The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 76, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 12, 1944 Page: 6 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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9
By Fred Hartman
'suet of
West Republic." And by "we’ 1
THE DAILY SUN. GOOSE CHEEK. TEXAS
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER IuA^daY, SEPTEMBER 12. V
Wt MOS'f
MAKE- HASTE,
MEIM TUtBCt12*
With the end of the war in sight, people
are beginning to think of the day when
readjustment to peace can be made. Part
of that readjustment must include a new
conception of the United States in relation
to the rest of the world. Hereafter, the
problems of the world are our problems.
If there is another war, we will be in it.
It is our responsibility to help lay the
foundation of enduring peace by seeking
to re-establish equal trading opportunity
and free markets. Admittedly, this may
take time, but failure means another world
and another world war,
opfntondf J. B. Condliffe, Professoc of Eco-
nomics in the University of California, who
declares that: “The whole case for.expand-
ing international trade is that there is gain,
not loss, to the national economies partici-
pating in such trade. In the circumstances
of the immediate postwar period it does not
require much reflection to realize that not
Iocs but disaster, is threatened if the chan-
nels of trade cannot be re-opened prompt-
ly. There is little chance of a relatively
smooth conversion from war to peace econ-
omy unless this conversion can be carried
out in an expanding system of internation-
al collabor
oration.
‘Tn the successive emergencies of recent
years so. much stress has necessarily been
laid upon the regulation of all sorts of
* jriices ... that the more important neces-
sity of maintaining active and healthy mar-
kets has come to be forgotten. The foun-
dation of prosperity is abundant production
and free interchange, not nicely regulated
equity.
“It is, as unrealistic to consider national
^ economic activity apart from its interna-
tional repercussions, as it is to draw a dis-
tinction today between the home front and
the battle lines. The connection between
domestic and international economic policy
is so itimate that for many practical pur-
poses they constitute a single entity.”
The future is in the hands of the Amer i-
can people. If they will but inform them-
selves and act wisely upon the strength Of
their information, lasting peace is within
reaeh. No other people have ever been
blessed with such an opportunity—or obli-
gation.
mean the younger men of the
# Tri-Cities, the one* whose arafct-
; t tlofc and inexperience were always
■King them Into one hind of
trouble or another.
The "rage of Wert Republic."
That was what we calieu jonn
Hill MdKlney. An insurmount-
able problem would pale into
nothingness once he got through
analyzing the situation.
Those who went to John Hill
McKinney's office when they got
into trouble were legion. I can
name- myself,- - Norman Hargrave
when he was a Boy Scout man,
Jack Jacob* the chamber of
commerce man. Shannon L, Mor-
iif. Congressman Albert Thomas,
State Senator W'eaver Moore,
more > school teachers than we
have room to list, Leon Trenek-
mann, Thad Felton, ever}- foot-
ball coach whoever lived in this
area. Jack Commings and a host
of others.
John Hill McKinney was a
great man. and his passing will
leave a vacancy that time will not
easily erase.
Ruth IQU, his* daughter Whom
he adored, was their only child,
so he informally adopted every,
boy in the TH-Cities as his own.
He helped Ross Smith, learn how
to block. He helped Bill Taylor
become a great end. He helped
every young man he knew tackle
every situation he faced with
fear and trembling. '
John Hill loved life with a
vengeance, but he had not been
feeling well for the past couple
of years. The high esteem in.
which his fellow man heid him
should be solace to Mrs. McKin-
ney and Ruth in their time of be-
reavement.
Oply list week we had set
aside a special seat for him in the
press box at Elms
it was more easily
Some night this season we hope
Under The Dome At Austin
By Gordon K.!
Synopsis
“Jl leading and popular resident
or Talbot, sleepy litUe Chesapeake
J^VeWUCT FEYNOLDS, Ud-
e/ly and unable to walk, but the
° possessor of young Ideas. She
has been dominated by . her
strong-willed granddaughter.
—vLAURA, who lives with her. Mrs.
Reynolds hires
ANNE WILSON, personable young
New Yorker, to be her no-sc.
I/invUme fiance Of Laura is
RUSSELL SMITH, conservative
young attorney. The placidity
AUSTIN (UP>—On the home front as well „
the battlefields bipod plasrrta is essential for uJ
human lives, and the Stflfcc Health Department *
will broaden it* plasmaw’lceting program to b*.
tanned because I’ve been in Flor-
ida. Docs that answer all?”
<>3 *»r*sc*irewr3p
with the valiant Work of the Red Cross, Dr.
-SUMMONS TO BERCHTESG ADEN”—194*
Looking A* life
By Erich Brandeis
DAN.
YESTERDAY:' Russell recsUs
how self-willed and light-heart-
ed his younger brother, Oan,
had been as a boy, and how
great his love had been for
beauty.
DAN’S STATEMENT that no
one could take beautv from him
came bach to Russell across the
years. Dan had been in prison
and he ohly laughed about it, He
hgd come home shabby, penni-
less, but he Still was laughing.
He still seemed to have something
nobody could take away from him.
Inst night Russell had come home
and found him asleep. He hadn’t
bothered to put sheets on the bed
in his old room. He’d slept in his
-ekrtJwr the mattress with a
rough blanket for covers, his head
on the coarse ticking of the pil-
low. And Russell had' stcOd
through.
“You get washed, Rus. ,Annc
will help me set another place at
the table In the living room.
Soup’s on in five minutes. My
specialty. Some cal! it slum and
in France it’s pot au feu. Last
time I made it was over a camp-
fire in a bfr'okl can that wasn't | t
too rusty. Hurry up, Rus. You’U—--The state program was begun in 1940 as
. y m - v ^s0^s~ttwmrof a collecting system used ty the
while NYA. Blood from men in the camp, ;
RUssell began to repent his im-
When I aet started;”'
of his outspoken,.liberal brother. - w im. brought to the health department laboratories'
‘•Where is Mrs. Gander?" he ask-
ed Dan.
“1 sent her home. She didn’t
come till I’d cleaned the joint up
anyway. She also seemed to have
been smelling a bottle, so she
couldn’t help much.” ..
Russell hurried upstairs. He
knew Mrs. Gander drank, but be-
cause she had worked' for his
motherJbe likod to help her all he
could. Dan was in dnti Of hi"
rebkless'ihohas, of course.
The department put the program on a
basis When the NYA folded and since thsfj
the laboratory have processed more than 2,00|
eiibic centimeters of plasma,
presently the state has on hand about 75,00# ct
centimeters ot plasma.
The state mobile unit will bleed in a comp
when at least 100*persons have been signed ait
ors. The unit has a staff of five and a local di
is always on hand. -
You have, of course, all come
under the roniantic spell of per-
fumes. , »
Their names alone are enough
to make your mouth Water and
■what male can resist- the «charm
of, the seductive female who is
ness only knew what he’d cooked.
Or where he had met Anne Wil-
son that he called her Anne al-
ready. What had he been doing?
Taunted by the ouestions in his
own mind, Russel! hurried down
to the living room. Dan had- dug
out their mother’s old china soup,
tureen and it steamed as he car-
ried It in triumph to the table.
BUILDING SUPPLY >v’; i
or nis^EIGHTY PER CENT of tHe plasma from the,
o-rtflT munity is returned to a hospital for local use ,
fjferu u siA1 ..n,n,'n;nn, arnminl la 1/onl of fhn oint.'
the remaining amount ia kept at the state I
tory for emergency use and to replenish
ty supplies. «S
No large emergency call, has ever been m»
the state’s supply, Dr, S. W, Bohls, director t.
laboratory, says, pointing out that replacement,!
communities have been mostly routine. S*
He explained that the plasma is good for as t
■ as five years and that some persons have I
given as much as a gallon of blood in a year,
most popular? That ,too, has
been scientifically determined by
the scientists.
The flowery odors were the
favorites, found the learned re-
searcher; fruity and spicy odors
came second; and resinous, burnt
fiei'd'because HbenSy''sprinkledwSt "Charm- and putrid jdors were third,
—os "’£« “„T «„
..... . ...... ...---- ...... ... .. . , . Local health officers have charge of plasma,,
watching hipi smile in his sleep, as Anne followed with a b«g bow! of pijes sent by the State to hospitals in Houston, !
if he had some inner happiness salad. She seemed to have caught gan Antonio,*Fort Worth, Tyler, Midland
which even steep couldn’t cover. Dan’s,.infectious gayety. Paso, CorpflS CRjrjsti, Lubbock Amarillo, Sau l
' But Dan had changed, Dan had In no time at all they were eat- nRp, Wjofiiltri Falls, Sherman, Texarkana and ffi
refused to come to Weston and mg the stew. Dan poured beer .The health department is not "pushing" its jf
'' ~ “ with a flourish. - To his surprise, ma campaign because of’ the heavy war demand,
Russell found the.stew very good Bohjs said. But several West Texas comma’
and unusually flavored. Anne ate have asked ‘for the state unit and it has not
the Ganders will “win one for
John Hill.” That Would be more
than he would ever ask the kids
to do for him. Next to his fami-
ly, football -and friends were his
next loves.
POLL-TIME HERE
HEAVEN DELIVER;,us, but the
time of pre-election presidential
polls has come, and there id
nothing we lowly citizens can do
about them but eriduro them.
We recall vividly how straw
votes set down the old Literary
Digest for the count when it
blandly predicted that Alf Lon-
don , would defeat President
Franklin Rooseveit in 1936.
Since then every poll has been
exceptionally accurate. They all
have predicted Roosevelt victor- wnn gwivre
jeg mpse When we breathe.
Now the polls have started
Amour” Or “Shangri-La"?
Now come the dear scientists
• and shatter all bur dreams of ro-
mance and perfume-laden moon-
light nights, with a perfectly pro-
saic survey of smells.
They have come to the con-
clusion that there are only four
basic odors, namely: 1) .fragrant
or sweet, 2) ’acid or sour, 3) burnt
arid 4) eeprylic or putrid.
All other odors are simply, com-
binations of these. And if you
think that the beautiful and en-
chanting aroma has anything to
do with love or passion or ro-
mance just listen to this.
Smeil is purely chemical, say
the scientists, being produced by
gkses or vapor in the atmosphere
Which are brought into contact
with sens! vie nerve endings in our
Five Years Ago
Na?is
Today’s headline: Polish Troops Throw
Back From Warsaw.
Adolph Hitler’s war machine ran into heavy ene-
my fire both on the eastern^and western front to-
ztacy:“"Fir Poland; tfre’TOTs'ca’me'as a ’pew‘threat to
the Nazi mechanized armies. The Polish forces ral-
lied along a battiefront defending three big rivers
and were counterattacking at Warsaw to throw back
the German invaders.
Pelly volunteer fire department had a new slate
of officers today. They are A. F, Carroll, chief; E.
L. Welch, first assistant chief; James McMicken,
second assistant chief; O. O. Dorris, president; W. A.
Vinson, vice president; B. B. Elliott, seeretary-tr'eas-
urier? J. A. Huddleston and Frank Mpffatt, fire po-
mi:
The garage apartment occupied by Mr. and Mrs.
Brent Adams, 41b South Gilliard, was damaged by
■fire Monday ni
>y night.
Rae Goodman and Lillie Griffin'entertained
with a kid party Saturda,
•i
fSl-re MM Mg
By William Ritt
The Dutch Island of Java has 125 volcanoes.
However, that isn’t the only reason the Jap# wUl
find that country too hot for comfort,
'
Hitler, we read, has a high strung te/nper#jpent
High strung, eh ? Say, that couldn’t, be prophetic,
again, and they predict 56 % per
cent of this is for this and 43.8
per cent is against the other, arid
what not, and what not. Dr. Gal-
lup, the poll man who would ra-
ther take polls for a living than
work, has* been having a field
day, but his high spot has been
challenged by the Crossley poll.
- Crosaley, Inc., is out of Prince-
ton, •-N: J,, arid the results WHS
be available every Tuesday and
Friday for the remainder of the
campaign. It says it can’t miss.
We still aren’t interested, Well
-just wait until election night to,
•'dHcoveF'We'’^ poll”
boys don’t mind.
Anyhow, We can teli you the
winner now, all polls to the con-
trary notwithstanding. Don’t
quote me, but the next occupant
of the. White House will be one
who has occupied it longer than
anybody in the history of the na-
tion. And what’s more, if his
health remains, he will* be double
tough in 1948. Now -1952 — they
might get him then. But by that
time even the Indians woiildri t
waftt the country back, unless the
national debt were cancelled.
-
......- spjd we said the government em-
ployes received. Incidentally, Roy
Wrote a' nice letter, and! if you
ever* want to take pen,in hand
and do the same thing, we Will
be glpd to get it. - - - —- ^
Here we started writing about
presidential polls and end up in-
viting you to write a letter to the
editor. Small- world after all,
isn’t it?
So the next time you are out
with your beloved and you are
hypnotized by the sweet ||ag-
rance of her love creeping Into
your heart, remember—it’s only
gas tickling the' nerve endings
of your nose.
Now then; what odors are the
odors, with liiac and pine in Sec-
ond place. Then came lily-of-the-
valley, violet, coffee, balsam, ce-
dar, wintergreen, ehpcolate,. car-.
nation, orange and vanilla.
So there you are—this may be
a guide to you in your courtship.
And, by the way, for no reason
at ail, it reminds me that many
years ago I was completely smit-
ten with a girl who worked be-
hind a soda fountain,
Finally she consented to go out
with” me. It was a lovely even-
ing and J $a* very young.
As I washout to embrace her,
a faint odor of vanilla emanated
from her lovdly person. ’’
Moon, spring, flowers, a rippl-
ing brook, Ijl came to naught
when I smelted the vanilla, vanil-
la always having been one of my
pet aversio™; ' ,
The romance ended right there
and then, aid even now, when-
ever gomethMg is repulsive to me
I smell a Waint odor of va-
nilla...
How do the. scientists explain
that?
be outfitted. Dan had glanced at
his laborer’s shoes, bis rough cor;
duroj'S. his flannel shirt darned in
several plaes, apd had grinned;
"Clothes. What do I need clothes
for? You’re a lawyer and a gen-
tjeman and vbu look' like one. I'm
a. hobo and I look'like one; Okay?”
‘‘You’re my brother." •
“Swell. So I’ll bum more ciga-
rets* and eat your food, but your
f>!nn>ac fit ”
heartily and they both laughed at
Dan’s stories. One minute bs was
clothes don’t fit.”
"I mean new clothes. You need
. •>
telling them he’d dug some of Mr-
Thatcher’s garden and gotten '5
whole dollar for it, the next he
was telling a story about Los An-
geles, And all the while he man-
asred to eat-With gusto.
(To Be Continued) ;
sent due to long travel distances and the Red (
work. 7 ,f ' t 7
Majority of the state’s collecting is done in t_
coromunities where the Red Cross does not ml
"Our object is one of preparedness to assure tor
of having plasma which may save a life,” Dr.{
said. “Many of the smaller places -do not **
blood banks, but if we can make plasma avaUR .
can mean the difference between life and deattfl
a haircut. You—”
"I always pay for my haircuts.
It’s a matter of pride.”
GRAB BAG
Orie-Minute Ycst
.-L la stamp collecting,
dues a star signify?
.what
2. Why is a pack of cards made
up of 52 cards?
Easy Knowledge
Today’s Horoscope
means that you are methodical,
faithful. and a good worker. You
'are generally quiet and reserved,
3.'In tennisi what is the score
when either side has won a point*
after deuce?
Words of Wisdom i
He censures God who quarrels
with the imperfections of. man.—
Burke. •: ’7 -7'.-
Ifints on Etiquette *
Many women now hold jobs'
formerly held by mqp before the
been in the habit of entertaining,
a TrtttaL’Hk) ':pen39^i9|r; calls on
him for business purposes, at
lunch or dinner, it is perfectly
permissible to do the same for
the Woman who lias taken hi*
place. It is only a business con-
tact, yon kriow,- and should be
kept as such. 6 ■ 1
possess a subtle and amusing
sense of humor. When aroused,
however, your temper is strong,
but short-lived. You make your
home pleasant and attractive and.
are*demonstrative in yoniv love.
In the next 12 months you will
benefit in many Ways, orthodox
adn unorthodox. Love affgirs will
prosper, though an elderly fe-
male may occasion anpoyanoe.
Today’s child will achive above
That was what made it strange.
Two J'oars away had changed Dan
that much,at least. Before, he had
believed in taking anything he
could get for the risking, and he
had never hesitated to ask. He had
said the world was bis oyster mid
he was very fond of oysters. Rus-
sell. with so much -work ahead,
had given in momentarily about
clothes. He'd left word Mrs, Gan-
der was to fix Dan’s lunch and
then dinner for both of therm He
had given Dan $5 in case any-
thing turned up. As be drove mto
Talbot a thought flashed through,
his mind. Suppose Dan had taken
the So and wandered off. He. had
only promised to stay if he eould
find an anchor to hold him down.
To his own surprise Russell
realized how glad he was to see
the lights on in his living room,
though it was not yet dark. The
little, house backed up on the wa-
ter and he had. an idea ,hc would
find Dan thole. He Went around
on the narrow strip of grass,
which he noticcd had _bcen_ mowed.
l3an'"wai',''tFere 'anJ"w^‘tafking
excitedly to a slim young girl in
a neatly tailored blue ouftit with
a fall of lace at her throat. The
sunset glow was on ,her face and
Russell stood irresolute at sight
Of her. She seemed part of the
Sunset and the broad stretch of
water with the lighthouse winking
down toward the Choptank like a
faint star. A rose glow-was over
the river and a ione robin hopping
across the lawn carried the color
in his breast.
Russell stood, not knowing
HE’LL MAKE BELIEVERS
OF JAPANESE
AUSTIN (fit* Pfc. Leslie C; Gar-
rison. 23, is probably the only
Marine eve!* sworn in for re-en-
listment in a Buddhist shrine.
He writes that in the midst of
heavy fighting 6n Tinian his first
sergeant rememhereri that his
four-year term had expired.
The Buddhist Temple offered
the only shelter; ’so he entered
and swore allegiance to the Unit-
ed States by the God of the
Christians.
NEW SOLON’S VISIT
NEWLY NOMINATED members of Uie 49th *
House of Representatives have already started ?,
ing the capitol to pick out desks where they 1
sit when the session ‘ begins nast -Januarym- ^
Returning members have first selection prtw
and then the neophytes ftjay pick from the i
cr.
Barclay on Bridge
By Shephard Barclay
Already selections have been made by No
Sam Sellers of Waco, Fred Jones of Lone )
Frank E White of Grnveton. and Hubert A.1
Paducah. »
NEW CLERK NEEDED
WHERE EXPERIENCE means a great deal i
the enrolling room of the House of Represert
For that reason there is going to be some dfl
next January 1n finding someone to replace 3
Elsie Rupert,
Mrs, Rupert served as enrolling clerk for f
legislative sessions—14 years.
She and her husband have moved to Brow
where 'he will represent an Austin printing
pariy in the Rio Grande Valley.
NOTHING FOR GRANTED
BRIDGE IS always producing
unexpected developments, and the
player who allows himself to be
upset when tilings don’t go as he
expects is </oomedsto plenty of un-
happy moments. Some have
THOMPSON PROTEGE S
THE RECENT VISIT last week to Austin of
Col, Carl Phinney, on leave from Italy as !
Quartermaster, on the 36th Division General ;
was one of rare ehjoymeht to Cot, Ernest O, *~
son of the Texas Rail-road Commission.
Phinney started* his soldiering under Tho
instructions back in the early 30’s. That was ?
hand -of art opponent who bid that
suit, though many a time length
vmS the basis of the,bid, combined
with honors in some other,,suit or
suiU.
«64
?A
,--------- ^ AK<rr96 j-------- —
4! K 10 7 4 ■
♦ QJ975
RA 10
t 10 9 8
♦ 9 742
4.6S32
energetically surmounted, and the
emotions controlled. -
1
intruder on his own property, Dan
One-Minute Test Answers
1. An unused stamp,
2. They represent; the; number
of weeks in a year. -
3. Advantage, to the one who
won the point, ,
was pointing out the various
s of lane
far
’’ howl* Fritz as the Yanks give him the old
hewVe-ho in France, “I been thrown outta better
countries than this one!"
According to Factographs, grasshoppers have
leaped into airplanes at an altitude of 10 000 feet
over the western planes. Maybe Mother Goose was
wrong and it wasn't a cow, after all, that jumped
over the moon! 7 ‘ •
Synthetic Rubber
Groups To Meet
,.
daily crossword
-JtedtOSS 7.'butside-of 24 Abounding
move the opening of the football season
her ahead the Rose Bowl game will drop to
If they
the status of a warm-up contest.
Indian summer, complains Grandpappy Jenkins,
must have been named after the blanket Indians.
The Nazis have closed all theaters in Germany.
Der Furious, however, will continue to make a show
of himself.
World events are moving so rapidly, says Grand-
pappy Jenkins, that a school atlas rtiouldn’t be
fftlM f| jyAfN^yrarshv hnf a hnAlv
a geography but a history book,
according to Factographs invented
puzzle 3,000 years ago. How com
.................... .......'£• ',r
WASHINGTON, (I’.R) — American
and Canadian representatives of
the industry making synthetic
rubber from petroleum will meet
in Dallas Oct. i, 5 and 6 to dis-
cuss latest developments In their
work.
Fourteen American companies
.are associated with the Rubber
Reserve company, a subsidiary of
the Reconstruetion Finance cor- 25. A fault
poration, sponsor of the Dallas *27. Poem
• , ,, . * 28. Sheeplike
At the semi-annual affair, rep- «o Arh™«*i
reswitative* will swap ideas with
arrrwrsts ¥
manager of the petroleum-buta- 33. ^Xver f
W; i-vowiww 24. Abounding
^^foundations bread; -ih leaves
flSW
29. Smalibalis
coal of medicine
19. Perish JQ.BoyV > •
14. Shelter nickname
" 1T:!S *5S«
34. Coerce
points of landv and water with
mocking comment The sound of
the motor* in the returning work
boats mingled w^ith his voice. Fln-
ally. he ended, “As soon as my
brother comes home, we shall eat.”
She smiled quickly,' ‘3 really
can’t.”
Yielding to impulse. Russell
moved toward them. “May I also
ask you to stay for dinner?” ,,
D«ti cried, “Speak of the devil,”
and boWed in” his mocking way.
“Just in time. Miss Wilson, toy I
2
f 73
♦ 85
bp,____JtAite *
KQJ6542
J 8
tional Guard.
Using a large red-'penclied map Which the
has in his office, the pair traced the sp&t
drive made by the 36th Division. Thompson i
was the longest drive ever made by a unit untifl
invasion of Normandy,
Phinney, formerly a Dallas attorney, told of knj
ing Naples on a boat and meeting another offlU
who was in charge of the military personnel on f
ship. Earning Phinney Was #Testo, he a*Wff»L
knew Thompson,. ------- . - - <■
When Phinney said he did, the officer said l_
served as a sergeant under Thompson |n Wo«i
War I.
North-South
West
Pass
present my brother. Russell, who
isn’t at rill tike me?”
Russell’s eyes opened a lii tle
wider. “Miss Wilsoi? Miss Anne
Wilson?”
lutgA
The girl gave him her
“You seem to know me.”
Dan ebortler. “He's a lawyer.
18, Takejfor
.»«,cwn ssscto *s5sr~
r. “He’s a lawyer, a might kil
He knows everything. He always pened then was funny. The dia
(Beater; North,
vulnerable.)
North East South
44 IA 2f
34k Pass 3 NT
You would think everybody
ought to prefer a rebid of those
hearts to what this South did.
That proved to be the case at all
other tables of the duplicate where
this hand was dealt, and all other
Souths made 4-Rearts because no-
body led a club. Thts particular
declarer, in his No Trump game
was the only on* who got set.
West led the diamond 2 to be
unorthodox, hoping . his partner
had the Q and not wanting to open
spades, as he reckoned holding his
■ ■ kin off the K, What hap-
Editorial Views ,
* As OthtrEditors Swil
lift -8S55- ****
Ififi 40 Oium ;7;
4robitecture n.lmct
23,Snake 43. Win.
47. Erhtem
IfSl
(sym.)
-
RuMell still held the slender
brown hand1 in his. “I went to ‘he
™-,’R 'filS sMfMm
: didn't know what possessed
mend lead was won in dummy, the
heart A taken to unblock, then
two diamonfcMMatoM
Deriding he might as1 well score
heart trick? as diamonds, and sure
the crossword' puzzle 3,000 years ago. How come
they knew about Australia’* emu?
diene division of the company.
si
will never flee to Switzerland for CdfCh R0{fe0 Cif|
be able to squeeze bet'
wee*
an editorial, is full of twists and
‘ points out Zadok Dumkopf, when
i to, expound _their views over the
:
A J...
a rt«
Crowd Watches Cop
»**££.....)■
SPRINGFIELD. „ Mo. (PJD—On-
lookers thought Officer Lee Wad-
dle was doing a little fancy adver-
However, a good-sized crowd
gathered while the wtPiftttsfrif trf-
ficer and equally exhausted calf
raced down the street. -Eventually,
Waddle, who had abandoned hit
7
15
scarf (Reel.)
39 Armadillo
42. Eastern
46. WeapiMi
48. Timing
devic*
49. Changg ,
50. Like slate
PQWN
L Layer
3. Distress
signal
ummmmwamMmm
him to express it like that, or to
'Sir..... mm
: his arm with the girl's as they
went toward the Rous*. Pan dash-
ed In ahead of them. He told her
that the spade A was held by East,
he now led the spade 4 from dum-
my. East played low and the K
was put up confidently. South'#
A NEW IDEA IN JOURNALISM*
New York Herald Tribune
The Atlanta Constitution, with a stroke of 1 ^
inspiration, has announced that it has .purchase**
1.000-nere farm in Georgia to keep pace with
abundant agriculture future" - of that state,
hewspaper’s staff will study^ the operation of.
farm from the ground up In order that “
may “better and more understandingly serve1
vast farming population on whom they de
their professional arid economic existence.”
an innovation in practical journalism which,
glance, we should say might profitably be copied
other great newspapers-even newspapers in *
great, centers of urban population as New Yd"
There can be no doubt that many newspap*
in addition to increasing their knowledge of I
economics and International affairs duriog
years, have shown a preoccupation with, farm
its problems and Its possibilities. Sometimes 1
fascination is mostly sentimental; if *0
nothing wrong with that. But the hard,
earth lessons to be learned by close obscrvatio
farm actually in operation could easily be of 1
rate importance. Befell* the war many exper -
that the farm of the future was the large,
mechanized establishment—“the factory ’
field.” Lately other experts have swung
to the belief that the smaller, ^lf-coi\tained
©an wgs always bursting with en-
ery. ‘ 7 ;7 '7; 7
told me he was absolutely the lazi-
est man on earth,” she said.
“Don’t the two go together
■fmbbbI
“And Tm certainly delighted T. .
you’re going to have dinner with
smile changed Jo a frown- when <lhe one-family farm -possibly linto*. ,
the A took it and the 10 was re- farms by a co-operative system -is the hope or
y. turned. Six consecutive spades gf^w. ^Here Is one of the questions that
Her eyes were full of fun. “He and the club A set. the contract **
irf me was absolutely the lazi- three tricks. ■ ' ' case, we dare say that
v,. ♦ * ♦ him be rewrite man, e“‘
Tomorrow’s Problem
be rewrite man, editorial writer, j
wholy insensitive
mi
us, though it wilt be the pettiest A j g 5 2
0* pot lock.”
“I didn't say I’d stay. In faci-
“In fact we simply won’t let you
111
rvw rf nm
ir mb--,,<w
1
- - - j
mmsMm
mmma
hbmIIh™
ft)™
-151 l"sh
flows.” '
She looked nt him steadily.
“Everyone does. I know just what
to sav. Yes. I am,staying with
Mrs. Reynolds. Tm not there for
dinner because she has gone to
see. Miss Molly You notice I’ve'
the tone of the place and
mistress Miss Molly.
_ .—1 New York and I'm
__ n
Mmm '
p01^ :
he improved, unless ne
the world about him, by <
contact wijth farm life. Good luck to the Con
tjon’s plantation ' which will be watched with
terest and envy. One warning: They must not 1
a country club or a dude ranch out of it.
*I«i> ' ’ ■
♦ 10 7 6 4 1 “LAST MAN” ADOLF
-7. ^
---- ^ ri” nrolonging the war iri Europe, U imquestionsWf
ng the world's record price for 1
♦ K 5
♦ 10 6* ‘
^;^«*»**S*>*
M’bat Is .East'# correct defense
against South’* 4-Spades her*
i‘llr.\y«Ltl«ft(l?,th*club9f ^
■l
There ate 1,125 varieties oif trees in the
States, according to Factographs. And, moan* 1
weary Zadok Dumkopf, every one has more
Its quota of leaves.
layou
• unit te four Texas commuhltiB*
t Work of the Red Cross, °°
W. Cox, State Health Officer, explains.
The state’s program is purely local at._
• flcials have asked tho department to take cs«|
plasma needs on the home front. In some instant
whefe a state mobile unit was taking bloodSl
community, a Red Cross unit has conn- into d
and immediately the 'ofcate unit left in defereA^
tjie orgfmiiation*
(HI UADINC a flight of jFfiuv.
fSts. c»pt J, a Willingham
1 Tuscaloosa, Ala., ted a group
I mare than 300 German* to Ai-
L columns where they were
ken prisoners. Seeing the Nazi*
Kving white flags, he circled
terliead until he herded them In*
1 Allied hands. (International)
DRl
and!
I
Elmri
is exl
tmml
than I
ting [
wortl
Un|
the
. acta ■i
meh'
tempi
on tlf
theml
Coef
. long
doing
Atl
good. |
Wher|
coach
tain ll
good, |
too.
Coa|
dav
with |
end
- na 111
has n|
Teani"
son
Thornl
Twtf
their
day
Hunt J
- ngainrl
RIIICI5M of the British policy
(Ward India by President Roose-
lit’s personal representative,
tnfiassador William Phillips,
joVe, has led the British govern-
bnt to request his recall, accord-
to Washington diplomatic
Ircles. Phillips has been ate
iched to General Eisenhower’s
iadquarters in Ixjndon since his
Mission to India'last year. The
1 S. ’state department recently
piounced that he was returning
lest month “for urgent family
(International)
fOB MEN ONLY
[dentists have now found that
who are. run down, and no
liger have the ability to enjoy
■e os they once did, teW he, suf-
ft-irig from a deficiency of eer-
BY W
Unitedl
HOUS^
v. as a
ticipat;
proinis
will in
season
.-Vigod
Southv
Rut
of the
, think
rade 1
|s that
their
confer
when
their n
wonde
Rice
gridde
eleven
seven
gregat
seven
Littk
time al
town,
premia
half sj
in the
ton At
benefit
Housto
firebaS
makes
How-
pus bee
man.
playinc
pound
stando
in
cieavin
es for
„.Th(.L„
pines Middle-aged men especially
be the virtims of thts em-
smg condtU<mrTroteame, the
medical discovery, combines
- necessary vitamins and hor-
bnts that may make it possible
lies, to make uo your yitensih-
r7teflcteiigy. Tfimmii'y may j
Imuiiit.- ^our vitality, 0e you ; . ,.|f—
|e verve and zest of a much -W »'*•
ngrt man. Added ytostoy no
fuller man. «aue« yuai» Ji‘»} 1
ngcr deprive you of desired cn-.ia--..-.
bments onre you begin to
fomone. Note.; foliow instnictior.s j
1 label. Trorrione for sale atl
hue's Pharmacy and druggist!
feiywhere.
OOT ITCH
ATHLETE'S FOOT
it n
to t
«
hv
IRIUIF GUARANTEED
OR MONEY BACK
*f lesit M% of tbo adult
^ Umtcd»r«"be)n* attacked
he diaM.j known aa Athlete’* Foot-
tlnM”
| p ATHLETE'S FOOT Ml£
$1.00 Bottle., NOW..............
{IM Bottle,^ NOW.
AT /ALL GOOD DRUG’
Mi
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 76, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 12, 1944, newspaper, September 12, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028807/m1/6/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.