The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 27, 1945 Page: 1 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.
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BAY. NOVEMBER « „
BUSINESS SE»virt
t
■'V;- n ; ;V
htheR
Tri-Cities Glass -men—Fair, <'°o1 lonlghl mill Wort-
106 Cedar, Baytown p yesterday, 80 degree*;
PROTECT YOIW *■*»««' l»»t 46 d,’Kr','‘»-
SAFETY AuSSffi ■
installed^8
PROMPT SEftVlcg
Ode Sail!) Sun
DELIVERED DAILY
ANYWHERE IN THE
FOR 75c PER MONTH
f
Stock Trailers For Rs _
Body and Fender Wn , V
See Willie 0rk
jL 28 NO. 141
GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1945
FIVE CENTS COPY
Leslie James Gwaft
319 E. Adoue
1°HN d
Phone 8B3-M '-------
Oor A]' Typ«s Rad',
^Pick-up and Deliver
Hull Denies He 'touched
After Raid
Gulf Coast Electric Cil
Market and Pine u *"
Phone 1367-W
Wiring—Fixture*--8^
Angry Jews Denounce
British After Nine
Killed By Skytroops
Button' That Started War
TRI-CITIES PEST
CONTROL
We Kill all Insects and H™
Tdrmlte Special
Phone 514-J
412‘4
■. ,j*-
RBPRIOERATIOH
Commercial Sale* and l
_ C. R. ERICSON
Refrigeration Uervioa
Market St Road
Phone 9006-m
NAZI PILOTS GUIDED, then hailed out of V-4
jxinih. British troops are shown here inspecting
tbe piloted V-4 bomb in it* first photograph made
recently at it* fairly intact, well-eamnuflaged
hunching site at Tramin, Germany. Very similar
in de*ign to the V-l, which did terrific deslruc-
tion to Britiah cities, the V-4 differ* with addition
of a pilot who, from hi* canopied cockpit, guided
it toward the target and then bailed nut.
(International Soumiphoto)
J,W°CL^
’’tsrrLizvtL’
■ guaranteed radio |
repairs
Clarks Welding W«
Oil Field and Farm
Portable Equipment
Maintenance
Expert Craftsmanship
Qualified for all type* of
welding |
Clark BoUcin, Owner
1402 N. Goose Creek St
Phone 1410
IAW Declares G-M
iolating Labor Act
ly Refusing To Talk
Fierce Fighting
Continues To Rage
In Central Java
SERVEL ELECTROLU
Parts,,. Service
(ETROIT, Nov. 27. —(U.P.) — The United Automobile
ork'-rs union (CIO) accused General Motors corporation
if violating the National Labor Relations act today by ra-
ising to reopen negotiations on the union's demand for a
i per cent wage increase.
An ever-widening gap separated company and union
175,000 UAW members neared the end of the first week
their strike against G-M over the wage question. There
every indication of a . -
Divers Search
British Forces Open
Ground, Air Attacks
.All Slxti
Flashlight Eatteriei
Radio Batteries
Bicycle Baskets
Luggage Carrier*
Toys \
Electric Irons Rcpah
GEORGE I
Phone 2641
GOOSE CREEK
WELDING WORKS
|ong. bitter siege by union
peket? against General Mot-
rs unl-’ss the government can
dug tae dispiC—U together.
The corporation refu-ed test
I night tp reopen It* talk* with
[the union on the 36 per pent pay
I boost. G-M aI*o accused ihe
H AW of •■lawIcKMH-**" ill using
I “force and threat* of force” to
I bar supervisor* and clerical
I employes from most of the 93
nd G-M plant*. . -
[■Cbn*-ration officials said more
hui 80,000 non-striking office cm-
loycs had been forced into idle-
by the unyielding picket
For School Bus
And 15 Victims
.High Winds And Cold
Weather Delay Hunt
a Welder*’ Supplies
a Portable Equipment .
ertified Welders 24 YeuiJ
Oil Field and Retinery
Welding Experience.
[The union denied thorp had been
Kgai pickedng. and charged:
[ “Now the corporation has re-
ted to negotiate at nil on our
demand."^—-1’'
By HAKIIY I. CARLSON
FIRST CREEKy Wash , ?fcv. 27..
(T49- A little group of parents
huddled in common misery on the
shores of beautiful Lake Chelan
today; as divers resumed searching
for a school bus which carried 15
children and its driver to death
in the deep, cold waters.
■The tragedy, which on-tired yes-
BATAVIA, Nov. 27. tl’.R)-- Fierce
fighting was reported continuing
today in Central Java where Brit-
ish forces have opened both air
and sea attacks oh Indonesian ex-
tremists. W
Hard-pressed Indian troops were
reported battling new attacks
around Ambarawa where extrem-
ists have been beseiging 8,000 to
to,000 Civilians in an internment
camp.
British plane* strafed Indo-
nesian positions yesterday and
dropped Rod to the internee*.
The Netherlands news agency
reported that other ftAF planes
bombed an Indonesian strongpoint
in Semarang, 20 mile* north, while
the British heavy cruiser Sussex
shelled the villages of Demok and -
Ungaran west and south of the
port.
The Indonesian national conven-
tion in Batavia passed a resolu-
tion yesterday blaming the Brit-
ish for the events in'Java because
‘■they are trying to make a second
Manchuria of Java on behalf of
the Dutch."
JERUSALEM, Nov. 27. —
(U.P.)—A 30-minute Jewish
strike was called throughout
Palestine for 1:30 p. m. to-
day while villagers of the
Sharon valley mournfully
bjtried the nine men killed in
yesterday’s raid by 10,000
British airborne trqpp.s.
The Jewish council ordered the
demonstration in an atmosphere
of extreme tension which threat-
ened to break into open fighting.
“The battle has begun,” one Jew-
ish,leader shouted at a mass meet-
ing last night.
Meanwhile, the General Federa-
tion of Jewish labor in Jerusalem
revealed that it had cabled "last
minute" appeals to the American
and British, labor parties to help
settle the Palestine crisis.
The federation said none of the
Jews Involved in yesterday's out-
break were “armed and asserted
—that their opposition was "in full
harmony with the declared policy
of the Jewish community to resist ‘
the* seizure of Jews Who seek ref-
uge here." , -V
Continuation of the British pol-
icy, it added, “is bound to lead
to catastrophic consequences."
At leant. 92 person* were
wounded in the mass raid by
British infantry, supported by
armor and fighter plane*, on six’
.villages north of Tel Aviv in
search of Jewish extremists who
attackied two British coast-
guard stations. Eighty Jews
amT 12 policemen were wound-
ed.
At midnight the 10,000 British
troops which had swooped on the
Sharon valley returned to their
bases, easing dangers of an im-
mediate clash. The .curfew on
movement between villages was
lifted.
Nevertheless, passions touched
off by the raid were near the
flash point; Tension could only be
compared with that which existed
just before the battle of El Al-
amein, when the Jews feared that
the German army would,sweep
across Egypt to Palestine.
Mass meetings in Haifa lust
night condemned-the British amid
exhortations from Jewish leaders.
Poison Gas Ordered By Goering
Jodl Says Many Wanted Peace In 1943
many began manufacture of poi
son gaa on a mass baste more
than a year before the outbreak
of war, evidence at the war crimes
Wist retested today.
Orders to start turning out poi-
son gas on a massive scale were
issued by Hermann Goering on
July ,12, 1938, the evidence dis-
closed.
Production'was to be started at
a rate of 4,000 tons a month and
to ri*e to a rate of 8,000 tons a
month «by Qct. l, 1940.
The evidence was in the form of
V memoranda on basic facts about
the German war effort written by
of the Nazi military economy staff.
Thb poison gas project was
turned over to the huge I. G. Far-
ben-Industrie chemical trust to be
Tennesseean
Scores Army
Board Report
NUERNBERG, Nov. 27, dlRi -Gcr- Gen. George Thomas, former. chjcf ord a speech by Col, Gen! Alfred
Jodi made In late 1943 which re-
vealed that Adolf Hitler was then
refusing a growing demand by
enemies: -nisi 10 oc many influential Germans that he .... « j _ _
carried did. ITidWas" memoranda .tiff to hegdfTht(\ peace WitJT the W.5. Failure To OppOSd
disclosed that actual proouction United States, Russia and Brit- Jap Aggression Would
Jodi was speaking to a special
meeting of Munich party leaders
in an attempt to combat the wave
of defeatism in Germany,
"Up and down the country the
fell pomewhat behind the rate or-
dered by Goering due to shortages
of workers/machines and raw ma-
terials.
The Botes did not explain why
Germany failed to use poison gas
during the war. ^
The evidence was placed before
the war trials court by Sidney Al-
derman, assistant U.i S. prosecutor.
Alderman also reuri into the roc-
.dcvil of subversion strides," he
Bald. "All cowards are seeking a
way out. They say we must nego-
tiate while there is still something
(See Goering Ordered, Page 2)
McNamey Sees
Reich Occupation
Lasting 10 Years
American Commander
Holds First Press Talk
Hurley Bitterly Scores
U.S. Foreign Service,
Quits As Ambassador
FRANKFURT, Nov. 27. - (RRI—
Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, newly
designated commander of Ameri-
can forces in Europe, predicted
today that the allied occupation
of Germany would continue for
at least 10 years.
McNarney held hi sfirst press
conference since he was named to
succeed Gen. Dwight D. Elsen-
hower as commande rin chief of
U. S, occupation forces in Ger-
many, commanding general of U
S. forces in Europe, and Ameri-
can representative on the Allied
Control council.
The strict denazification pro-
gram in the American occupa-
tion We will continue, Mc-
Sarriey announced. This auto-
maticall.v squelched hope* of
WASHINGTON, Nov. 27. -(U.P.)—Patrick J. Hurley re-
signed today as U, S. ambassador to China with a charge
that professional diplomats in the state department are
sabotaging the basic principles of American foreign policy.
Hurley saidin a blistering critique of the U- S. foreign
service that “in diplomacy today we are permitting our-
selves to be sucked into a power bloc on the side of colonial
imperialism agairist communist imperialism.”
“There is a third world
war in the making,” Hurley
said
"Thr astonishing feature of our
foreign policy is the wide dis-
crepancy between our announced
policies and our conduct of inter-
national relations" he suid
"For instance, we began the war
with the prineiples.of the Atlantic
Charter and democracy as our
goal, Our associates in the war
Yamashita Against
Aggression; Tojo
Hated General
thousand* of German* far mitl- * at that time gave eloquent lip
Freak Wind Hits
Tri-Cities Area
nation of their onus and pun-
i*hnients on ihe ground of be-
ing merely ‘‘nominal” members
of the Nazi party.
Eisenhower, who will succeed
(See McNarney, Page 2)
REO.
East Aden* I
Highway Jg|
Phone T4W|
kUTO PARTS CO.
This, the unipi} claimed, was a terday during a snowstorm when
brthir violation" of the Nation- the vehicle struck a boulder on
the cliff-top country road and
plunged into tile lake, left four
of the families childless.
Two children were lost in each
of six families. Only five children
were left ali.e :n the entire,
sprawling rural area.
Despite the stunning accident,
one of the worst in the history of
Washington state, the Chelan
schools continued classes.
Awaiting in grim silence
Pelly
ne 459-W 6J6-17 Main !
I Ubor Relations act, Union df-
idils said they were notifying
National Labor Relations
«rd .
[ Meanwhile, 40,000 Fbrd Motor
npan.- workers faced a layoff
fonight for the rest of the week
satise of a shortage of parts re-
nting from strikes in supplier
Ms. The company will shut
ten its huge River Rouge plant
wtsidc Detroit and a number of
pMdiary plants until dext week,
Adams Miffed
Over E Bond
Purchases
Barn Wrecked, Plane
Damaged By Storm
Tri-Cities
Behind In
Bond Buying
By UNITED PRESS
“l/iBrieoKto'1 mn* fUo
fafaoff icial* emphasized that*<See Diver* Search, Page 2)
move was not connected with
t General Motors strike.
erator and Brake Shoe 1
igc. Floor Mats. 3 *Mj
Hydraulic Jacks. Fog >
ing Lights. A few gtmii
eton Spot Lights,
’lers,..“Built like a i
Pelly, Texas
ral Services Held
Mitchell Infant
Houston Police
Department Scored
’ A freak wind that at times
reached cyclone proportions dipped
’down at 5:30 p.m.'Monday about
three miles north of Goose Creek,
wrecking trUSrn arid damaging a
plane at the Tri-City airport.
A downpour accompanied by
’Miserable" was the word used hail followed the squall. It was
by Nathan Adam* of Dallas, state estimated that three inches of rain
chairman of the Victory loan, in fell in the area from the airport
describing Texas’ showing in the northward to Crosby.
• purchase of “E" bonds. Hailstones as large as baseballs
Adams referred to the record were reported to have fallen in l
which showed that Texas has Channelview, and residents along nieted a check-up of all war bond
bought only 30 7 per cent of its the Croshy-Mbnt Belvieu road said ;selllng agencies in the area.
....... ......fell in that sectip-
scryice to the principles of demo-
cracy.
“We finished the, war in the.
Far Ea*l furnishing leml-leasr
supplies and using ail 0111“ repu-
tation to undermine demoerae.v
mid Imlster imperialism and
. Communism.”
Hurley said that in the “high-
er echelon of our policy-making
officials" American foreign policy
is nearly always clearly defined.
But he said, 1‘It-is no secret that'
the American policy in China did
'Tiger' Bluffed British
Info Singapore Surrender
Have Been Cowardly"
WASHINGTON, Nov. 27. —
(U.P.) —U. S. failure to op-
pose Japanese aggression in
the critical days before Pearl
Harbor would have been
cowardly, former Secretary
of State Cordell Hull de-
clared today in a vigorous
defense of til* policies. ; ™
The white-haired and tremulous
Hull, 74 and ill, strongly defended
hi* prewar no-compromi*e policy
before the house-senate committee
investigating the Pearl Harbor de-
feat which plunged this country
into the conflict.
, In two previous appearances be-
fore the committee, Hull had tes-
tified in a faltering, barely audi-
ble voice about his effort* to pre-
serve peace in the Pfielflc. He had
denied repeatedly that a 10-point
statement of U. 8. principles ha
gave: the Japanese on Nov, 26,
1941, "touched the button" that
started the war.
Today he was questioned again
about the charge, formally made
last August in an army board re-
port on the Pearl Harbor disaster.
Hull vigorously rejected the
charge and hurled at hi* accus-
ers the declaration that they
did not know what they were
talking about.
His eyes snapping. Hull aaid
that to express himself as he felt
like doing, he would • want all
“religious-minded people to retire”
from the hearing room.
He said he had “sat under this
Infamous charge for months ”
•• i,„ ...
* I
I a
i
"MANILA, Nov. 27. d'fi : Geh.
Tomoyuki Yamashita was opposed
to aggression, thought war against
the allies woiiTd be “very unsatis-
factory" and was hated by form*
■ft Premier Hideko Tojo, a char-
acter wifness-testified at his war
crimes trial today. : .
•The witness, a Japanese attor-
ney. Keioho Yoshido, jvho flew,
here from Tokyo, said Yamashita
was a reformist. '.
"And yet." he added, ’’somebody
who knows little and cares less
about the question asks why
didn’t., the United States make
concessions and save us from
Any “rational person.” looking
(See, Hull Haps, Page 2)
Orlando Refuses
Italy Premiership
Tri-Citians today lacked about
$88,000 in reaching their quota
of Victory oopds, according to
Hugh Echols, Jr., chairman .of the
East Harris County Wirr Finnnce
committee.
Quota for the. area is $700,000
and the sum realized i.s JtiH,027.75.
Chairman Echols Monday com-
World War I Leader
_______ . , ______ ‘Tojo hated him immensely,"
not have the support of al.) the Yoshido said. "It is common kmwl-
carcer men in the state depart- edge that Yamashita opposed Tojo
ment." and aggression. When Yamashita ------ ------■
“The professional foreign serv- returned from Germany and Italy • DodaeS 'Critical Jeb
«• -OWI the 41MMMS ,n |94I ho said war against the ■
United States and Britain would be
very unsatisfactory,"
Tear* lulled down Ihe rlcfend-
anf* cheeks as the whitc-suit-
-X Hous-
ice‘ men sided with the .Chinese
Communists armed party arid i lie
imperialist bloc of nations whose
policy it was to keep China diyiii-
ed against herself " he said.
“Our professional diplomats con-
tinuously (uivised the Communists
that nry efforts in*preventing-- the
collapse of - the national govern-
........... «.n Bquota. h..v» hall Ml ,n .ha. ««-. ,«.!• 7,t“lW ....... Z
Texans were urged to buy . Md hgll fall Intermittently of Nov. 2t was set at $700.000,“ Uc *ai.l I lie profcs.ioual dipla- -^^ta * profeWton-,
bond*, only in tribute to the over all East Harris county Mon- Echols noted, “so wr are just mats also advtefd the Chinese-
state’s own 36th. division "These , about $86 000 short of our quota, UbmniuriiHt* iml lo accept uni-
men kept faith with us,"Adams While the storm raged north of or about one week behind. final ion with the Uhiuese Na*
said. ' • Goose Creek Monday night,_there “We rtilf have ,a long wav- to ,1(1Iia| am,> unless the t’om-
-1- * — * go in this bond drive, and .all of nmiiist<‘ were given control.
tlie big sources of bond buyers are , q requested the relief of the co-
al ready in," he said.
ed Yoshido told of Yamashita’*
"high reputation” in hi* home-
land.-—
‘“rhe homeland folks have the
"in every county in Texas,"
Adams continued, "the men arc.
was only a slight shower from Ce-
dar Bayou road southward to East
Fayle street.. In the heart of town
) CARS
ill or trade 1941 Hy
)bile. Like new, new i
avers. Will trade for 3
) truck. Can be seeBJ
-Cravens Lumber
Jaytown, or call S80._
ade for good truck or •
foot Fruehaff trailer r
res. Apply Jessee
in, Baytown. ®
EEF™
West Columbia. The service was
id at .the graveside at Cedar-
:«st remetqry with Rev. J. M
Jr„ pastor of Pelly Meth- four"SJlicemen to a grand
" * ' ' j„ry He claimed the beating oc-
curred when he was picked up on
ment. - - measuring stick of success or fall*
Its snorts writer was preparing use of any loan drive, the E bond
to carry his charges of being beat- figures are a sad ‘thank you' to
en and choked into unconscious? these vettfMxjyl—
lift church, officiating.
Survivors include the parents
uid three aunts, Mbs. H. G. Evans,
pMorrell Park; Mrs. Robert Rey-
iolds of Pelly and Mrs. L. L-
fm, of Goose Creek.
HOUND TOWN
SED CARS
TOP PRICES
ck Saunders
Baytown
I pay more
Get My Price
y Make, Any Model
Iring Your Psper*
A. T. COLE
Texas
Hie Tri-Cities: Roy H. Rowland
jcles by the office for a paper
l«er missing one yesterday •
"'I Bill Robbins being pressed to
“s a hurried errand by Little Bill
Mrs. J. B. Tapp is back in
Wn after a vacation . . .Lt, M.
•Jack) Jacobs is back home
Ijwt the wars . . '. Ditto Cpls
fominy Rochelle and Al Taylor
They all look most “ftttin
a speeding charge and taken to the
police station.
In a front page editorial, en-
titled ’'Blackjack Law and Qrder,
the Houston Post today said: -
"We have seen Mood on the
floor at headquarters (police) too
many times. . „ ...
"We have seen the cruelty bat-
tered heads and faces at prison-
ers at the city jail. -
"And we have seen the, dead car-
ried from their cells."
The newspaper then advocated
A major shakeup in the police or-
Father Kills Self,
Chinese Reds Say Three Children
Yanks Wounded
h In,"
"We have had substantial pur-
chases from employes of the Bay-
town refineries of the Humble Oil
and Refining company, the Hous-
ton Lighting and Power company,
the Southern Pacific. The South-
western Associated Telephone
company, arid- Shaw jewelry,’;
Echols disclosed,
“I r'eqi
((See, H
Hurley Denounce*, Page 3)
TSG Headquarters Group
Called To Meeting
Three Building
Permits Issued
ADA, Okla., Nov. 27. U'.PJ- Robert
W. Pierce, 40, took his three small
. children for a Sunday automobile
CHUNGKING, Nov. 27. tilRI- -Chi- rj^e shot them to death one by
r one. then turned the gun on him-
Shck's government planned to self, police said today,
maintain an army of 4,506,000 men The bodies of Pierce, Emily, 2;
and claimed that U, 8. troops had 7, and - faur-months-oid
been wounded in a battle of Chi-
52 Felony Theft
Cases Solved
Throe permits for -construction
of business structures have been
All members of tile headquarters
detachment of the 76th Battalion,
Texas State (Jiuiii, must leport
tomorrow at 7 30 p m, at the
Ashbcl Street , headquarters in
Goose Creek,
Lt. Bill .Hamilton, commanding
officer of the detachment, will be
in charge of the meeting
All members must (Urn in, tlieir
ROME, Nov, .27. U’.H! Victor Em-
manuel Orlando, Italy’s world war
one leader, took himself out of the
Italian political crisis today with
the announcement, that he would
not serve as premier in a new co-
alition government.
Orlando forestalled an unofficial
move to posh him-ihto the; ptem-
jersjiif) by ioforming Crown Prince
Humbert that lie would rpfusc the
post if it were offered officially.
His decision was announced af-
ter a series of conferences with
leaders of the various Italian po-
litical parties had uncovered strong
left hi rig opposition to -his ap-
pointment.
Funeral Services Held
For W. H. McKinney
issued by the ,Ci|y of. Goose Cregk equipment at the session. Arcan-
since November 1. gemonts will also he .made for a
A veterinary^ hospital will be "farbweii -to- anw”'
dinner.
ganization. „ .
The charges of the sports writ-
Dan Cook, Jr., followed by "
na’s civil war. . , - -
A Communist pres* release is-
sued here said an "undetermined
number" of Americans attached
to nationalist battalions had been
wounded during the battle of YL
Yuan Kow, 10 days ago. Yi Yuan
Fifty-two felony theft cases have
hc-en solved by the Bant Harris
county branch of the sheriff's de-
partment in the past seven weeks,
" ’ C. Spence said
Courtesy C itizen* National Bank * Trust Oa
Bobby were found yesterday, ly- .........
ing on a blanket which had been Deputy Sheriff H.
spread neatly in a small grove of today,
trees 300 yard* from the family's Most of the thefts occurred out-
parked car. All four had been side East Harris county and were
shot in the head. cleared up with the arrest of men
Police Chief Dudley Lester said for theits 'in'the Tri-Cities area, creek street for the Martin estate.
■ built oh Highway'146," near East , . ......
James avenue, by Dr,.N. R. Naylor. — _ / . .^r- _ .'-j
VJ7S Close Today
approximately *3,000. —— — ..............-~
Dr. H. L. Kessler received per- -
mil fof Construction of. a dental
clinic at 104 W. Main. So! Aron, Allied Stores
contractor, estimated tile cost at American Radiator
*1,500. ; American Telephone
A tin. shop, 25 by 70 fact in size, Anaconda Copper
is under construction at the cor-
ner of East Fayle and North Goose
Last rites for W, H. (Will) Mc-
Kinney, 70. of Cedar Bayou, were
held at 3 p.m. today from the chap-
el at Paul U, Lee funeral home.
McKinney died at his home Sun-
day night after a long illness.
1
1'
1
h 1’ '
l
' i-
r
J j 1
j,:
1
Uiii
National Dairy .........
North American Aviatio
ssAaesrrjr
teday . . . He'did ah right too
Strickier tells about some
•aits for the day ahead • • • R°h-
Strickland iohg striding down
I™ avenue with the tallest man
“ town . Have you ever heard
Herbert Duke speak French?
John Shearer is taking ail the
counciimen were seeking to dis-
rharge the city manager, John N.
Edy The mayor and counciimen
held a secret meeting yesterday
bat all declined to'discuss what it
concerned- .
CASH
Your Car
Pelt for Mrs. Sheared*.* garden
Tain’l f«ir lAhn WilbUt*
lay - Bring PaPerf]
ftill Pontiac Co,
T&in't fair, John .•®f. Wilbur
’ about, the busiest man in town
-at the moment.
Ben Griffin, USS Houston yohin-
set foot on good American
*rra‘n at Boston this week end
the first time in the U. S. in
flr<c years . . . Dudley McMicken
jn the states again,
•tly phoned bis mother
HI NABOR
By Gliri Miller
about 30 miles northwest of Shan-
kaikwan. .
At the same time the Commun-
ists asserted that the central mili-
tary government budget for next
year amounted to $260,000,000,000.
and that steamers of the Minseng
Steamship Co., largest concern op-
erating on rivers of interior Chi-
had been seized for military
xi-1
dren and then the baby, burglaries at Channelview, all
S- ’*•' rsS,."7™r,Sl,L0? Tri-Cities C-C To Be
Organized Tonight
older children and then
His own
and Janette's,
Mrs, Pierce, distraught over the
tragedy, said her husband had
been a railroad dispatcher until
last week whqn illness had forced
nm appearefdisco^sXte mJeW <>f clothing and cash from Rachel’s merce will be held at Robert^E.
noi appearea aisconsoiaie, nowev r-honn.lviout 7^.,,
parts,
Spence said! , : .
Two negroes, A. D. Forte and
Oliver Kidd Jackson, have been y
charged with burglary and felony The organization mcefitng
theft in connection with ttfa theft tm^J>(-CiUes Chamber of Com-
purposcs, Minseng owns appro:
mutely 90 steamers;
y Rochelle and J. D
back with the birds
Mlars . , , Sam
Wile Toups wot
-6 m°re^Uf *
When » M»f
fays, "I
fool," he
ein’t thinking
— he’s won-
dering.
ON TERMINAL leave
Lt; Roscoe Zlerletn is at home
on terminal leave and will re-
ceive bis discharge from the navy
air corps early in January.
Lt. Zlerlein’s most recent as-
signment was on Saipan. Previ-
ously he had been in the Aleutians
and other sections of tHe Pacific
theater. He has been in the navy
for almost four year*. «
Eisenhower And Nimitz
Are Given Senate Okay
WASHINGTON, Nov. 27. -(U.lt)
—The .male tale yesterday con-
firmed the nomination* of Gen.
Dwight D. Elsenhower to he U.
■S. army chief of staff, and
Adm. Chester W. Nimitz to be
chief of naval operation*. Both
men were bora in Texas.
store al Channelview
•Two while men are held in jail
today in lieu of bond on charges
“of automobye theft, Spence said.
The Harris county grand- jury
has Indicted Melvin Akins, negro,
on two car theft charges and two
charges are pending against, him.
Also indicted by grand Juries of
Harris and seven other counties
for theft* of tires are H. L. Prade,
of Houston; Ollie Hughe#. George
Wilson,, Sam Mbxie and Wjllie Lee
l-awrsnec, all negroes, of Houston.
At least 20 felony theft charges
hav^ been filed against them.
Lee High school auditorium at
7:30 p. m. today. v ?-
Members M the Goose Creek
and Baytown Chambers of Com-
merce, n«w members of the Tri-
Cities Chamber of Commerce and
ali business men of the Tri-Cities
not, belonging to the new organ-
ization have been asked to at-
tend.
Twelve new directors will be
named at the session, and this
group will name a slate of of-
ficers and appoint additional di-
rectors to help administer a new
program that will be worked out.
I American Mar&cuitm
Be:key and Gay . .......
Bethlehem Steel
» Chrysler Motors ____
Cities Service .. ______
Commercial Solvent
Consolidated Aircraft ,. „
Curtiss-Wrighf ,. .......
Du Pont .. ;.. ......
Eaton ,. . ...............
Electric Bond' and Share ...
Electric Power arid Light
Freeport Sulphur
Genera! Electric .........
General,Motors ;.......
Graham Paige .....
Greyhound ....... ?.........
Gulf Oil ........
Ho. Li. and Power Co. .
Houston Oil ..............
Hudson Motors .. .,.,.,
Humblt Oil _____
Jones and Laughiia .
Kroger Grocery .....1.....
Kirby Pet ..................
Louisiana Land ............
Loriliard ..................
Murray Corporation .......
Nash Kelvinator
Ohio Oil
Paokard Motor*
Pure Oil . . . .
Reed Roller Bit* .
Republic-Steel;, ...
Rustless Steel .,.
Sharpe and Dohme
SkelVy
Southern Pacific
94%
12%
20V
m
23%
29 5i
27H
2644
23 4»
19
_
_
______
Sperry, Corporation “A,.
Standard Broads .. .........
Standard OU of. Indiana ____
Standard Oil of New Jersey
Sun ray Oil ____T.7.....:.....
Texas Corporation ____,
Texas Gulf Sulphur ........
Tidewater Corporation ......
T-P Larid and Trust
T-P Coal and Oil ............
United .Aircraft ____. .......
United Corporation
United States Steel ........
Walworth ..................
Western Union
White Motors .
Wilson Company
SS ;.........
Premier
St. .
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 27, 1945, newspaper, November 27, 1945; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028758/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.