The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 166, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 27, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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Wl
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WA
*4’ ■
THi DAILY SUM. G005I CRIfK. TEXAS
WEDNESDAY. DECEMIft
.*
(jljc pa(|5 #tm Sun Slants
“IP ^PP*
1I» mm Pm** *W"«. <***•• Cmh* Tw**’
Htf» NAKTMAK MiW
gimtf MaVMUtaC •“»*•*»
SlBS» WfT10« WT»; J -
tfoute 7fc;^i »W»s
Sm.4«I Ki'u T« Mm b. Seems—fo*
Jl ^ yw#** NfMt) l» Mm***,
M9RW.1
By Fred Hartman
% N*fo AI I»H4K\ni
WK ARK GOING to one fovorifo
oevCur. ««t 4 prt*rt*fo» g
*«•* - -r4 i5T m
•Mm <*U« ** foHC«i«i*te
S§->
TeMmie KMfei
service
No one beaten
T aflfnrtenf^nl telephone companion have ,
totafonSe Bell system in the c rralion of a two*. t
StcM-Itt" ?t «w*if *££.*». .I.U MM«m-
On the preacrtpiKm will m **•*•
notation
*rf*o»M*cto cigarette*. ». U*t f»
Wsf m il UMt will ttt fo*‘
pockfgv Everything else bu fail*
^ommd, w» Mk* rM« °t
our \to. t<ur frtond •""■■'
HlfwfTPrfO fo hail of the fa**
ip the jwrk.
uf. mWlA M.
OUR HUWBUS rtubfrtetate will
mu the bijt pot in the Httte on*
Sunday night u* foririfofiual New ..
Year’s Eve dalle* Which start* it
IP p. Hi fo* »r* jn(MiwA b¥ VV*t-
don William* *fot *1* hour* of*
dancing and cnjoytbVnt will follow
before ihc breakup at'* a. in.
m extewiins and improving rural tele-
phone nervio* comes as good new* to man.
aecUptw of the. ctjujntry.
SrM-KsttM
the
atnr William* will handle
prtaa for the club in 1946.
ltd has an assignment in every*
day We that assure* him of br-
ing * gogrtier He located hous-
ing for ftnytowh workers
Any man with enough on t he
bail to locate A HOUSE, let atone
housing for trl-fitie* worker* in
Romantic Masquerade
IY MARIE ItBAtD
SyiiofKiH * 4 <v,: ' _ i''
Daphne Willoughby had thrlll-
cd .MmtiuMlaMteJBtm JM
eloped at IT wIth Carlo Abruaal. tl
concert violinist. Foe eight
years, until hi* death. *he lived
abroad Utter* from her to Kate
Dennison -and -other friend* back
home were masterpiece* of ro-
mantic Imagination. After Carlo'*
death, DapWie worked for four
year* with Cor tone Hofliii, New
Btiei Tht*n she
with
going Ui tlueaten her new
by attacking her emotion*
%Twmwvr:*-
aloud, hearing Alans voice bo-
low her window.
She sprayed crepe do chine on
her hair, ran a moiat finger over
her aye-brows. and wont down-
stairs to meet him, conscious of
how pretty she looked,
It happened early In Ut* evsn-
a most unromantie mom-
News Behind The News
hi Pall
WASHINGTON
York decorator. Then she re- mg at a
turned, after, un aheenoe of twelve fo*The moon wasn't evon up.* ,
There wai
,_____ ____n’t a note of soft mu-
sic. and AW like oVeryono else
Daphne ^ “Kale’s party, wa» d#to« an
The German* did »oi
*hrou«h owu-w* I*
They picked some of it from Finland
,,ul ""’M "< 11 rang.
built up by reorganlr.ation of the eiJSi
straggled home from the lost battle of r,?1
constant increase of Na*l strength »in« <£!
can be attributed to that latter dreu **
U*constantly grows greater.
Carefully, Von Runstcdt and his
Hitler was in on it according to my*’
ehooxc tt» time and place skilUuliy.
the spot was a portion of the line which *
Nrwia and our army had loosely held. **«,
tNNMM* there could easily break throughe&h
But their concentration went undetected
years, to the old home town
where* she wan welcomed as
glamorous personality. ,.
icmodcled the house willed her car of corn. Someone hud tied a
by a cousin and hired a part-time napkin nround hla neck,
gardener called ‘•Steve." A viva- At that moment an arrow, tip- NOT a note of advance warning did m*
dOM^b^,'Bufr Tumtr.tftd mmUm-m l«f° weather («ortd their ^
z as &£z£xsr a?a “1 ^ -......- - --
One day Corinne Hollis, arrived , jt )m(j come out of nowhere.
W'r-4y
He Admitted BaMUBpat *Ml poi««‘
MbHHm for 'fdHNUMtiOB
in the podlwar hra. We who uih* the tek*-
ahoM «tvery lwttr oit every day com®
to take it as a matter of fact like the noon
whistle -but there an' seetams of the Tn-
Cities, or hereabouts, where the service
can not bn bad These areas offer a dial*
l»n«e to the interests operating here, It not
only offers them a challenge to extent! their
.service, but it aiso offers them a chance to
increase their income, and a telephone tom*
operator. ’.
Wc tfwy look to sec .the Humble
club well puhhi used to the day* t«
come
NO RACK SUtHNG TIfIS TLHC
T%
m
IIM « IUUsTMAS
CHRISTMAS mermng used to be
a morning that the man of the
house spent with his youngsters
lit'!ping them play with their toy*,
or piaymg with their leys or re-
pairing the toys-whtch either he
or they had brakca. But it was not
that way thi* Ciiristmas. -
hicrease their income, ana u^S^nVts1?fSStf SS
■toy. like any other corporate ent^rprme, is 1U|{(M. Wj,j, monty and .»«&«.-
not in business for Its health. Stamps aminumfion
This committee has already studied the But from what wc «nd.car the
matter of postwar expnnmop to the urban ,m m,‘*1 froRt*' >,li
and rural areas. Said d spokesman for this
committee: -
“A* soon as war demands are reduced,
we propose to resume and expand our re-
march effort and, along with it. the inten-
aive program for extending farm service
which was being ramc-i t.ti before the out-
break of - hostilities.
GRAB BAG
GRAB BAG, Wed. i><?
One-rMlnutr T«4
children (rod your home tics,
mean mu«|H to you. In the next
7 Wbew ar# thaw famous bays months eacrcBe caution , in the
■'»* *w*» a» ■>' sSSSimS^'SS^
nceiAUy in financial affairs..
Tusdy, the &W of Benggl?
ia-eiiapclic!’
the Orange Free
search, on most fronts, was v*tin,
Bid don't feci too badly If you
have m> sugar, We want down
with 20 pound* of stamps too!
sTIU VIORLtNk TfX ONql KR
WE HAVE made a scientific dis-’
...very A new glass has been dls-
tawcsrtl and -developed -hy -the
American Optical company of
■fjoutfcridgg. Masa Thcrkayrtattrc
glasaJ survive* exposure to cor-
X Where i
3. Where is
Stale? .
Words *>f Wisdom
New ideas can be good
just the same a*' thc-old ones
Franklin D Roosevelt,
bad.
Hints on ftfcfwtto
It Is not necessary for a young
man to ssnd flowers to the girl
htc cscoris if it is to tov an infol -
mat dance.
peeled to visit them that even-
_____ in* ■
Easy Knowledge ampler Ten ■-
* ® They were crossing the street
now. and her .eyes settled on a
group .of boys to navy uniform,
talking jo ah older man, a naval
officer. Roy Gates, hands in the
pockets of his duck trousers, and
eyes wistful, stood on the outer
edge of the group.
“Look at Roy Gates,” Daphne
directed. ‘ *
"What about-it?”
“He wants to enlist now, I
think,” said Daphne.
“Well, he can’t, because ”
Kate’s explanation was cut short
when she had to rescue her sec-
ond oldest Tommy from danger-
ous proximity to an over-sized
fine-crackcr,
Lucy Upham tooted the horn on
Brunswick and Nova Scotia; Bay hf, car. “Cwne <m you two.
of Bengal is part df the Indian We_re waitmg for you- The boys
with an autoload of gay spirits
from the Big City, including Alan
Pembroke, architect and Daphne’s
ardent-suitor. The hilarious rout,
lasted but a few hours and -they
departed merrily, later Alan re-
turned, interrupting a talk be-
tween Duplin# and Steve, When
the latter left, Alan tost no time.
She protested his. kiss but there
was no annoyance in her voice
Tnu iiiuntnr fatur; mg mtMgn
ting the Fourth of July. Never had she looked, upon
Daphne. Kate, and Tommy Den- Carlo and felt this klnd of
nison, Jr., are going to attend a )ng tenderness that was Ihero
picnic that afternoon. Alan is ex- ....-i »« ...
She’d just happened to look up
and see Alan with the napkin be-
ing tied around his neck, and a
took of pups delight on his face
when Mie,'bit into the succulent
corn. Then all sorts of things
happened to, her. The past (that
was -Carlo) and the present
(whu.Tw. wivs the three months
she’d known Alan) fused and set
only with rain but with tow nanginc
clouds prevailed for several day* a her
through so wc could not use our air nZ
which we relied heavily to offset any such ok
(planes are disastrous to such offensive/'
necessarily are closely-knitted and thtref
decetted and damaged, while defensive,
cap be scattered and therefore be co
safe frqm tdr destruction.)
. The breakthrough strategy itself w.
new and could have been anticipated;
constantly used such tactics in Russia
es-
pceiAlb’ in financial affairs.. Do
not be improvident. Refuse to
take unnecessary risks in ail
things. Born today a child will be
energetic, ingenious, very original,
artistic, fond of science and -met*
a physical subjects, and moderately
successful.
thuvMimite Test Answers
1. Bay of Biscay, from Brest,
France, to Cape Ortegal, Spain;
Bay of Fundy, - between New
just because Aian had that boyish
look, on hi's • face. ’ It was this
quality, irresistible, that made hi*
suddenly w^rii tb, run ‘her fing-
ers through b‘s nice, crisp blond
hair, that made her feel a little
thrilled hy his masculine near-
ness. It was an appeal that she
recognised as dangerous, ,
Daphne pulled her eyes away
from him and took a plate of
watermelon from Hank Upham.
Talking to Hank about the' diffi-
culties of getting an Oil burner in-
stalled, the cost of bard coal,
and the . joys of a pot-beilied
stove, bor thoughts hewed
straight to the line of her prob-
lem.
If Daphne thought she was fall-
(Continued on Page Six)
course of winter fighting on that froatmul
termined on what eventually happens to( *
The Nazis have -used up their initial ™
success,’they threw everything loose into itl
blow is crushed, without too great loss t* t
next advance should meet less resistance,
European Political Events May
Deal Doom of Dumbarton Agreej
EUROPEA?! political events have endanj
chances of getting the Dumbarton Oaks a
through the senate when and if final t
reached with Russia,
That agreement, as far as it has progre...
poses a closer-tied world organization thaiu
fore to preserve finally and forever the
world we -have at the end of the war It w
permanent the status qup at the war's, co
Naturally, as the stalls quo becomes less *
pleasing to ail the parfice involved, interest i|
Mk of hofitlfitiew ., "tr-a'rSTand collected, ^between India on the west.....
"Over one,half million nrtlegof.telephone gtasa «*#**'*< kSl :"rma and Ma!sya 05 the Y«S «m7ng with us!
•oit line*serving rural areas have* already corrodes most metals amt pro- optimistic. east ~~ *- «- - —® -i-n.-
K. MSS-UA rnope Iku of SZSTSfiJS
Oil rural (aniues in the United j>taU» can optical ^ukage you. You are affect-
lonate and demons', rative, fond of
Barclay in Bridge
By Shephard Barclay
I ,
be served from exist i»L' toe*- Since 1935
more than 500,00ft additional families m
rural areas have become telephone sub-
acribers—an increase of 35 per cent. On?
of the major objective* is to continue this
upward trend by making the service over,
•lusting lines increasingly valuabht and at-
trifitive. This Ui« industry intends to do to
the limit of its ability.
“A second major objective is to extend
service at reasonable cost to families not
#ow reached by existing lines. Telephone
, industry research in the last several years
boa successfully developed new construc-
tion materials and methods which substan-
tially lower the cost of building fire lines to
•reaa not previously reached. In addition,
work was started by the industry in 1938 to
develop a practical system of-transmitting
telephone conversations over electric pow-
, «r lines ,.. Before this work was interrupt-
ed by the war; it was clear that a suitable
eystem of Ibis kind could bo produced.
* “The telephone, companies also plan to
•tody the possible application of mterowai'e
ladio ayatema to rural telephone service
knd to make use of this and any other new
mcthmls which wifi he helpful. in giving
-service' to the farmers”
Fyoin ftk wyort .it 'wmiMiadic4Ui,vthat
”” Lfit?_«lf*y"'at muiti-iiarty ijnea up and down
the country-side is at an end. Jn its place
the farmer, whose house is lighted by elec-
Jtf’icity, whose home is heated by- butane
gas will also be one where telephone service
alt over the world will be at his beck and
call.
It appeara that the “Number, please"
. business is on tisi' matfii *
eorfoniCS most mcials and
duces dongciOM* burns
This may be an important dis-
covery, and the glass and optical
j*opto.may think they have all the
glass tmtwsrs
But we defy any or all of these
smart guys to walk out of a cold
day into a warm room without
having to take off thelf specks
and -oefog' them. .
lx looks fike with all of their
brains they could figure out a
“windshield wiper’ for glasses or
glass that would survive expo-
sure to anytihng as harmless as
warm air.
No. you glass hoys, have a tong
way to go yet.
WAX III! Ot TRA(cEI)"
ONE OF OUR teacher friends told
me that about 2o years ago he
w;a# teaching away in a small
town, and one Saturday morning
the . phone rang. The village's
banker was on the wire, and was
he Mire ’ •“, •
Tint teaehiy had not failed to
ext end a note. He had committed
a more serious .breach..
“Did you know Ihiit one of your
• box's was dow'ntown playing ten'-
,-!>*• ho I
Germany; .it is now
captured by the U. S.
2. In
Aachen,
forces. .
'3. In South Africa.
Editoria! Views
FIGHTING WHPHOI’T IIITLKK
(The (ireensille Banner)
id# without a shirt on?" lie wailed,
(Note to English - teacher
friends That “shift on" Is the
banker s mistake of grammar, not
mem*. 1 kiuia that a prepositton
is not the right word to end a
sentence with )
Hiller may bo dead. Or insane .
Or a prisoner of the German Gen-
eral Staff, It has- been months-
*sinee there' has been an indica-
tion that he is still dictator of
Germany.
• Sowhat?’-
To historians, it may some day
be important to determine just
When Hitler fell front power But
...Jo us, at war with Germany, it is
’ of no importance at all. .Germany
Is fighting just- as ruthlessly an
the Siegfried Linewithout Hit-
ler as it fought: along 'the Dneip-
er with him. Germany’s atroci-
ties at Lublin and Distomo with-
out Hitler as just "as horrible -os
were those at Warsaw and Lidtee
with him,; GetmAa yftutR in. the
streets of Hitterless Aachen Is
as.ferodtius end uiwontroilabte as
the Hitlgr youth in* the purged
stteeta of Munich. HiGcr may
OF WHAT VALUE?
((IkhUimtiMi)
It’S gonig to be a grand picnic,
Daphne got info the seat with
Lucy, determined fo shake off
the feeling of doom that pervaded
her. >
It was a grand picnic, a typical
one. The water was too cold,
th», sun l^JioL. hut nobody mind-
ed, Thera*were cows who came
fo inspect the lunch, and ants,
and mosquitos. Lucy’s son got a
nail in his heel; Susan Fiskc
found a small snake and put it
in a lunch hamper, and her moth-
er fainted when she found it.
le for what has hap- "-hbrue Fennell sprained a finger
playing baseball, and Daphne got
a burn When she tried to rescue
a hamburger, but the picnic was
a success. 1 ' „
At sundown children were
rounded up, hgmpers repacked,
and the party moved back fo its
various homes to -put children to
bed, chqnge clothes, and reappear
at the- Dennisons’ for Kate's an-
nual summer party. There would
be an outdoor supper, dancing bn
the brick terrace, refreshments in
the rumpus room.
Daphne — famed in hometown
legend as a girl vyho had danced
at the courts of Europe, in ball-
rooms, casinos and on the decks
of yachts—was donning an even-
ing dresa. The transition made
her feel as though she were
seventeen again, the years slip-
As Olher Editors See If
to be ovejy That’s good. Now may-
be we can concentrate on the war
against fRI Germans who qge just
a#'resfwnfpble for vvhat has hap-
pened as ‘Hitler. - We’ve fought
that war before. But we’ve never
finished It It’s-, atiout time!
BID ON GUESSED CARDS J
“I COULDN'T bid on cards
which I only guessed you held,",
pleaded one kind of contract de-
votee after an unhappy hand. And
his partner answered: “Garda
which you can tell are in my hand,
because of what the opponents did
orernat they did not do, are just
as good trick-takers as they would
be in your own hand," Of course
he was right. Bidding on what you
infer, in addition to what you,see,
is essential to being truly efficient
in the auction;;
4$ 4
ee io 6432 j
• , 4J875 ;
' *8 4
4 K 10 8 3
serving it it permanent, becomes less.
For instance, if wc are going to have «I
power politics in Greece, it will be difficult t
serve. If Russian borders are to be extei
Poland, we will undertake through Dumb
_ tion to guarantee those borders forever. j
" arms'. »
Indeed, it is conceivable that such
may arise in Europe where not only tbt i
' but the administration might not be esped
thusiastic about permanently guaranteeing itj
This is a new clement which has entered 1
private discussions here’. It will become im:
only as developments from Europe direct, !
simmer and die if those developents become]
satisfactory.
For the present, I would say congress is <
into two caps; those who say the Atlantic!
war purposes, and those who susgfect the
be ,shocked-fo find now that our adverl
hopes have been taken abroad so lightly.
Republicans Shaw They Will Hof
Compromise With'New Dealers
THE MEETING of certain republican
era with Governor. Dewey in New York
DEFINITIONS
I Charlotte Observer)
We could the more heartily in-
dorse Churchill’s foreign policy of
intervention , in liberated coun-
tries against "mob rule by-.'mur-
der gangs” if we knew just what
,js his definition of ‘‘murder
gangs.” Just any “gang” that op*
putts his program? The HitietitoS
•call American and British soldiers
“murder gangs.”
V J9
'* Q 4' '.**<•(
*A J107
2
4 J 9 6 5 2
v k q ?
4K 10 3 2
*5
*A7
- 1 ” . 4 A 8 5
‘4 A 9 6
* K Q 9 6 3
(Deafer; East East-West yul*
nerable.)
East
South
West
North-
Pass-
-1 a:..
pass
If
Pass.’
'2* i
Pass
Paris
Dbl /
Pass
2 4
Pass
3 A
Pass
44
That is not the bidding .acturiliy
fleets lack of confidence in leadership by I
publican governors who had such a prog
in the last campaign it reflects also an i
position fo compromising with the New
In Indiana (now highly industrialized)
other states which the republicans woo,
publican .campaign was more uncompron
Dewey’s effort.
Mr. Wallace, the VP had nothing_appar«^
with the abortive putsch of the Guffey-Pe]
Dealers against Roosevelt’s state depart!
pointers although they are members of 1
Me saw Guffey once, that’s all.
The coming VP Truman got some repub
afore on his war investigating committee I
save the president.
Five Years Ago
From Files Of The Sin
Today’s headline: 'imm• Belly Hotwlng Project
Is Approved \ ,f
PrwtRknt Ttomewlt today gave final approval Io
a. tSOP.OOo loan toatrai t for a *!um <. learant* pro-
ject in Telly.’ nweeyad for foe Si* A bousing autfo.
■
Fir
innjsh troop* claimed today'to have turned' bkek
atilt another Red army thrust on foe KiwaJfin Isth-
mus. but 909.006 Russians soldier* were reported
missing on the yentrah and Rbrthrrn ftoafo for.
another offensive '
Around town Joljfl M Kilgdre grvr* the 4t«*tton
a hasty survey . a cold ha* hern Joe Kilgore’s
plague during the holidays Erme Lotltanc*
sports a white pifofetiiM agaiisat »m-
tery blasts . . Chester Rogers took* at «r«afot r
predictions rand not because of a 'proposed fishing
trip'.. . Kenneth Moait and Gordon Craig"pay foe
metropolis a, sheet boslneas Hate
'
Quotes Of The Week
From Here ond There
. **
"There to no reason why an Indian shouldn’t be
Preridentof foe U, 8.’’ Indian AffsirsComraisslon-
R was Saturday, and tlu; slu
dent was a-charge of foe parents
ami not of the teacher. But* even
ah, there he was playing tennis
on a public street minus shirt.
And the banker was horrified, and
tic demanded ail of the rights tlmt
a banker in a small town (foe Tri-
Cities ain’t small that way) de-
» mend*,,
Before weget any deeper'-into
the story we will report that to-
day that banker is languishing
away in a pmiitenUary-
He embezzled his depositors over
„ a period,of year# and-ygar*.
< Maybe , he had. grabbed a few
hundred or a few thousand that
very mornmf! and maybe he was
- juM a' Itt-tfc “qufek.” Maybe that
explain#, why foe ten#* player
mum shirt »o outraged hbn.
• We don’t believe you would be
interested in foe remsumfer of foe
*Wry,' ■•- - - ... __________
We will say this for foe banker.
If they tot 5***0 out *>f prison soon,
you will see tennis players now
baiting that onion around and not
even wearing an updrrshirt,
BOCteEWMJJKR DEIT.NKE
' MANS’ WRITERS all over ' foe
mow have com<> to foe defense
of Nelson A Rcvkefoltor, one of
th>*te about whom a storm arose
over their appointment* as as-
sistant secretaries of state.. -
The fact that the, Rockefeller
name to always first linked with
wealth causes R to be come the
object of smear by many who gun
for anything or anybody that even-
smacks of wealth - .
Apparently. Nsison A, Rockefel- general
ler k a fine American and as Vein (Mining)
such should make a fine adjunct g *
mm mm
appropriate, this proposed consti-
tntionai amendment to limit the
~ s rain levy
Imagine the teacher's humilia-__ ”Bhfi®'’tKF)fCirho'^ limit'w'thc
aap^*:';** 7 7Tr. 5 v"?2f? 6 i ‘ amount -of money Congress ran
Maybe it's just some guys-
named Ki-ny. Meeny, Mmy: the
same typical Germans who made
three ways with Bismarck; who
nearly won :foe> ‘'world with
Wilhelm 21, who looked. Hitter
over it) H)22 and said, “Jn, he'll do.
He’s our kind.”
The war -against..IJiftpr scents'
: ping away when she had slipped done on this deal ,ii) a .ruhber.
the’ fflniy dress over htir should- game. What really happened is
that East passed- the 2-Clubs.
amourtTof tastes Congress ’
would seem fo be worth—exactly
nothing. ■
ere. *•
. She broke a sprig of white
stock from a stalk in the bowl on
her dressing-table in Kate's spare
room and tucked it in her hair,
put when Kate came to tell her
that Tommy had gone to meet
Alan’s train, she took it out
Looking At lift
1 By Erich I
j*
which - therefore became the con-
R took a world war.to make us
Americans cat sensibly.
again,
"It's cute;
DAILY CROSSWOkO
26. Tremble*
with cold
ACROSS
1 Bare
6. Rod for
mrat
9. Greedy
10 Forearm
bone
It Tendency
12. Adhesive
“■"mlxtura
!4,81oth
15. Fuel
1? Bristlelike
organ
28. Cuckoo
20 Burst vto.
lently into
fragment*
22. Part of foe
eye
24 Anger
23-Right side
_ l*bbr )
2C Change -
2* P»rtof
fo be” ..
32 Confederate
■SOWN I
i.o< foe «ra
'm
;S 21W*
A, *ssr
[sje aifli oaq
mm
'jjaua aatiuu
Leave it there,"
Kale advised.
“To coy.- I'm afrakh “Daphne
said, foie meant it was too dan-
gerous, with Alan in the offtec
It was becoming increasingly dif-
, ffcult fo keep from’ being swept
away by Alans ardor.
The first carload of guests ar-
rived and Kate went off, leaving
iDaphM to finish her dressing.
For some time Daphne sat OB
the bed with a slipper in her
hand, pursuing the train of
thought that had begun when she
read young Roy’s heart in hi*
Obtorf
*tsrs
loaing ™, -------
spades, two in hearts, two in dia-
monds and three in chibs, his cost
150 points.
did not make the double
shown in the bidding sequence
above, and by not making it last ;
hundreds of points for his side. If
he had made it,-and West decided
to leave it in, his pair would have
scored 500 points instead of 150, &
gain of 350. And if West had done
the correct thing after such a dou-
ble. with vulnerability as It was,
the side would have reached a
We were discussing taxes at the lunch1
few .days ago, and all four of us agreed W(g|
are much too high.
Of course, like all amateur economists,
us had *a remedy, * except to fire & djUIkm* 1
merit employes, but we bad a *°t of fun ■
spade game which can be made.
That would have been worth,
roughly, a,total of 620 points to,
the pair, a gain of 470 over the 150
really made.
anyway.
One of the fellows^a man with two
$35,000 home and two automobiles- cofflP
there is no such thing as INCENTIVE fowl
"What’s foe use working hard and tram
brains?” he asked. "The government ttfmg
from us as fast as we make it, and all
tion, which is approaching confiscation, *
terprise and ambition.” r .
1 didn’t say anything at the time-I dooy*
be very fast at repartee—but when I got oom
SOfacontive. the fellow had said. Just wb«ll»^
tive- the-thihg that'impels men to action .
Is money ail there is to It? to ^wer, sitcctf
tty the only thing that is an incentive to 1
raent?
"-17
»,:*■!
.....................................
41. To take- . j house, unsharad. kept coming into
her mind,
foe proud to take
Had a ‘
The key to this bidding is sim-
ple, West, being vulnerable, should
n.ro. was sixty not mahe a dangerous overcaH on
c charity mSm a hand of that approximate n*-
eyes hours before. ra# uaces , P!aying at spades, one trick
foe extra rooms In her little
________M*V' 1 ‘ • ‘
......r ....... »tars . dinner
13. Organs of 34, Girl’s name 44. Timid .
hc irine 36. Per. to the sun 46. Greek letter lo find a position as a
—------------—-- keeper Irast'oT aH^Daph^'wili- tog "cards and doubled.'Hls passes
oughby Abruzzi. But . . . But did not necessarily show a weak
Daphne had a fateful feeling that hand, but North’s pass of
sooner, or later, Mrs. Gates would did. So East could ha?
be ensconced in Daphne’s west West for enough
r bedroom . -. % “I’ll have to find a his double a sound
place for her.” foe decided, put- > • *
ting the flower back in her hair. Tomorrow*:* Problem
gta Christ die
ar the cross for moMJt?
« the slaves for pay’^
t of ta
ture, which might cost him heav-
ily If North had most of foe miss-
Lineoln free -------.* - ,(h ,
Did Verdi think of taxes and of weaiip;
composed his gloripu* music or Shake*(r-
he wrote Romeo and Juliet? -
How about the teachers and foe P
,0VHov^abZtrfoe doctors who *0 buthfta'
of foe night to save a life, the sc tent st#w»J
long hours in stuffy laboratories to discow-
fo foe department of state.
We have no personal knowledge™
Mm but if he to any*
of the
puu II? „,
tg. Man’s name
gnakhtr.Rnejgdtojjw
fol* game Wa* Wtnthrop
-who used fo work at th* rafto-
Wm- '’ 5-
eiy her* while learning the Ml
foeLhefo“ -Gttmsn_new*foper. fo- STfoj^^f'criG
,»•:** *B*0^*f *** Icism because he will not have to
and Be Married!" Sign mi Justice of worry about Ms next nwal.
h“" lilis-
many friends of poocw m the »n«
. ATTJWMSTS 35 S
42. Terbium
(sym.1
-43 Uland In
” New York
harbor,
43. Spirited
47. Every
4A Pilaster
...
Id sl-
n Rnrtre-
.v4».0*rdof'
three spot*
to
W. Sc* msmmal
ilamide or penicillin? .
’’^iow afouFyou mother* who nurse^
r,-;
101
stjcsth:? sk 5£*« *
««*
r"t - si's?}.
- hye to the beautiful detachment
you. and you to them.
bye to the beautiful detachment * _2*
that makes life so gracefnl. Good- f
m
is
bye to this new-found feeling of
security against the hurts that
you can only escape when you re-
fuse to let yourself be .touched in-
timately by other*’ suffering,
No, no, Daphhe thought, she
couldn’t risk following *nch r,_ ,v ... .,
fine sense of duty. Affection for bW* ?‘Hftart*’
like Kate and Tommy and North z-No Trumps, South 3*
other friends, was all'that Hearts arnTNorth 4-HearU. what
lilMBS
A
through sickness and health, who cook and j
»k4 and scrub and mend for your children
h7hwtbout you men who labor so that youN
may be yours and your fomHieti m«
better lives foan your fathers famtliM-
How about all the millions who koow «
never be rich but who yet ^S the ^ PilUt 1
chores day after day. year Mfor y«r. I u b
{a Kies
fs - oYfoa spirit—and not of t_ ...
, ■ - 1 -- ---— ■■ ■ ---:—r-
♦ *
financial worries taken away
That would give us more comfort, | ■
mind, perhaps more happiness ^ ncvcf ^ j
hv money-- because INCENTIVE k • I
! (Deafer: South,
vulnerable.)
After South bids
North-South
2-Ha
s&SSS&F*1
^..■*-ssssw.
-
■.■j.. ■■■-•
,AY. MCIMIM 17.
&SSIFIED
information
,45t
P
*'ri.....*5t
r r«i »* >** nr<|"'
P^^urtcn- >nd wnvwifBf*.
l**: T D\rr the tde*bo«* »nd
IfeS HMrt" Z
JZ * ‘,i«k or u,,n* ^
I tail, render.
veil Mtitl )““ word
~r~'
[L 1- in by il »• m-
^,',4 ” r
arK WANTED___
Iteo to BUY
radios, stoves or ,
Fiar sr-s
r»nL Best cash prices-get
1 Umv’fl price and then
k. W F lWI. 312 Main
pw.a«»w,t
s“:
Anl
Hel
517 v|
t|
KTdfle in good, condition. 105
Ki Higl.la.ns. J-g
Di
pGRTY FOR SALE
geJ
birTTpre war price. Close ,
Bio per acre. Lots and ,
L,„ Easy terms. Jones and j
BfeSTWtate, 1003 Miriam
K Lamar Courts. B-~«
E„ f.foom home, double ga- 1
E with concrete floor, large j
Fri bargain. Ay 9- Bynum.
L, 680-WX. ■■ - 160-261PJ
T
LaB.^t-room house at Hat- 1
U Arkansas. Good bank
Uler house, hen house, _and ,
Coat pen and shed, $400 of ,
E'a Mrs. E. J. Jones, Box
Midlands, 9th and San
Efon Streets.______________182-6tp .j
fcktndncw houses, one broom !
E( one 6-room. Never , been j
M ia. Vacant and ready to
Lk in. The most reasonable j
fied that has been sold in the
pfoo years. Located in one
»fte sewest and nicest sub-
■Uons of Goose Creek. Don’t
p seeing these houses. PhOne
|i; Williams, 189-JX for ap-
pbnent. 165-tfe
ill bouse with bath, 100x200
H Lights, gas and water $2300.
■ dawn, balance $36 ~-mt
Bath. Also two extra ,lots. Ar-
M Turner. -Sixth street off
Bgrlake Drive. 166-6tp
-
(HERE! :
t the place you have been
i for. Big 4-room house,
big ham, cow shed,
Irate, hog shed, wash
r, with concrete floor, deep
automatic pump arid
f 10.6 actes of land well
1 with 25 pecan trees, all
jilp/grafthd, 12 pgar trow,
s have apple , grafted on,
l trees, some have peaches
i on that are bearing
. forge garden spot with
i; finest garden In East Har-
count. on it now. This
t is a bargain. Also large 4-
1 house 50x100 lot ip ArOn
, Mon. Priced low for quick
N- If you are* looking for a
1 out of tolvn,, but close in,
.let that will pay for itself,
i lhat has future pgssibili-
jv Don't overlook this 4-room
pe, 2-story garage, 4.5 acres
n all-.modern conveniences.
1 below cost.
Btooom house and furniture
,F E. DeFce is now for sale
* reduced price: So that you
® live in it while it' pays for
F- Don’t miss tHis buy If
* »re looking for a place to
t or an investment that will
‘big dividends. One large
fo 4-rooms arid bath on
Hide. One side now rent-
|a nicely furnished even to
' e, Other side la un-
and is now vacant
Iteady to move into. Located
corner lot with curb
er around It. Price for
E Safe!- Don’t milw this
Cljiffor
partn
a real investment or for’ 5?*!? d
**•
^ 1W-JX_ today.
lit With Us
Rontali—Sale*
«V$horo Realty Co.
Realtor Phone 801
^OOh| HOUSES
FOR SALE
t ,„J DEVELOPMENT OO.
i».n,,P*lfk--Morrell Park
17«SV*t National Bank
®dg—Houston
■ ”4’ »
S*
...foel
.Call 188JX
8- WILLIAMS
for
8EAL estate
tosns - Engineering
Deveteping \
Ml W Ifefro ?
r^rt
c
* *
-2,
Mulbe
juicy,
can g
^■1
Pecan
black sc
Persin
grapes;
. Shade
shrubs 1
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 166, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 27, 1944, newspaper, December 27, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028914/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.