
flea... A.
H> I nrtrti »v«,
The battle ju»t fought in the
desert sanda »k»«* tie Egyptian-
Libyan frontier ia likely to prove
an index to the future cgprse of
event* in North Africa.
The action wee not a'decisive
one. but it la of paramount im-
toboth'sides " General
Sir Archibald Wavell's army ha*
felt,out the strength of the Axis
farce# and one of the bitterest
single actions of the war result-
Onr fact stands out The op-
posing forces seem to be almost
equal, after » period during which
the Germans had superiority and
the British Were barely holding
their own
Now the empire troop# have
again attempted offensive. Be-
S ZSZ
Mngyfa er that mint mean he thinks he
has a chance to prevail and is
trying to find out
If he can succeed in a second
attempt around Solium jn*t over
the border within Egypt, his next
move probably ‘ would be to ad-
vance TO miles westward and ra-
tion li nurd from Page 11
ciency appropriation* wee pMeed
it imtinurd him Page IK
after five week# of conferences
among representatives of labor,
industry, and til* .government. It
outlawed strike# And lockout* and
provided a baeic/.hocrty wage of
HOI - / .
The United Automobile Work-
er# union (CIO* accepted a me-
diation board Vopoeto yesterday
for settlement of its dispute With
the Marlin-Kockwell Corp.. at
PtainvUie. Conn. The company
•Aked additional time to eowdder
the recommendation#. More than
IBM of the firqt’a employee had
struck' but' returned to work at
the board's request.
Director John Steelman #t the
federal ronciliilion service an-
nouncer a temporary seUtement
had been reached In the strike
Of MO CIO steel workers at the
Apollo Steel Company. Apollo. Pa
He did not disclose the term*
< Continued from Page t)
First LL Burrell, plana and train-
ing officer. First Lt Glenn A
Jracht, First Lt. George T
Brown, dipt Oeorge D, Brice,
medical officer, and first Lt. H.
W. Goodpastor, chaplain.
Major George Spencer, com-
manding officer of the' 3«h bat-
talion to Conroe, and his staff
also- are expected to attend the
review here.
Others expected to attend are
Major F W Taylor, commanding
officer of the 2nd battalion, Hous-
ton and members of his staff, in-
iB> lulled Prrse) !
Former Governor Jim Fergu-
son today endorsed the United
States senatorial candidacy of
a. «- T ATlawinl
Governor W Lee O'Daniel in the
belief that hi* election “will re-*
for old folks.”
Ccincidentaily. Ferguson sug-
gested that O'Daniel “certainly
will be high man” If his ccnsti-
tuents combine with those of Lt.
Obv; Coke Stevenson.
Stevenson, Who will be elevated
to the governorship if O'Daniel
goes to the'senate, received 446,-
000 votes in the 1940 runoff elec-
tion O'Daniel got a majority in
United States Representative
Lyndon Johnson, speaking in the
Kio Grande Valley at Harlingen,
claimed that Secretary of the In-
terior Harold Ickes has approved
hi# proposal to "buy Texas oil
liars" t
Britain.
O’Danie) Attacks Ring
Replying to a telegram from
the Johnson City congressman,
Ickes was quoted that the sug-
gestion would provide "quick and
most effective aid" to the Allies.
Ickes newly-appointed coordina- campaign appearance wool#
tor of the petroleum industry, met made Beaumont ^
ZZt*r* “Moa
n22TwW.
in Washington today with leading
oil men arid political representa-
tives from the oil states.
At Sherman. O'Daniel was lam-
basting an unspecified "political
*••**<*" - u
^r*-^.*=S£=BS&
here
ing officer of Co A and the oth-
er commissioned officers are
Puri# uald ilkto the guvtrgaKs .dv
ftekency expeditor- wa# tha tow-
e#t of any ip recent year* and
146,090 of rt was tor national de-
F n»e projects
The senate also pasted finally
a *30.099 appropriation tor the at- __
tonny general to u#* to proposed itero-fb# British garrison at To-
—'* bruk. hwieged there for months.
Company, Pittsburgh, ^pending
court action to obtain an, eqcit-
sSiic diviatan of th» Pecos river
against.- New Mexico, in which
state dam* have been eweted that
prevent the Peto* water# from
being used for irrigation in West
Trxa*
Another houae bill passed final-
ly by the senate will direct the
From Tobruk, he could com-
mand the Axis supply lines to-
wards Egypt arid keep the enemy
well back within Libya. If he
could consolidate there ami keep
augmenting hi* forces of infan-
try, tanks and mobile equipment,
a drive on to Derna. Benghazi
and finally Tripoli would be in
order. ’ .
That is the British hope, but
rtJ" ~._T!r..l”'T“ . WVIW.M-«-■«- SJSTBrd.'VJ,"X
.s&rsjsiL'ars ro,uBj.,i-cS;TA.<2s
the Duquesnc Power and Light First Lt, J E. tyftiordaft, and
Second Lt. B S. Culpepper. Each
company is expected to have
about M men, in the parade.
Major Klllough's invited guest*
wifi include Mayors J. H, Meek
and C. H. Olive of Goose Creek
and Peliy, JAhn W. Harkins, L.
G Sanders, Leori Trenckmariri, W.
C. Swain, John M. Kiigore, F. N.
Read. Nelson Stile# ano George L
Keene, J. A. Anderson,' J. B.
White. W. L Pendergraft, Gordon
L Famed, J, E. Rutter, W. C.
Williams, Floyd Higginbotham.
R. G. Florance. Nami Katribe, M.
L Neal. Dr. N. S. Holland and
members of the school board in-
cluding R. D. Martin. L A. Lev-
ering. J. C. Slone, Roy Elms, Theo
an attempt to weaken and divide
my votes.”
conferences with the ND
CTO and an independent union
were contesting for bargaining
rights; A conciliation service pro-
posal for an election was accepted
tor the CIO. but rejected by the to*,
dependent union.
-r-
BcfRn Denies
Attack on Reds
(Continued from Page I)
certain that they were at least
«ss»ts
tector* reputedly haw, made ut pl<tce WUIt p, „ time# almost new
.......' more thw> a .huto«B-.Sanir. .«iii'. JiM
WWw« A O Hunaway. and W.
K. Robbins.
Thoueh the* »rfmi(tea th.r th» Reviews of Companys C and D
Though they admitted that the were held earlier this-week by
whereas the hulk of the nation'0
oil Industry now js under federal ,
he said, wells on -tub- The governor again scored leg-
land along the Texas coast islntors. to wit;
are not. He claimed a share for “Legislators that were starving
this. to death on blackeyed peas are
"A year or so ago a resolution now eating large planked steaks
was introduced in congress as- and calling themselves statesmen,
.serting authority and control by and they don't care whether the
the federal government over these pld folks get a pension check or
submerged lands," Mann related, riot." ?
“The brunt of the presentation of Dies Changes itinerary
argument against that resolution 0,DanieI said further that whcn
fell to the attorney generals de- he announced he would run for
the senate if the legislature would
pass certain bills, "the bilM pasaed
like greased lightning — many
legislators not knowing until the
next day what’ bills they had
passed."
At Houston, United States Re-
presentative Martin Dies changed
his intinerary after a speech de- '
manding that President Roosevelt
shut down ,all Italian aiid Russian
cdnsrilates in the United States as
a “follow-up" to the closing of
German consulates. ......
partment of Texas.
"The presentation was so ef-
fective that the resolution Was
Rilled.”
Mann reiterated that jurisdic-
tion over the oil industry should
be returned to the states when
the emergency is over.
Major- Chiodajsnd bis staff, and.
Musical Program at
Baytown Junior High
Bird Weathertex
Applied on Avereg# j
'*■ 5-Room House
NO DOWN PAYMENT
$5.18 Per MonPh
21 Months
Includes All Finance (
Asphalt' and Asbest
Roofing tind Siding I
Goose Creek Roof
& Siding Co ,
Phone 747 DeFce at'
■' «ttortm" such' ™wrpri»cs....................-
A nine to four favorable vqte
in the house appropriations com-
mittee apparently dimmed the bill
by Sen Oian R • Van Stand! of
Tioga for construction of an aero-
nautical engineering cortege near
Sherman- The bill pnsi -d by the
senate provided a 1300,090 approp-
riation. \ , 1' -
Attempt# were made* Without
MMM in the senate to take up
house-pa»*?d -biUa for redistrict-
ing the hmrse of reprr-senlativ,-#.
for appropriating I'UKK.istO for a
cancer hospital arid cancer re-
search. and thr “must” bill to
detibcralise the term* on which
old age pension# are granted in
Texa* to conform to federal so-
cial security board rules. It
would do away with Texas ex-
^rtiffftiS *S*" incic^d in tK
Hence a swift advance over any that the British-Turkish alliance S° the metT^n^he^r^aip^mance
had been nullified in fact if not and aucndancc and lauaded their
in theory. - — u-
Newspapers gave prominence to
statements that the British of-
fensive on the Egyptian-Libyan
frontier had been smashed With
big losses in men and tank's to
the British, but they displayed
report# of Uic German-Turkish
pact much more ae.nsationally.
Editorials on the pact followed
the same pattern.
supplied, which means
trnance of slow communication#
over a long and difficult haul.
For the present, General Waveii
will have achieved something of
a miracle if he invests. the re-
gion a# far as Tobruk. British
communiques from Cairo an-
nounce that in the present phase
of the campaign, the British had
withdrawn to their previous for-
ward positions after inflicting
heavy punishment on the enemy
and forcing him to disclose hid
strength
That may mean a stalemate or
plan by Waveii to consolidate
it
patriotism. He also pointed to the
advantages of such an organisa-
tion to a community in the pres-
ent emergency and to the need
for its services.
Officers, of Co. C are Capt, Joe
McGregor, First Lt. Edwin Atte-
berry and Second Lt. Elton Run-
neberg. Co. D. officers are Capt.
Darryl Watson, Firt Lt. Tom Rid-
ley and Second Lt. A. J. Jepson.'
- f"iWk temp hyfflH-to :
attend a songfest at 7:30 p.m. to-
day at the Baytown Junior high
school. The program will be pre-
sented by the recreation depart-
ment of the school district with
Supervisor A. M. Bale in charge.
A concert by the Robt. E, Lee
high school band and a series of
stunts and games and contests
will. f ound out the . hour and a
-half program.
Texas leads in the number of
muies with 537,801. Mississippi is
second with .337,620.
I Central C
8 512 West Texas
WILL PUY
R USED CAI
I CASH 1
Central Chevrolet Co.
512 West Texas-Phones 34—1100
WILL BUY LATE MODEL
USED CARS AND PAY
FOR THEM.
hi# force# for * new attack. Evan
ARCADIA*
SStSff
relative* and pension eligibility in
spite of certain property hold-
ing#
GLEN
COON C.OKH KItiHTHEEfNG
ROCHESTER, N, Y. «IR>
Pets,
"BroMw^Uiftei"
' — swl ■
mism oyer trie outcome, the most
hopeful statement being, "It may
be that no decision or result will
be reached by either side." On
the other side, both Berlin and
Home claim complete victory and-
#tate* that the British offensive
1m*. been Smashed.
he
Nazi-Russian
Tension Grows
Moscow Quiet
Despite Rumors
(Continued from Page 1)
Russian republics have organised
summer camp# where, 1,000,000 or
1,500,000 children will spend -va-
cation#."
Reports from Helsinki said
that British warship# now are pa-
(Continued from Page 1)
network of elementary and
eondary schools.
Good Crops
Other newspapers hail the har-
vesting season in the Ukraine and
the norther Caucasus. They say
. tafl ■ F*ATff*E!
CHAItLKN IMIYER
•
"baoc sngr
Friday and Saturday
journey through th-c Federal
building hat.' Pete. walked into
the building, uninvited, hut (Ray-
ed aa a guest of Arthur Carpent-
er Carpenter served -the coon a
fish dinner and (lien, turned it
over to a game protector.
- becomes difficult fur the Allied
aider It will be a matter of dig-
ging in for the defense of Egypt-
Both (Idea will be bringing up
reinforcements, with a long cam-
in prospect.
iust hold
shipping from entering or leaving
the Finnish port,
'ARCADIA
STARTS SUNDAY
Britain mu»t hold Egypt and
the Sue* canal at all costs or be
driven out Of the eastern Medi-
terranean and cut off in the Near
East. It i* a question of how
much in the way of supplies and
eempire force# Britain can bring
up through the Red nea, and How
much the Axi# partner# can ferry
aero## to North Africa by air and
sea from flicily and Crete.
For Britain, which hold* sea
supremacy, ft ta also *• question of
getting enough plane# to offset
Hitter's domination in the air.
Week apparently has enabled coi-
lectivc farms m northern regi-
lt was said in Helsinki that the Zf littVT?
three ship# which the British teflfled <^n.
said yesterday were seized cn siderahly due to the late spring.
route to PeUumo actually were ~—---
captured east of Iceland en route
to the United States.
Attack Is Fatal
To Worker Here
Phillip Plant, Noted
Sportsman Is Dead
NEW YORK. June 19. «3
Philip M. Plant, 38, millionaire
sportsman, died last night of heart
disease at Polyclinic hospital,
where' he had . been under treat-
•me
SHtfraI^fl^TOer tanprf
By Fireat SNpBrd
BOSTON, Jung It «B-The Unit-
ed State# destroyer Wilke. Whs
slightly damaged by fire early to-
day in the third fire within four
months aboard uncompleted de-
stroyers at Boston navy yard.
The btate, apparently started by
(Continued **•$ *■£* ** ipent-.xlnce Sunday.
an inqueet verdict of death from . since 1920. Plant had ranked
natural cause#, , as one of the leading meri-abouti
The body was taken today by town, seeking occasional diversion
thr Tri-Citie# Funeral Home to from Cafe society eecapadea in
1V:immmt Where funeral services hi, game hunting in Africa,
wrtt beReid with the BoberU k u- He wa# the adopted son of
neral Home in charge. « Mort0n F. Plant, Florida railroad
Surviving Hudsoy arc his par- an(j gteanwhip magnate, from
^^b^eroVwaTd andT Wh0m hp ;"h^'‘“d e#t,meted
and two brotn«i'8, «#dwara and A. -
F. Hudaey, M ot Beaumont.
Eight-Hour Day far
Defense Zones Dropped
*15,000,000 In 1918. ' !; -to*
Plant marrrtiu movie actress
Constance Bennett in November,
1995. They were divorced in
Paris In 1929 with reports of a
*1.000,000 settlement.
an »tec trie welding torch toft by
a workman, anmgif the AJT.gBF'**--. ' m .* - .
ML Oily firemen and a lifeboat WASHINGTON, June 19. <r.P> - BOTfleT PtiTOt 11161
5^JSS!!&JlSSS Over IntprnpH tamiiK
today sesjended the right HlKIIIM WnMIlS
FORT Sf ANTON, N. M-, June II.
onto on defiftae wtSk* in the CJ>i_U. S. border patrol officers
Canal Zone, Puerto Rico, sad today began the purchase Of sup- •
sasr5
it i
Fel.
I
1
1
i^^7Qy7£xTFtOROLl.ftt
C0lD-Mft^W"-wonderful r8f,,9_
eralion; oxceoffontif gconofwy. _
I 20RB OF ST0RAGE~fhe right ^
tompe- of ure for every kind of food.
wmmmmmmmtmmmmmmrnm-'
Alaska.
The' toweMent suspended tha
law by executive order for the
duration of the emergency in ord-
er to expedite construction at
theca out poet# of America's de-
fense Uae.
plies for German sailors Interned
here, firut move bji the officer#
since they took over eontrol of the
abandoned COC eamp where the
men are held.
The patrol assumed direction of
the ciurip following President
Roosevelt's order fijeting fund#
ftf itlti flaimtan • mwornmsiftF lab
This big Super-De Luxe Norge “Six’- costs
only t little more per month than lowest-
priced refrigerators and gives you a truly
amaring list of outstanding features such as
the (costoional new Norgc Night-Watch.
You’ll enjoy these features every day for
many years. Gome in . . . see Norge big'
.
• ALAMO • IfrrpjrSTSJ; w«,,«h,.
MODELS
AS LOW
AS***
Up
tied German liner Columbus, had
been boarded and aupplied from
Oemaa conauiar funda
_ bord. r p-.tiol ordered SHOO
worth of groceries from Caitan,
N M. and El Paso, Texas groc-
er#, and indicated the supply would
last “aeweral days"
BROKER DIES
FORT WORTH. June 19. (UR
“ B| R. Beaver#. ■ tod
OOf)
Phones 26-27
202-6 W. Texas
activities- scheduled a Wl
speech at Orange- Texi 1
hume-town tn which he o7nk
will reply to "certain ail,™
by rival candidates.
Dies said he originally Wa„
to close hi# campaign in
on election eve, June 17
changed hi* mind ‘‘became 1
radio facilities in Be*u«#jgJ
It Wa# presumed that hit |
tro’lab
M3.
»World
Jl
. ' end
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 19, 1941, newspaper, June 19, 1941; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028053/m1/2/: accessed May 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.