The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 224, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 1, 1947 Page: 4 of 8
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THI DAILY SUN GOOSI CREEK. TEXAS
Vv
SATURDAY. MARCH 1.
>
Gfie IDailj) £un
Sun Slants-
bltohed each week-day afternoon by
The Dally Hun Company, 118 Weat Pearce Street,
Goose Creek. Texas.
FRED HARTMAN, Editor
ROBERT MATHERNE, BumJnewi Manager
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:,
Month, 78c; • Months, »4.18; Year, 1800
Special Rate to Men In Servtc*~50c Month
All Mall Subscriptions Payable In Advance.
Entered as second class matter at Goose Creek,
Texas, post office under the act of Congress,
Much A 1807.
By FfWd Hartman
NEVER DI LL MOMENT
NEVER A DULL mament In the Trt-CItles.
can't do anything else for excitement, we
one of our sons In a train wreck.
Imagine how H. O. Cornell felt the other day
when he found out the railroad car In which he
was riding was headed out across the country cut
•loose from the rest of the tfatn to which it should
have been attached.
Along about that time H. G probably wondered
IP he'd ever attend another meeting of the Leger
■
Red Cross Time
addition waterworks.
The annual International Red Cross roll
call openedMn tbs United States today, and
a Harris county and Tri-Cities campaign* is
HOOVER’S HARD TASK
IT ALWAYS REMAINS for Herbert Hoover to
have the toughest assignment or ahy man in
America. ~ ~ * ' '
He was nominated and elected president st a
.. _ time when the worst depression In world historj1
R part of the annual effort to finance thl*\) was Inevitable. Aa president when the times were
world wide agency. tou*h**t; rioow rw*lv^ ^e h*arty
f .... ... demnation of that same cross-section of the cltlien-
shlp who always want to fire a coach no matter
what caused his boys to lose.
Hoover has just returned from si trip over Ger-
many on an assignmefit of President Truman. He
viewed the food situation over there and has come
back to recommend that this country make avail-
able $475,000,000 to Germany for food.
Less than 24 months ago, we were trying to kill
every German we could. Now we re being asked to
feed those we didn't kill.
Here at home the campaign this year will
be directed by W. M. Knowles as chairman
and R. ll VanDeventer as co-chairman. They
expect to prosecute vigorously a campaign
among the people of this section in an effort
to raise this money. '
During the war years as much as $80,000
a year was raised right here in the Tri-
Cities. This year the quota here has been set
at $20,000, and we note that this amount is
slightly over the pro-rata quota for the re-
mainder of the county.
This is not a Knowles and VanDeventer
drive. It is your drive as much as it is theirs.
If every person in the area would respond to
the best of his ability, the campaign could
be completed in about 10 minutes and the
quota would be more than reached.
Jhe Red Cross Is too well known, and its
pain in American life la too well known for
a ease to be made in its behalf. Ip addition
to its far flung services all over the world,
it must be remembered that it is doing well
a job right here at home. Proftems that add
to the thousands have been solved right here
In the Tri-Cities office in the Pruett build-
ing in Goose Creek. Any contribution that
any person in this area may make goes to
help defray the expenses of office that Mrs.
Roy Elms heads ' «
\yijen the committeemen call at your
home or at your business, give them a
cheery greeting as well as a contribution to
this worthy cause. r _ , _________
The best way to impede the drive is to
rely upon the few exaggerated stories that
may tfe told about the Red Cross or any
BAPTIST CHURCHES PLAN
SIMULTANEOUS REVIVALS
Three of the essential belief, of . The evangelists also will speakat church nf Croiby, the Rev,
Baptist, will be emphasized by the 3:30 p. m. day front radio- J. McDvleJ oMhe Cell.g,,
minister, who tpaak at the Tri- station KRCR Baptlgt church, Bryan. ,
Cities churche, next week In the In conjunction with ******** *
simultaneous revivals, according gelistlc cruaade, the Inter-City The Rev, Joe Slone of the |
to Rev. L M. Chapman, publicity Training Union will sponsor an Baptist church of Yoakum w||
in, tii*. nurtirmattna evanaellstlc rally at 2:30 p. m. on visiting minister to the Kir..
TROUBLE IN THE TEST TUBE
Of course, Herbert Hoover la rather to be lauded
than condemned. He la a humanitarian aa well aa
,a foremost engineer. But there will be hundreds of
Americana who will take a bleak view of this sit-
uation.
FARLEY COMING .
JIM FARLEY is coining to Houston next month.
Appearance there of the bald'-pated former Nation-. Today's Headlines: New Jap
•f DddlOcraUc chieftan Is a reminder of that day Flast Head, for Java. Japs Renew
somewhere back there when he came to Goose Air Attacks on MacArthur. ♦
Creek, or almost came to Goose Creek. Japan's military avalanche roiled
We can’t remember whether he came ,or whether forward in Java today despite des
Five Years Ago Today
From Daily Sun Files
_______ _______w __________ .. Yoakum will i
chairman for the participating evangelistic rally at 2:S0 p m. on Waiting minister to *“
iS§l
leadership of God in matter* of cast. J P«wc}v Th# Rev.
religion, and, the gospel Christ. Th* evangelists and pastor* of Oorkero of the FI ret |
as meeting man's supreme need* of the Trl-Citio* churches will b# ®n- church pf Orange will be .
life and eternity," Rev, Chapman tertained at breakfasts on Wed- evangelist at the Second
Mid. , nesday and Friday of each weak.
The simultaneous revivals will and will attend luncheon-confer*
begin Sunday In 118 churches in ence* at Houston each Monday of
an area ektending from Cedar the revival. Report* of the me*t-
• Bayou to Rosenberg and from Ings also will be given at the
Crosby to Galveston. breakfast*. . .
■ Dr>C E. Matthew, superinten- The First Baptist church of
dept of1* evangelism of the Taxes Goose Creek will be the host
Baptist convention, is the leader church for the breakfast next Wed-
of the revival movement which is nesday; Friday, the Central Bap- rv.mj mpust churcj
sponsored by the Union assoc!*- ttot church of Pelly will entertain Dallas, win be voting minktaM
tioB, the largest association of the minister*. Th# following week, tke Oentr*J,B*pti*T church of pJ
Baptist churches in the world. the Wednesday breakfast will bo and ths Rev. George English ,
Twelve churches in the Tri-Cities at the Baytown Baptist thurch, conduct the service, at the
will participate in the revival, with and the Wooeter Baptist will be Baptist church of Pelly.
various evangelists conducting the the host church on Friday. The Rev. Marvin Cola
services at 10 a m. and 7:30 p. m. At the Flrat Baptist church of Worth, will be visiting minis)
daily, except Mondays, from Sun- tChannelview, the Rev. C. R. Me- the Firet Baptist church
dir through March 18. A prayer Daniel of Oak Lawn Baptist town. At ths Wooster
rice will be held st 7 p. m. each church, Dali**, will be the visiting church, the Rev. E. F. Cblejl
At. preacher; at the First Baptist Worth will be visiting
lung minister to .the First 1
Highlands. At
church of
of 0po»e Creek
XFStewart HelghU. Doom)
the Rev. Mark Richards ot
First Baptist church, of LA,,,
will be visiting minister. The
Baptist church of Cedar Btym,,
have as their visiting evangelist t
Rev. W. P. Jones of Ini,.
The Rev A. C. Turner ^
Forney Avenue Baptist
hg almost came on the occasion of the formal dedi-
cation of
ied alive when the walls of a ditch
cavsd in. Vi-,.
Junelle Jenson; daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. J. Jenson of Barbers
-Hill
Church News...
cation of the Goose Creek poltofftce building.
As we recall It, Karl Crowley, a Fort Worth man uw Australians wmen iook a i^irow
then solicitor general for the postofficc depart- heavy, but indecisive, toll of the Mr anri «„ Kn, p... . . ,
keep'uJ’fnklni 'h^J^FarUy^^”^ too. Strange planes "which may have W 'XJSviJiZ:
We stand corrected if that is wrong. _ been German-built” have carried Gglif. '
out bombing attack* behind Gen.
* VS was VI tii wua/ Utrs* sm u,__ »,rn«s»nSsM* in a n|ann
P*rate resistance by hard-flghUng (ita, at t£ h , LLortum bv BEV- ANNOUNCES
araugai^er: sesa <™
"A PUwer for Reconstruction
will be the topic of the Rev. Lee
C. Pierce at the 10:45 a. m, wor-
ship and communion services of
the First Christian church
Highlands Church
To Be Dedicated
(Continued from Page 1)
MV** Mvomummnm •* XJST&XXR TJTkSS ’»--«• **•>,-*»-► bXT&T’lTSfVS «-**m. mm
WE SEE IN a cartoon In a newspaper that Justice'line stretching across Bataan pen- ,L„ ™at A snd M coHege during Pjrr” OFfW"*,** "The Function members of the building commit-
week end. (Miss Roller early
:nin| across naiaan pen- « 0„j „ __
Hugo Black of the U S. Supreme court is an ac-. insula in the Philippines, the war th<, ..:5°£eje durin.f
department said today.
Jphn M. Goodman, son of Mr.
compiished cook in addition to being a jurist.
Also it is noted in this cartoon that the eminent
Alabama attorney is also an accomplished musician,
and it is said of him that he can play almost any
musical instrument "by ear."
From the way Jhe supreme court has been ruling
for the past six or eight years, we would offer
the guarded statement that Justice Black and some Stewart Heights that children
of his associates also must be "decisioning by ear p|ayinj? in ditches dug for
to?„ „ . . . ■; .. the new sewer system are endan
We can find no rhyme or reason to some of the gering their lives. The ditches
. _ „ . , of Prayer " This sermon will be tee said The five-acre tract of.
(hi. rifr M Kcbcr early continuation of a serirs on pray- was purchased with the first
this year became Mrs. J. C. Welsin- er contributions to the building and
and Mrs. R. C. Goodman, received marred to jLk'feker^Mm* W«l!l" ^Md'rhristlan YoJth "fellow5 Sa amlL^re
his lieutenant s comm ssion in the ineer is livine at roileee station a'. m' ftnd '-nnstlan Youth fellow- nre amouni re
u„w a,..;. w.. Fort .......... sTSs,t
m
mouth, N. J.
City officials warned parent; of
igency that may have functioned
the
Uk
other ag
during the war. For every instance of Red
Cross ihfic£ivity, there can be a million of-
fered to support the lofty ideals of this
organization.
Let’s get behind the drive with the same
zeal we have exhibited in the past.
Hews Behind The News
By Paul MoBoi
WASHINGTON-The Republicans are skating on
v thin ice in their budget slashing, and kpow it. But
they can safely make ft, and the goal Justifies the
, As a matter of fact, the ice is thinner than the
arguing senators know or indicate in their public
statement*. From a top finance authority on a recent
trip, I learned what few of the best informed Wash-,
ingtonlans realize—namely, nearly $100 billions of
the federal debt is in 'short ttrm paper. His calcul-
ation from federal reserve board statistics indicated.
$93 billions were obligations of duration under a
year. My investigation concludes that two months
ago the treasury had outstanding about $17 billion
in bills, $28 billion In certificates of indebtedness,
$10 billions in notes, nearly $6 billions in tax and
.v iavlngs notes, about$25 billion*. In special issues and
$1% billions In non-interest bearing debt. This totals
about $88 billions.
Whatever the exact figure may be, 1f money again
becomes tight, or any emergency develops, the
treasury would have, an unwelcome financing prob-
lem on Its hands. A building boom might absorb
money to an embarrassing extent, for Instance,
Prudence would seem to require the refunding of
a larger portion of small interest short term hold
might cost the treasury twice as much in what the
bookfc show as interest payments, actually the gov-
ernment recaptures considerable interest and the
toMi h fsr fc*s burdemome than advertised; \ -
Any Reasonable Cuf jCould
positions they are taking.
HARVEY BACK TO SCHOOL
WE HEAR THAT Lt. Harry Harvey, now a public
.■relations officer in the U. S. Army is back in school,
He has been sent to public relations school at Car-
lisle Barracks, Pennsylvania, for a 12-week course
on how the army publicizes itself.
Harry has had a varied career which led from
the Tri-Cities to a German prison camp after his
plane was shot down over Europe.
. He came out of the service, rested a Jolt at home
and then went back in.
He says Carlisle Barracks is wjthin a short dis-
tance of Gettysburg. r
Looking At Life
were from six to 10 feet deep and
one boy barely escaped being bur- seeking
Barclay On Bridge
9;43 cost $2500. Since that time, the en-
required to finance
the building has
At 7 p. m Monday the Young been raised through contributions.
Adult class will hold their regular «"d the church is debt-free, mem-
class forum at the home of Mr. bets said
and Mrs. Glynn A. Young. The church was organized In
The executive committee of the May. 1846. with a charter mem-'
Marsh gas, in medieval times. Woman’s council will meet at the bership of 49. The membership roll
was thought to be an evil spirit c“!, . *[ 10 a- 0°w has 115 names. * . <
to lead travelers astray. Rev. Flournoy has been pastor METHODIST Y'OCTH TO
attending
college. Mrs, Baker is a teacher at
San Jacinto elementary school In
Baytown.) ~ -j,
Rev. Robert E. Goodrich It.
held in the First Christian church n,w.r ,
of Beaumont. A numjwr of people Kimb.|| BtuJlaS^SSol
RSS «!» 52W* «"• tendent. Mrs W H. Ac
months after church was formed.
are F. E.
sitperin
The Rev, Robert E.
Jr„ will be speaker at the <
Avey. presi- in°the rST*
A IV/ipfku w WifM in IW rlfR m
HE WOULDNT GIVE UP
GEORGE WASHINGTON .had
a lot of qualities which would
have been useful at the bridge
Bv SfaDluird flordov -tmfehu^8 diStriCt of Chm' dent of’the WMU; M o/Worthy fjjj
By pad , clay ^ ^ he)d al Sr.Jr^urer J$CA Jacueon ^ « T«» “ 73<^]
lowed, on which East had some 7 P *»• Thursday rector- Mr. * p wiAn chow.. ...The Ye
discarding to do. He put the'club
10 on the second of these tricks
to let West know where his side
By Erich Brandels
table. Among those was his re-” entry was located* tuid on the
fusal to give up when things third and fourth diamond threw
looked dark. He kept right on, his spade 2 and 4—very bad
with his plucky little army until - bridge, as that left him only two
they won. You can bet that, on cards of.tfle suit,
defense against a No Trump con- South next brought forth the
tract, he would not have discard- club K from the dummy. East
ed from his own established long came right in with the A and
suit* while atlll retaining a Side cashed hi« remaining spades, the
meeting I
possibility his partner might pre-
vent the game trick there.
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Be Very Easily Absorbed
TlfE PRESS seemed to have an inkling at some-
thing like this situation. A survey of newspaper
opinion the second week in Februap' before the
ilisue became hot, showed a surprising' total of only
seven per cent of the newspaper* behind the pro-
posed house cut of $« billions. The Republican house
'.mmt’ma C ■ - -
ttte papers
mainder was silent
What the press and public do not apparently un-
derstand is that the $8 billions figure is only a lit-
tle above 17 per cent of the budget. Anyone who
knows Washington must realize that a substantial
amount can prudently be cut from any budget with-
A Boston woman just won a divorce from her
husband on the ground of cruelty. One of the prin-
cipal ‘chargd-ss He beat her because she wouldn’t
reveal the hiding place of her piggy-bank.
That is cruelty, indeed. That piggy-bank was not
only the woman's rainy-day depositor, but in all
likelihood it represented a symbol to her.
When people get married particularly when they "
Hvc in small quarters, they haven't much indiridual
privacy, ' - , ' „ ,
There is an old tradition that marriage makes two
pm^e:;<pe;jna. With that antiquated belief goes-
the presumption that whatever Is the husband's is
"also the wife’s and vice versa.
Community property, up to a certain extent, is
all right. But, unfortunately, thcre seems to be also
the idea that marriage means also Community
thinking and community spiritual life,
Men, in their thinking and their spjrltual living,
comparatively simple. No man ever gets very
iWay Trom lM^hodarTkny halfway sensible wom-
an can figure out a man’s mental mechanism and
see right through It. No man really fools his wife.
Women have weirdly acqijjate hunches which, in
more elegant language;.are called intuition.
But let .any man try to figure out the mental
processes rf a woman. Let him try it, but he'll
never succeed. Every woman I have ever knovj-n
has a little of the Sphinx about her.
Every wd/nan has a part of her life which she
heyet divulge* to anybody. Every woman, no matter
how happily marrigd, still, earries In her heart the
picture of the shinning knight whom she expected
to marry but never did. ■
I have been married twenty-five years. My -wife
knows me thoroughly. It Is Impossible for me to
bluff her. But do I know my wife? No! Oh, I krtew
Mrs. Brandeto, the woman Who takes care ot me and
of my bouse; the woman wiM ir «~good wife and .- u ..........
a practical wife. ~ , «l*«y , ^ intersection 24. Study with
But there are a thousand litUe privacies to which W ’ ^Troubles rare
she never admtu me. I ace it in her eyes every now 8. Melody 4. Estimated 25. Winks
and then when she doesn’t know I am looking. What 10. One of the -‘5. Nocturnal ' rapidly
rector; Mrs. A. P. Wlckey. chorts- ™e*?utl} ch?r ,°U*" ‘
-r ^ tpr anri Mian Kathrvn Jhi kson WethodUt church of Goos*
f HRIST JEW S' SUBJECT pianist Mi“. Kmthryn jRck*0H' wijl furnish the special
OF CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS F The board of deacons consist* of The th*me ot ^
JPtt£SfEg£il.\ L"fis &■»
read in all Churche* of Christ, Robert W Lg# “ “««"« Crusading'* ’
Scientist, Sunday. -.Members oof the building com- *?.£!!!!
The golden text is: "Unto us a mi*tee are Richard Marshall C. A. Methodist churches arei
child is born, unto us a son is Jackson, Jeff Tanner and W. W. t0 »‘«nd.
given; and the government shall Spivey Sr., The furniture commit- —--
be upon his shoulder: and hi. tee included Worthy, Fred Chand- TELLY' BAPTIST CHURCH
name Shall, be called Wonderful, )er and Rev. Flournoy WORKS ON NEW NAME'
■ ■ ......., . x-.-.k— ..." -F-—...... Counselldr, the mighty God, the
entry, fn order to protect another K and 7. This, however, brought everlasting Father, the Prince of i FVnrv wrouiv urr
suit, if there was any reasonable his side's total to only four tricks Peace" (Isaiah 9*1. kv toivitv rmwitoli
----—-------- - - - Among the citations which com- * EPISCOPAI-
prise th? Ic-sson-sermon is the fol- . Scr1v‘cf’ /or, t*Je iff0"'1 *“n-
him with set-pp tricks. lowing from the Bible: “The next day )n L«t at the Trinity Epls-
East pleaded with West that he
had to protect the hearts, which ^ ion at 8 and n a, m. The Universitv of
The choir, under the direction Toronto, Canada was
two
commun-
tuted a fourchette over the j in
dummy. He was wrong, however.
He should have clung to one
more spade, and could have shed
either his-club 2 or hearts, count-
ing on his partner to block off
a fourth heart trick since West
was marked with four of Xb* suit..
dag John seeth Jesus coming dnto C0J^} church will consist of
STo? S 2SSf SW tSSfZ gZ.*. 7
»in of the woi
• Tho lcBson-i
eAce and Health with Key to the Vefu®* \me thT f*c
nrifYtliPJYR” Kv Marv Pair AW ITrfrlv Ohlirch RThnril vritl mnol si 4 Q-M clna Isut mm A
The First Baptist
Pelly. in a regular ' confr
meeting Wednesday'evening, j
ed a tentative approval
name "Memorial Baptist .
for th« new name tri thfir
* K J1# 7 cartls Tif * the ^ui^ wh^h coniM* Thft le»son-*ermon also includes °J R- L. Docbendorff, w th Mr*. t„ lg27 » King's College.
4 2 cards of the sult, which constl- the roitoWinC p^age from the organist, wilt sing opening o( tbr ooilege w«/d*i
■ ' M ---------------■
nerable,)
South .West
If Pass
2 NT
^__faculties of $rti,
Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: Church school will meet at 9:45 cine, law and divinity ‘
"The Chrlat is lrtcorporeal, spirit- a, m. With R. C Halter in charge.---------ssJ*——l
u*I, yes, the divine image and “The Bible class, under the leader-
likeness,; dtspeHmg the illusion ship afJChomas B. MeCuHaeh, will ■!-->— ' ~—
of the senaea; the Way, the TriRff meet at the same hour. «
arid Ue-LHer"Healing the sick Unten service* for the week in-" j (•()[* Yf)||
V * * and casting out evils, destroying eludes a celebration of holy com- •
AVcek-Ehd Question • sin. disease and death.’!- munlort at M a. m. Wednesday; and '
opponents'pass while _ The churoh; is l^ated at Nevada -Utany at T-*0 Friday. JL ;■
?♦ IbisHealiig
11?. J*“« ' - 3 NT then 4-Spades, Jvhich defender 5“^ at 71 IF* «®NHAUS ANNOUNCES
West opened hto spade 6* to the should be cophted on for the «“ilw ffij01,' at»Wc4* "ERVK’EH FOR SUNDAY
10. and the J knocked out the A. lar^Y share of high-card strength ”^ reaS wm ’wilT'be ooen "<Jod'* CWMwn See God’s'Glory"
The diamond A. K. 10 and Qfei- during plfty for the contract? 6 from°2 m*5 J'm on M^da^j^/An Hour to the Land of Se
ff r.*«3rw
DAILY CROSSWORD
16. Blunder
19. Skin tumor
22. Spawn
offish
8 p. m Wednesday.
ACROSS
1. Mark of ft
wound
.6. Large.
50. Headland
DOWN
X. Learned
man
-out damage to necessary government activity. Both
preasand*publlc have been Impressed, for insunce,
by the testimony of the generals that national
defense would be "Immobilized." (They say the navy
would be) by a cut of only 10 per cent In their $11.3
billions. No one seems to notice figures of Senator
Byrd (whose figures on any subject have never been
successfully disputed to my knowledge) showing the
armed forces budget proposes to spend $3,100 per
man as compared with $1,306 in 1940. This Is for
personal maintenance atone and does not include
munitions or engines of war.
-
to she thinking of ? I don’t khow. And if I asked hef
she'd answgr "Oh, nothing."
questions. And
pfggyjbank!
The shooting war may be over, but no one seems
to have been able to bujld any kind of ^permanent
i cage for the dove of peace.
citizen who has been in the armed forces . Grandpappy Jenkins says that out his way the
knows 10 per cent $sn be cut from general military price of apple* to so high that he Wouldn’t be sur-
expenditures nearly anytime without delivering the * " ' " “ “
nation into the hands of its enemies. Privately some
army and navy authorities concede such a cut
would only eliminate extravagances.
Byrd, who hss made the study of government
wastes hto foremost work, was not even a member
of the joint committee recommending budget cuts.
Hw independent non-partisan position, however, has
given him a valuable objectivity. He says somc-
Aleutians
■BHVHI . H .....apxiJH?'
Watch your wife some time and sen whether sbe, , eUctromo.
too, isn’t a thousand miles away from you-on a tive force
journey Vhfch she insists on graveling alone. When 12 Mai. rHt-
you catch her on that journey, don’t ask her any .
‘ * never, never break your wife’s *|ov*a
along
. 15. Organ qf
smell
17. Type
measures
lg. MoUture
•v (he go Iridium
prised if a doctor weren't cheaper. 21. ^
Speaker of* the House Joe Martin uses a gavel *>1 'Ph*
' mammal 27. Ssck
6. Boy's school 29. Help
(Eng.) 30. Funeral
7. A standard procession
of pressure 31. Indehtscent
8 Country of fruit
Europe- 33. Reigning
Asia . beauties
13. Foot-like 34. Observe
organ 37. Jewish
14. Lair t month
"■ ' f ; ' \ ■
HUU UWU
QUUtH JULItJ
Uiauuu UQUU3
ua uau fcisiaij
ijuu aanBajffl
'JUU2 LJEW LIH
utiii ijun
au aau aauB
HLiamui
uiiEia wju ac
ijuj'jj mum
rtUiSj tdtarjci
L30IC UJ3
REV.
OF
M91MINS tUSlES
Ions on faith’*
\>»(rrd»y’» As««tr
40. Women
religious vow#
41. Rise and fill
of waters
43. River (Afr.)
45. Thrice (mus.)
made of wood said to be 15.000,000 years old. So,
says the man at the next desk, it will be only na-
tural for the freshmen congressmen to show re-
"LIT"
. Tlwdr]
ofthe |
(myth
im^t^d1 C working1 ZwVrZarljn '.Wort
cut in taxes hurriedly, saying these should be de-
layed at least until the coming July.
Good Buwrjdsi 1$ Needed
jdosf In This Country
i drink
! gods
liyth.)
26. The head
28. At the pres-
ent time
29 .( A sea off
Greece ' ;
32. Pen points
35. Nine (Ro- ;
man num.)
;•
27 year* of Intimate connection with gov-
tinance, m persona! opinion to that good
f essential to the government finan-
a«d that a tax .reduc-
ore than anything. A
built
only
the Roosevelt era
i. That is purely a
. than the
war taxes which
ly today restraining business activity generally down sound
to the^ point where a successful man wants to trim
hto income, enjoy life more. Thus We will have few,
er successful men, and less tax income to the gov-
ernment. ''
Unless this condition forced on, the nation during
the war, is corfbcfed now whgh they say we haw
prosperity, it wiil ifever he adjusted but will become
permanent. The treasury will not reduce taxes in a
(Tenressibh or in Mines of slight bustness.
44. Stop
46. P*rt qf I
window
frame [
47. Wavy (Her.)
48. Toward
thslee
itRlMMfjOKF:;
and Renewal
......- T . -'j:;
Xfic refreshing nf*
church respectireto^ IoIm a* rmn J understanding of the Bibk,
and 7:30 p. m- Sunday. and the. resulting release
The Rev. Bracy Greer, pastor of The Sunday school and the | from disease and other dih ’ i
the Central Assembly of God adult Bible class will meet at 9:30 t , '
churct), will begin a series of rnm-^£ _. „ -. _ ^ ’ ... }
7l-.uSu1?ay ,2e,Soufht Not Tears^fer.Hitn- » fi»uanumberedth(9u»ndl I
on "Faith. The title of the first *e)f" is the tk»me on which the * r«---?- - g ■- - j
saw'™' sas?«r^*sse nS^STTSW
sis i r»--K».s.
^ Spell, superintendent Mrs. Joe Kubik Friday. The group » .The complete cxplana-
Jam mSs.i srs ~ j. *• -
p. m. worship service. A feature of .SERVICES ANNOUNCED FOR * a°d *u «<«hpd of proving
SS.WSL lCrJ’.S! j UxmiUWHjrofioio.
ai Ifla-rtSB b' maSa’S'HSJJS SLS 1 u°f'*”d.'h“'fo"
The church to Seated at the at **uV* Lutheran church, Bay • l,eaIth* «Mpirat«on, worti)*
s.a-'p.sr “m ^ i
—on the theme "Christians ‘ neM< un4« *H condmoni
MONT BELVIEU CHURUh to Are Ambassadors lor Christ." } is given in simple direct
&S&H«aKa‘S i sci™*“4a*’
fa'TtJirifi i£ci^ce•**health
day. P — * ‘ " Held at 7:80 p. m. Wedn^ay at 1 w‘"< ^ ‘«> “•« Secipturrt
sbs% &yss sttss jrs- f *■ rij-
6:48 p, m. and worship services at ih*me Tt,e ero*« Calls Us to »
7:30^p. ^ rrayer, • •
I v
■SHSsia, i
riSrimihtoi j
Communion Invitation” --
At the 7 d. rn. *g*rvl
b Mary Baker Eddy
A book for all to under-
ftand and use.
In various editions, at
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
READING ROOM
Nevada At Michigan
\
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
V At thc 7 p. m. service he will
preach on “The Power which
Kelp* You Live Well," Holy com-
munlon will also be ’observed at
the evening service.
The regular church school begins (
at 9:45 a. m. with n class for every i
' age group. '
CHEVROLETS ‘
it M
“Big car
( All Christian Science Read’
l ing Rooms are open to the
l public for the study of the
• Bible, the works of Mary
• Baker Eddy, and other Chri»-
• tian Science literature, witb-
I tHsrgt, a
i chase stl tht
mSm
■1S...... .....1
-r
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 224, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 1, 1947, newspaper, March 1, 1947; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100087/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.