The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 56, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 18, 1945 Page: 4 of 8
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
d m wd <U« •Miff M Gmm Cmk, T»m«. p*
•fat n*t 0» •*« •! C—ftn*. Mm<* », l»T
UndernecreUry of SUte Grew hau left
hi* position, and hi* reai^nation can be call-
ed a victory for Washington columniata.
They have been “after" Grew for aome
time, and even Paul Mallon. who rarely
THE DAILY SUN. GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS
SATURDAY. AUGUST 18( 1*, |sATURDAY, AUGUST 1
Sun Slants
By Fred Hartman
MKin.lir TIME
ONE or THE tint things that the congr**# will
attend U> when it reconvene* ih# ftrwt week In
September will be a resolution which mil* off the
dog* on daylight aavinga wartime
Setting the rtoch be- k an haur will mean a
change In aehoal a. hedulee at rlaeaee It mean* We
wont have to get up In the middle el the night
thta winter We almoet can't, wall for Uve congreae
to convene.
lit MMiltl HWTOItr
WE LEARNED more hlatory In 18 minute* at the
Bay theater the other afternoon while n guoet of
Manager Rufua Honeycutt than we could have
learned from reading to htatory book*
Lowell Thomas. the motrlf*commentator, took u*
tram Pearl Harbor to *urrender day with picture*
and map* blowing the high apou of the war with
thr * • *
It i* a great festt re We had our money'* worth
when th» showing waa over and tUpprd out the aide
door of thr theater without finding out that Spencer
wrote in nuch a vein an to indicate that it
waa Secretary Grey who in judiciously
influenced President Truman to accept the
Japanese surrender terms and that con-
gress wasn't unanimously behind the move.
The country has become a little upset at
the trend of the situation since the war
ended. Every statement coming out of
Japan indicates that the Japanese are hope-
ful of merely getting their breath before
striking out again. *,
But is all of this criticism fair? If Grew,
who was our last ambassador to Tokyo,
does not know more about the Japanese
than any other man. to whom could the
president turn in this time of stress'*
We have the Japanese surrender. It is
up to us to make the terms of the cessation
of arms so tough that Japan can NOT
strike back within a decade or two. even
if she does want to—and expect to.
America is not excusing Hirohito by al-
lowing him to remain in the saddle. There
is no doubt but that he has more influence
with the Japanese people than any one else.
We can use him in our plans. We can
reach the Japanese people through him.
And when he has served our purpose, there
wifi then be time for further action.
The fact that Secretary Grew submitted
his resignation so soon after the war and
even before the formal surrender is rea-
son enough to believe that much behind the
scenes activity has been going on in Wash-
ington.
But as this country exhibited faith in its
leaders during the fighting, it must* now
place its faith in the leaders after the fight-
ing has ended. It is egsy to criticize from
afar, but even Washington columnists with
all of their pipelines to news sources should
give the Truman administration a chance
before it acclaims it as a failure.
attack. ..Tracy and Katharine Hepburn were starring in •
m« called “Without Love." ,
Thi» movie attempt* to portray the atom bomb
and to show how It waa perfected
When they got through describing, we didn't
know a bomb from atom.
But that waan t the picture ahow * fault. It tried.
PINKING "IIE4KS
JUST TO SHOW you how thing* you haven't
tern can upset the utuation Cheater Roger* walked
\Church
Thl»
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
June* turned to Sukey
n member of your family V
“Yea, my *i*t*r 8uaanne.
la Mr Jonce. Sukey"
Sukey laid the red bok.down and
made a bobbing curttoy Then her
eye* reproached him “Your man
chatcd u« off your place one day
yen he did!"
He laughed "Now that * too
bad He had ordera of court*
There* been a lot of riffraff flak-
ing up there "
He ignored Sukey and returned
to Eleonora “And have you and
your delightful grandmother been
wen**
noon, and It
crackling, aplutterln*. and atiMr
“la thi* signals I've heard it off and on terror loomed
Would be tin,
foTsweek I thought »ine# you're "I feel sniffy," Hid q.
to near, you might be letting It, when they were land* *!
too." btva aat on that bead
"Perhapa we haven't had the *“
radio on at that time What do you
think It la?*
Clem * too long I m Koi» u!
a hot toddy and go right iL J
He lowered hi* voice. “I think
eieei'a khril
"YeaMhank you; and you?"
someone» abort-waving In coda In
our neck o' the wood* Juet you
and tho*e big folk. Uvc bejond u*
•Tin not doing it" She laughed
on a tremulou* note.
lent he" No. It* someone who
come* out there because It a safe,
and blasts the program off the air.
"Won’t you eal somethm,
“I don’t want a thing jW
ian't it dismal all the.
raama! Mamie didn't nt*gka
her friend* this Sunday*9
that Orar. toddled up <,in
"So busy I've bean getting.up He shook hi* wrench. rid Ilk* to
here only for Sundays and my
wife* annoyed, say* I'm neglect-
ing her" .*
“And the* Improving?"
“I think so She should be able
to gel out aoon; perhapa have some
of her family up for a diversion."
Into the office the .other aftemoen with a pair of
“pinking shear*” that-belonged to hi* mother, She
SIGN ON DOTTEO LINE, PLEASE:
catch the no-nnd-*o! If It happen*
tonight I'm going to find out who’*
doing it."
'Take » gun, Clem," *he cau-
tioned. "and-have your wrench
handy"
Lafonde wrapped the bo* Sukey
^ ,0r **• Stefv. *'EI*onore.^*I Utlnk^Sfcl
they left the store.
They were a few yard#
when Sukey cried, "Oh, El
Lee And Reilly
Meet In Finals
Of Hardy Toumeyl
wanted him to get them sharpened.
We haven t been around much, and It waa proved
beyond a doubt because until that good hour we had
never before see a pair.
We wonder how many of you actually know what
a pair look* like Many of you do. of courae but
well bet marble* to chalk that many of you don't."
GRAB BAG
SENATOR IIOOVEK
THERE IS much talk lit California, we underatand,
to have former President Herbert Hoover appoint-
ed to the U 8 Senate to aucceed the late Senator
Hiram Johnson, Governor Warren of California
will make the appointment, and he la a Republican
»o the appointment could be made.
There are many arguments to aUptfolt »uch a
move. There is no doubt hut that the experience of
Mr Hoover after the last war would be a great
help to thi* country after thi* war And naturally
hi* tenure in White Hou*e, though it did come at a
tim.- when the nation *ank into the depth* of the
world'* greatest depression, there still is no doubt
but that he gained plenty of experience that would
atand the government in good stead now.
There is an unwritten law and a silly' one, in-
cidentally- that a former, president should not be a
member of congress.
It i* true iha« over a century ago John Quincy
Adam* served several terms in the House of Rep-
resentative* after being president, and it is true
that President Andrew Johnson was elected to the
Senate after being president, but in most instances
Onr-Minule Test
1. What flower is traditionally
Easy Knowledg#
judgment you really, ran trust.
Howard Lee Baytown Ha
district *alqs and motor tn
supervisor, ha* fought hu t
to the final* of the tv R |
golf tournament «! the
club, and he now face,' n*j
Lawrener Reilly in the
Howard entered she to a
from the depths of the
ripped it, and did not look up 8u- morrow if he stop* for gas. and let ^**vI-*'Vs'*
bev ran lo the enunlrr and nicked tom looK into It." w M H»Ny. tl
away
... I did
it again? Forgot the shoe*, left
them on the counter ”
They returned, opening the door
just as Lafonde handed Jones
" untry sEMl" of Fifth Column-
ists! I've meant to report that
radio stuff.”
Eleonore asked. "So you mean to
tell the police T
“That’s it. But I've been so Ymsy
thick package of letters. Jones here with no helper tell you what
dropped them. In his brief case, J || do I'll hail that big shot to-
supposed to be held by a corpse'
J. What have the following ar-
ticles in common buckler, greave,
hauberk, gauntlet, gorget?
3, By what names wort the up-
per and the lower classes of Rome
■■referred.-to?'. .
Hint* on Etiquette
Chndlcs are not used on formal
luncheon tables.
Ilortmeope fur Sunday
Strong emotions, an observant
and absorbing mind, and a love for
Word* of W isdom
Mercifulness makes
the gods. Claudian.
peace and harmony in r^JI relations
are your dominant traits. You are
us equal to
considerate, sympathetic? quick in
key ran to the counter and picked
up her parcel
Lafonde nodded
"Did you notice," asked Sukey,
That Mr Jones didn t nay, *Oome
over to see- the bearers any time
you want to-?*'
"It means just one thing. Sukey;
he doesn't wgnt us trespassing/’
That fleeting glimpse of the
package of letters exchanged, top-
ping what .she already knew, what
Today's Horoscope
You have a keen logical mind
capable of great, reasoning powers
Your courage, self-assurance and
anger, yet equally quick to forgive could be neater? Stamp collectors,
and forget This Sabbath, when you rceciving foreign mall, passed un-
are celebrating a birthday, the hour suspected. Messages from Berlin
of meditation and prayer at church could be forwarded'bearing South
services should give you a light American stamps Wa* the sta-
that glows within you, add bring tionery shop a “letter box’ for
you joy and happiness. Do a kind Fascists? Was Lafonde lending
faculty for handling people suggest service for another while in this hire*elf to it unwittingly, or was
n-old custom has been held to tenaciously.
I resident Roosevelt shattered custom by being
elected president of the United States four times
Why could not Mr. Hoover set a new precedent on
hi*'own. He can with Governor Warren's best
wishes.
that you are a born leader. Your mood;
hobbies are of the intellectual and
cultured nature. Outside sources
of help may come to you to bring
closer the goal nearest your heart
If you need help, advice, or coun-
sel, seek it from someone Whose
One-Minute Test Answer*
1 The lily.
2. They are parts of men’s ar-
mor.
3. Patricians, plcbians.
him look into it.’
Consternation , spread over her
fare “You mean B Stead Jon»»’“
“Yeah, he* in the know Hed
be interested a* mueh a* we are."
"What make* you think to?" she
demanded "Clem, what do you
know about this Jone*”"
• Huh. he* not German . . . he
looks all right4'
“How can we be sure he is?”
Clem pulled a carrot lock ami
Said, "four# pretty cautious"
'High time we all were Wed
better be cautious, if we dont
want to be Norway or France'"
“You're on your ear about some-
thing."
Eleonore took the heat out of
her tone "It occurred to me that
a stranger wasn t the proper per-
"You look non to go to with Fifth Column ac-
tivities"
He gave a wry' smile and nodded
slowly as be went back to the
job on her ear Again her eyes
sought the cavern advertising sign
“PM
?#r (A
Barclay On Bridge
and her mind fisa* off on its inter-
Isn
ANOTHER BIG THREE
THREE FORCES caused the capitulation of the
Japanese. One was the atom bomb, another the al-
lied naval forces which daily were tightening the
steel blockade around Japan. The third was the en-
By Shephard Barclay
We have not gone too far but that we can , try of Russia into the war
still take steps that will make the first Jap- We 811W thls very exte,lenlly sct out in a tarloon
anese empire the last. The end is to pre-
vent a recurrence of the war. The means
may well include use of the Hirohito. if he
can help. ■ »• • .-■---
Oddly enough, many a square deal has
resulted from a round table discussion.
The popular dinner guest these days -is
the fellow who never takes sugar with his
coffee.
in an eastern newspaper.
It showed a Jap hanging to the limb of a tree by
his hands and feet. A bulldog was nipping at the
seat of • his pants. The dog was entitled, “Allied
Naval Faeces"
' Just above the limb, from which the Jaf> was
hanging was a smaller limb from which a yellow
jacket nest was hanging. This nest was labeled:
"atomic bomb." •
Walking out the limb of the tree (with his head
only in the pieturei was the ferocious looking Rus-
sian Bear.
That's rough going, ain't it a buildog nipping at
to emit, and a bear aiound for goed measure.
No wonder tjicy quit. . ' ’■• * si
News Behind The News
thwarting a squeeze
EXCEPT WHERE it is a mat-
ter of pure tuck, a squeeze by a
fine cardsman is seldom defeated
except as the result of splendid
card reading Much of the moat
advanced form of that practice
can be described as ‘'potential
oard reading." The mind works
something like this: "If the de-
clarer holdii'such and such cards,
as he very well can. then he can
execute a squeeze against me or
against what my partner probably
holds " That, is. unless you break
up the chance for his little scheme
by making just the right defensive
play.__:___________.—,—_
« J65
v A 10 6
_ 4AKQ8IA
+ 10 ■
tittle woman star studied firs!?
That diamond suit in dummy, plus
the heart A. made it clear that
seven tricks could be run in a row
If he led a heart. That would be a
potential squeezing situation
against whatever East held.
. Study showed that, if South
Seid the club A and the J or 9,
together wifh the heart Q or J,
the dummy Could have a perfect
squeeze against Ea*t when the
last diamond was led. Actually,
dummy would then have held the
heart 10, diamond 4 and club 10,
East the heart K and club K-Q,
and South the heart Q and club
A-9 When'the last diamond was
led. East would lie squeezed. It
he threw the heart K, the club 9
would be discarded. If he tossed
he one of the slimy crew”
Sukey nudged her.
mad, El."
Her sister snapped herself back
from her grim thought* to the
reality of her small sister, "Do I ?"
"Now you’re smiling:" Sukey*
tone wa* relieved.
As they approached the theater,
they saw Grandma seated in a
high-backed red chair near the
ticket box. Oblivious to curious
stares of the crowd, she had a
contented expression as she
munched gumdrops from a paper
bag
"Leave, it to Gran!” sail Eleon-
ore "She's made one of the ushers
bring out a chair for her "
"Guess they think she * a Per-
sonal Appearance!” giggled-Sukey,
"You-needn't have hurried,” said ;------—-........
Gran. "Does a body good to sec ■ *ng Ih® door pnd running in to
crow-ds once in a while ” rhi‘*f plint "
J. in the final* A two
of the red hot Jake Kutttr i
ed to pit him against tin (
boss
Reilly eliminated luipjt |
less. 2 and J, to win thr |
flight; He then won from (I
Robinson, S to 3, to gam the j
rtmnd vf the playoff-
Rutter defeated i. L Hit,
to win nieond High! hoaohl
Robinson bent R 1. Hilait]
wm in the third flight
The tournament t* a wttki
of schedule indicating that j
terest In competitive golf a j
club is staging a muilsg i
back after the war
An announcement *u t-|
made later today by Tourna
Chairman Java Mooney *ha|
match will be played
Texans Rap Sooner
Staters 13 To 0
rupted evploratl
In a ravine on the Wolffe place
- a ravine with enormous’ rocks
piled helter-skelter by some glacial
convulsion w-as a roomy cave
called Tories'. Three of them,
hunted, had lived there during the
Revolution, so the legend said The
trucks, which Bill Steuben told of
could be .storing stuff in Tories’
Cave ...
“Your car is ready." Clem an-
nounced. "Ami right now I'm lock-
see
Chiel Plant’'
Eleonore beamed her approval.
The Lawfence* (hugged easilly
toward home along a wooded way.
a likely pface for short-waving! .. .
The Lawrence house cuddled on a
WICHITA FALLS Aug II
Superiority in overhead tactial
day wa* cited as thi i ontrita^
factor in the Texas ait-sun(
packed 13-0 victor, om
homa’s schoolboy all-star tii-m
the tij.1 Bow! classic ntghtl
With August IV .’ of WxT
Falls in rare form (he Ta
rated the underdog
betting, took to the air Usa|
the first and las’ quarter*tel
wash the Sooner state gmfj
fore 8.000 fans*
off a club, the hf«r» .-a.aa w» dooondahle an a home and buggy "
"How waa the picture??
"Oh. my my wonderful,” en-
thused Mrs. Lawrence. "He rode
right over a cliff when he was
chased by bandits! Exactly as our
great-great-grandpa Eleazar did in level place . and, even though
pioneer days near iPttsburgh! Only Dumbo barked a frantic welcome,
he was chased by redcoats or, was a fog seemed to close in on her
it redskins??___________, as shed rove into the yard They
As the jalopy started in a dila- were so isolated, so unprotected, so
tory fashion, Gran added, "I've ringed round with woods, so near
always said these things weren't as to sinister neighbors,
MIKE FRANSSE
STATE RESERVE
“licr.Mr Before You Uif j
Phone 2.-8 !
KQ4
BY PAUL MALLON
$95
♦ J 95
*8 7 4 3
N
W E
S
4 8 3 2
f K J 8 32
♦ 2
+ KQJS
~ napped” god
WASHINGTON Behind the whole tricky dealing
of the Japanese to obtain a preferred position for
their . emperor lay:......rathcr- convindng .evidence.....of.
thc plot to perpetuate beyond our western under-
standing the Japanese system, which brought on
Pearl Harbor.
In fact, the simplest and most easily obtainable
farts haded verification to certain high congression-
al suspicions that maintenance of the emperor in
any position could well give the Japs a better
nucleus upon which to build future world trouble
than the Nazis were able to get.
The Truman • administration quieted these in-
creasing congressional doubts by passing along the
inside word that Mr. Truman looked upon any sat*
isfactory surrender as, in eventual fact, uncondi-
tional-apparently regardless of the standing of
the emperor, a* long as we held control
To the Japs, however, tjpe emperor is the top god
In a list reputed to run to about 500, or no matter
where he sits, even if under Mr. Truman’s chair.
Foothold Of Christianity
May Help Remaking of Japan
WHILE THE
militarists built the emperor god
theory up out of ancient legends to its highest peak,
conflicting Organized beliefs have gained footholds
there including the Christian concepts of reason,
right and wrong. A census before the war showed
2,104 Christian churches, 108,000 Buddhist temples
and 110,431 shinto shrines. There is no communism
in Japan above ground. The foothold of Christian-
ity, therefore, is quite clearly the one upon which
we should build, (
4 10 9 7
¥Q74
♦ 10C 3
A 9 6 2
These are the reasons why the increasing num-
ber of congressmen, (including one of the highest
administration leaders! were biting their lips dur-
ing the latest hectic stages of Mr Truman's nego-
tiations. They, were wondering how much of a job
he had left himself to clean up later, when the final
document is analyzed in complete detail.
,Deale?: North East-West vul-
nerable,)
North East South West
1 ♦ Pass 1 NT Pass
3 NT
West promptly ran ofT four
spade tricks and took good notice
of East’s heart * discard on the
last one But. instead of slavishly
obeying that signal, this brilliaui-' Overcoat”?
carded and the two clubs would
finish the hand.
Having figured that out. West
then decided that the best way to
break it up would be to lead a
club She chose the 3. That severed
later communication between the
North and South hands, so that it
was Impossible to aqueeze East.
As a consequence, violation of
East's high heart signal enabled
West to set the contract one, no
matter what South might have
tried to do.
Chirk up then," sid Eleonore.
"for those days arc coming back
fast"
Eleonore missed Mamie’s cheery
presence. MamTe’s Triend* wormt-
bring her home tomorrow night It
s’cemcd a long time to Eleonore,
Eleonore's car signaled distress burdened as she was with dark
whenever she paused lor a light, knowledge. Night would be here
the engine finally stopping. An ob- - - .......—........ •
liging truck driver shoved her until
CONE'S PHARMAC
Come in and
■ Try the-
Zeniffi
Hearinq Aid
West Texas at Gilliswi
Y our Week-End Question
Why do veteran bridge player*
often call the spade suit "ih*
DAILY CROSSWORD
Looking At Life
Top Jap Ambition May Be
To "Reestablish” Hirohito
By Erich Brandeis
THEIR ESTABLISHED religious 'theory would na-
turally hold that their god was in temporary dif-
ficulties In any subservient position. The national
Jap prbblem then would be to extricate him, and
restore him to his rightful position. Anyone stand-
ing In the way, Uke Mr. Truman of an American
would be a sort of devil who had kid-
A Bridgeport, Conn., haberdasher advertises:
‘The fact that men don’t use make-up proves that
they arc vainer than women -they really think they
don't need it."
The whole superstition could be proved a fake
and delusion to the Japanese if respect for reason
could be restored there, by a factual research into
accurate history of their diefied dynasty research
by their own people. Japanese intellectuals, who
long since discovered that the line back to the
sun goddess was not only broken but shattered by
many historical incidents, have been shushed ef-
fectively by the emperor's clan, meaning the ruling
classes, who may change faces from time to time
but never have changed their emperor story, which
was the excuse for their authority and cxistance.
Their trumpery, in turn, would be just as easy to
prove and display The Japanese people have been
required to believe, as a co-matter of religion and
government, that the emperor picked his cabinets,
controlled the diet and held "complete executive'
and legislative powers" This pretense that he was
a Hitler was difficult to maintain with a straight
face at times, as the various ruling Japanese
groups controlled and pushed god first one way, , -
then another—In fact, wherever they wanted him, ,f
Who is vainer, man or woman? I have heard that
question asked a hundred times and I have heard
—any a-hcated-argument-aboutiL-- --------— —
Vanity docs not concern Itself with looks alone.
Make-up is not necessarily powder and lipstick and
• rouge. Any sham, any pose, any pretense is vanity.
A swivel chair might be make-up. The title of
vice-president is often just make-up. A loud neck-
tie is makeup. A mustache or a beard may well be.
Yes. men do use make-up. Women try to im-
press you with their beauty~in face, in figure, in
clothes, in social standing. Men also want to Im-
press you. But with them it is wealth, power, posi-
tion and strength. /
Just the other day a 80-year-old executive boast
ed about his fine physical condition.
"I’m as good as any 30-year-old" he said.
And to prove it, he got fiat down on the floor
and showed us how easily he could lift himself,
onlv his hands and his .toes remaining on the floor.
He did it 40 times but suddenly his nose started
to bleed and. although we tried everything to stop
ACROSS
1. Licks
0. Excess of
chances
9. Region
10. Measure
(Sp.)
11. Refuse of
grapes
12. Wicked
13. Portion of
curved line
14. Urge for-
ward
15 Kcr!-bit!cd
cuckoo I
17 Tellurium
(sym )
18. Fruits
21. Wit
24. Sorrow
25. Genus of
beetles
27. Organ of
sight -
28. Raveled
29. River (1U
31. Man's name
.>2.y\voiU
34 Confer
knighthood
Upon
3. Cotton cloth 22. Part of
4. American "to be”
Indian 23. Wander
5. Across about idly
6. Form of 25. Constclla-
crane lion
7. Passageway 26. Authorlta-
to a garage tiviveom-
8. Auction mand
14. Underworld 28. Expression
god of disgust
16. Medieval ' 30, Unit of
boat weight
18, Generation 32. Epic
dO. Lever —-—--poetry...........
20. Rhubarb 33. Suppose
Yesterday's A*«*e»
35. Part of iris
of eye
56. Moat excellent
38. Young bear "
she reached a down grade. She
was able to coast into Nelson’s
Clem Nelson, a young fellow who
lived less than a mife jielow them,
greeted them, then peered under
the hood of the flivver. The result:
"Something wrong with the igni-
tion,"
“How arc your wife and the
twins, Clem?" asked Eleonore.
“Pretty good,” said Nelson,
bringing up an electric bulb, “we’re
moving, you know. I’m going into
the army- tank division. Felt I
wanted to be in it, and Hannah’s
willing: she'll move into town with
her folks.”
Clem began to hammer. Eleonore
walked aimlessly back in the ga-
rage. She noticed a license plate
and a tin t&fsabove it. advertising
"HOWE'S CAVERNS." a familiar
slogan for some popular caves. Her
eyes grew dark with thought: Cav-
erns-caverns—caves! That could
be a solution to—
“Just thought of something" said
Clem coming toward her, wrench
in grimy han’d. “Are you ..having
any trouble with your radio these
nights?”
"No. Why?” •
"It happens about eight or nine:
Vitamin Concentrate
v CM/miL _
f W COM IA <41 'If, Vt I »MINS\
( DABCDGJ
-•5SJK£r.r.~s--
!>.YAtsRnr~v
If you ton'i k#*p up with lib
if tvary tffort stem* too r
for you—lot u* *ugfle*t
NYAl A-B-C-D-Oj
CAPSULES
Mm flvttfwnMol vitamim||
font up th# ntrvt*.
and tliminotive organi,
and muselt, skin ancl
pltxion.
Combined to on* »m«8 "’I1"*
to* of AA »**o»$P
25 07C 100
‘2.
SCARBOROUGH PHARMACY
Corner Goose Creek and
Phone 498
lMt
it the bleeding continued. We called a doctor who "7- Part of a
told the fellow he had a bad hemorrhage. window
"You apparently overexerted yourself” he said. 38, Cavern
“A man of your age should take it easy."
badly tightened ”
The establishment of reason in Japan will how-
ever, be the most difficult task because reason
never existed there. As part of its emperor gov-
ernment religion shintoism has no moral or ethical
cod*. The emperor, tar instance, is not required to
do what is right or good because he is a god. The
faith of shintoism ignores both logic and reason,
and the people arc supposed to be led by blind in-
A
The man was
the make-up, and now acts his age
He was taken 40. Shbshoncan
can afford is van:
*■ Keeping up Wth the Joneses is
a woman With too much rouge on
u . Indians
ity. A 41 Branch
rants is makeup,
no different than 1
her face.
That Bridgeport haberdasher was right in one
respect men are vainer than women. But he was
wrong in another men do use make-up, only they
n’t buy i
m I
DOWN
l.fibctan
priest
3 Samiarac tree
I
l
Z
4
1
s -
h
?,
9
i
1
0
1
iO
I
1
ff
1
I
■
'3
a
14
%
I
:
i
i
%
18
*9
20
i
i
21
12
n
4#
I
is
2<o
n
;;;
28
11
i
S.....
iO
Sff!
i
i
1
I
J2
p
3S
i
ST
1
i
M
1
4G
I
|
—
I
41
i
-» A
Five Years Ago
From Daily Sun Files
don't buy it in n drug store.
Today's headlines: British
Bombers Blast German Cities.
Roosevelt To Confer With Prem-
ier King.
British bombers smashed deep
into Germany last night and early
today as aerial warfare continued
over the British Isles with little
respite.
Shown on the front page today
is F. L. Muston, who has moved
to Cedar Bayou from Alvarado to
take uo his duties as successor to
G. L Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Traverso
were complimented with a house-
warming last evening at their
new Cedar Bayou home by Mes-
dames N. B. Cloud and J, H
Hulme.
Mr. and Mrs. James Harrop and
son. Bill left recently for a three
weeks visit In Massachusetts.
Mr. and Mrs. W C. Jones left
today on a two-weeks vacation
trip to be spent in Brady and
'
Members To
{Give Thanks
For Victory
:
-
1 ........-
Junction.
FOR SALE
NEIGHBORHOOD GROCERY
STORE
Established 20 Years
Excellent Reputation
n ■
Ml
Owner wants to retire
-
a
LY SUN
ill
mS
: v
Tri-Ciuc* churches, recognlsini
President Truman'S predsmntioi
EttoM ***** St*"**? M • <•* 01
I', imve planned ipoeialssrv
L, ,!mh .dl Tri-CtUans h,*v«
urged to attend for "prayer
u th«nk»|ivm» for victory and
ln,a 1,1 line*- of those who died
Priirilicvc It
Krv Ben Behrens, preiident o(
ki,t Tri-Cities Ministrlal alliance,
j sp,waled to everyone to go
„ ,hl. church of his choice "to
,« ih,ink* to the Almighty Ood
fcr ware and the victory Ms ha*
Uuited the alii#*."
BM-eml churches have planned
V.J dn) program* fa* Sunday in
Edition to the prayer sendees
Ji-hcr* see awaiting the official
Conation of V-J day- by the
prrddint before arranging the
LpKia! M-riiee*. ,
St. Paul’s
Lutheran Church
B«)t.iAn Community Building
jchsrclt School
mirine WomWp
.. 9:45 A M
. TliW A M.
SrniM.n Theme: "let t* Give
Thank*!*
YOU ARE WELCOME
J. A. Pietsch. Pastor
1211 \V Wright ' Phone 598M
REDEEMER LUTH
,4%
412 jK . Main
COME
Sunday Sr rv
Sunday S'
Remember
DISTINCTIVE F
The most modern and effieii
able to the profession is use
service a revelation of beau
source of abiding comfort a
rcaved.
TRI-CITIES FUNER/
INSTANT AMBULANCE
444 Phones
OPA RELEAS
Ration
From August 17 to
HUNDREDS
LADIES'
LEATHER
SHO
I
Many of These Shoes Are d( U
mm
ECONOMY M
■ -tirW.Tcx
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 56, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 18, 1945, newspaper, August 18, 1945; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028661/m1/4/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.