The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 296, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 30, 1946 Page: 1 of 10
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OJje TJtiiln Sun
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DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN THI
TRI-CITIES FOR
75c PER MONTH
28 NO, 296
GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 3 0, 1 9 4 6
lew Council Maps Out
Ian To Give Tri-Cities
lecreation Program
, temporary recreation council was formed in the Tri-
Mlast night- and first steps were taken by the group to
fra plan that will guarantee a program for both adults
Iyouth of the community. -
. -•— -r-«»■■ ■ -T.
FIVE CENTS COPY
-?--;—■— .
MEMORIAL DAY
!£'£. Knowles, representing the Rotary club, was
-temporary chairman; Nelson McElroy,- representing
ffri-Cities Chamber of Commerce, was named tempor-
[ secretary treasurer.
, Other representatives at
’ the meeting were Mrs. H. A.
Barnwell, Tri-Cities Coun-
cil of PTA; Mrs. p, A. Wheeler,
AAUW; Rev. Lee Pierce and Rev.
Ben Behrens, "ministerial alliance;
J. M, Stuart,' Kiwahis dub: X). .E.'
-Bauer Jf., Trt-pitif* Junior, ChanS**
ber of Commerce, D#J t
T. Hor-
cczy, Baytown Employes Humble
club; -Allen G, Meister, Tri-Cltlesr4
Welfare league; W. H. Burebette.
Tri-Cities Central Labor and
unison Gives
; Answer; He
Hot Run
IwTnof's Race is
** TmU. council; I. A. Yount, UonI
JN Mav ‘m d’.Pb- Gov. Oan Stallworth, athletic director
IV' Stevenson'today gave his- of the Goose Creek independent,
Juawtr on bfcrig a candidate School district, and Ed' Bryant,
R third term, and the answer -Harris County probation officer as-
1^.- - signed 'to tin- .Tri-Cities, were in-.
I left the campaign for the vlted to the meeting because of
icrstir nomination for gover- their knowledge of' the workings
fa 13 pthcr - imtfdates. and ofa recreation program’.
, Mrt who may file before ’ The Trl-Cities area ha* been of
next Monday. one mind for years now on this
today s■ - announcement, the recreation program," Krtowles stud
»r stuck to the decision ex- in keynoting -the meeting, he'd at
-ib in Bounced by the United the chamber of commerce office,
tot February 1 that he “and all we need is a group of
I not be a candidate for an- interested person* to, take the bits
,’ter- in their mouth. I’m ready,1"
i .then tip until last night The group plans to raise funds
itom urged to change the for a stop-gap program, this sum-
1 Stevenson dubs were mer, meanwhile setting up a per-
ils many parts of the state- moment council Then in the faU
lot of them filed Ms candi- an effort will be made to place the
| with the suite Democratic council** financial problems before
save committee. In aecor- (he budget committee of the com-
M today's renounced de- munity chest.
he will have to notify the A professional director to "put -
stiff eel to place his name on the program " is seen as the
EMht fen the Democratic tint need ted a committee of Be-
-
m
Violent Storms Lash Texas
By I NtTED PRESS , Its lines were down in several injuring three crewmen when Five the high winds. St. Jo and Muen-
A deluge of rain, cyclonic winds places. Mile creek flooded its hanks. , ster reported torrential rains,
and hail slashed at the . Dallas . ;In San Antonio, gusts of wind up Twenty six passengers and the Naeona reported ,4 inches of rain
area during the highjt apd until to 60 miles an hour did'consider-, driver of a hew Bowen bus were in 60 minutes. Some paving was
early today. . ' . able damage. rescued when’the vehicle ran into washed out and several business
Thunderstorms’ were^forecast for Greenville reported-a flash fldod. high water on U. S, highway 75 houses were flooded. A troop train
Dallas and vicinity tfiis afternoon More rain was in prospect for south' of Dallas and was washed was delayed for two hours,and high
and. tonight, .presaging 1 a third1' drenched North and. East Texas. from the road. No one was injured, water caused- closing of. highway
straight night of stormy weather Several houses were damaged or Hailstones of hen-egg size bom- 82 west of the city,'
for the North Texas metropolis, destroyed, trees were uprooted, barded Dallas, which-only -the pre- The additional rain last, night
* A stprm in South Texas crippled communication's and electric pow- vious night had undergone the in the Trinity, river watershed ag-
communications today between San er service temporarily wCre cut Off heaviest rain in a 12-hour period "gravated the flood situation and
Antonio and the Lower Rio Grande and at least two persons were in- in the city's history, ‘warnings were broadcast by tne
valley. jured at Irving, small town north- To the northwest, near Naeona, U. S. weather bureau at Dallas to
Western Union’said its lines svere west of Dallas; by a small cyclone, the farm home of -pene Cook was persons An the Trinity lowlands to
out‘'south San Antonio, .and ti^ot .The engine, and four, cars of k destroyed, as was a barn nearby, move livestock and other valuable
Laredo was, cut off. Southwestern 37-car Missduri-Kansas-and-Texas Montague county Sheriff Buck property to high ground.
Bell reported a Jive hour delay on, freight train slipped off a soggy, Jameson reported .minor damage to At Dallas, which had 1.54 inches
*-i- J'-“----— *- ----■’— —■**“■* of Dallas a few old biiildings and trees from (See Wind, Jtain, Pag* 21
Hard Coal Miners
Refuse To Work
Without Contract
Lewis Wins Welfare
Fund And Wage Hike
. V"‘ : *- .
• . J -
8iaw, buglet, hiOW, soft and sweet and Jow,
Sing a good-night song for jbem. who braVel-jt.faced the fop;
Sing a song of truce to pom.
Where they sleep not wake again,
’Neath the sunshine or the rain-— y ■
Blow bugles Mow. .. >i , .
"'V-y IlraE
long distance calls to valley points, sagging roadbed south of Dallas a
Nationalists Hay
Try To Destroy
Chinese Reds -.Washington. is*i’**-y* ado*-
• The soft coal industry gloomily menu granted in otheg basic (Jidus- __ ... r , i -r
Kuommranq Sees Chajce viewed .the governments' mine tries. , /d,UUO expected lo
To Wipe Out Enemy. ’ S,*» Hom* ■
SHANGHAI;’May-30.'--"t*.l’i -Suc-v' Nbder the -agreement, Lewis' fight, w#s a provision for,ap in- NEW YORK. May 39. -<rH— A
cess or failure of Gen. George C, <00.000 United Mine,workers"AFLi dustry contribution Of1 about $25,-, new coal strike began today as the
Marshall's mission to China Jb- will begin returning to work to- 000,000 a -year to an employe wel- nation's 75,000 hard coal miners,
pended-today upon a. possible Kuo- " morrow to end -their four-day-old fare fund. It will he financed by an refused to work Without a niw 1 -
mmtang derision on a campaign strike'in government - ..operated., assessment of. 5 cents a ton-on-all contract"
te exterminate communism. ' mines. The tndustrv .probably will coal produced. , Although the contract does -not
• " Well informed Chinese and Ani- h° •near normal production levels ' The operators, made it clear that expire until midnight; tonight, all
erican sour(r< helave the bitter-, by next Monday. Coal then will they thought Lewis -had won a anthracite mines wer'e closed to-
' ly anti-communist Kuomintang begin’ flowing to relieve the grave thumping-victory; and the National day for the Memorial Day holiday.....J.
may sei7e on recent nationalist Vi - industrial crisis blamed on the Coal association, trade organization and the miners said they would
tftrie. ,n Vam-h.iri* tn nrnmnfa a mioe.rdispute- . '. for the bituminous industry, put not go back to work until the od- -
Rlllvb JUi VW WCimiVIBHV rt VUMIIKIMW VI
Nation Honors War Dead
» i» certify the ballot, on A committee of Meister and Me-
off,,.. isce New (ouneH, Pag* Travelers Jam Transport Centers
In said that after the an-
piouem that he md not de- _ _ .
- - Truman Called
pl ;; Doublecrosser
t fom nf petitions, let-
I..,;' ,S*ST5' S".; Roll Union Chief Hits
“ J At Prosrdenl In Talk
By UNITED I'KESis where the holiday is observed and ment is decisive..;
- The nation's traditional pattern m everj foreign land occupied by As a result, co
of celebrating Memoria! Pay vas •Atr.eriran iroups . is at its lowest level since lO.'lo
i^ m ittancnuria to promote a ".•w.-h-wk-- ■ ror the bittuninoti.s industry, put not go back: to work until the op-
. .victory
that communist withdrawals from, increase necessary to cover the, for; Lewis over the government and Negotiations between the UMW
sss^K^'iinsys
any agreement reached with' Nan- (hat coal price ceilings would have- D. Battle, executive secretary of groups were to meet again today,
king but were forged by the milk- To be lifted upwards of 50 cents a ^ ^ Union officials said the soR^coal
r ^SrMted6 t^layna that and- eo?i?administvhtor X istered by’ three men-one ap-
20,000 communist Hoops had coun- A Kr,i8. government opetator nf pointed by Lewis one by Krug and ,n stopping the anthracite strjke,
• tdr-atlacked at Anshan and Tang- the mines, signed the-contract at aMhir.d by their two -appointees, although thby expect ft to be used
kongtse south of Mukden forcing U1(' IVfutc House late yesterday in The fund will be used, for payments as a ''pattern" >in further negotia-
te nationalists'-, to- evacuate An- the presence-of. President Truman. «. miners and their dependents tionsf. .
shan . Subject to the approval of the and survivors to compensate them Mine owner* had proposed that
Fighting in Manchuria admitted- wage 'Stabilization board, the. con-. for wage losses resulting , from- the contract be extended for a few
- j«"is light in ill tests of 8 pos’i-'- ttaef.. wyll give ^he bituminous mi- sickness, .disability, deat^, retire- —----
tioniil J i but superior national- nerS a wage increase of 18cents mentandrelatcdpurposcs.-
1st staff work, training, .and equip- T *• ... ’ : ’
ist staff work, training, and equip
5*lSrrs«r Foils Down His 'E* Flags
S-ASILS X“asr S .Taxtila Mill Owner Takes Vacation
workers off on a long, four day ed th, S9(Mwil* mtwnobdr race it tenttal m Manchuria was overt Mi- - "
NUW "TfDRK. May - 30. <l.D-A. J«w
‘ ’ F. Whitney, president of the bro- «ht
Heclares
llpwi Klan
workers off on long fom day ed th, Aummile automobile race at tenth! in Manchuria was overt
weekend holiday. . - Indianapolis. Thirty-three of the Owe -Nationalists, Page 2)
. Fair weather was the order of world's top rating drivers com- ’-
he dav m- neat; *}( stvtiom, of peted m today ■ Uas--c which at- . „ i# ' .
- r,A,iJasr»5J....... ........ Rail Line Tied'
n were making their first long JThc heavy holiday exodus from JJ ^ ^ JJj |
nfiir
weeks, with any future; agreement •
becoming retroactive. However, the -
UMW rejected the proposal yiester-
.’ day and- said the miners will not
work until a new contract has been
signed.
The mine owners • committee is
headed by J. B. Warriner. presi-
dent of the Lehigh Navigation
‘ (See HanT Coal, Page 2) -
'**•.- . . \ ■*
m
the
imnv
:»»* * z:<.....s sr a
the, Grand Central and the’ Ferny,
count il >pre- sj.lvama stations were
ATLANTA, -Go, May SO. TFI— the wage'problem'’ at the
A Southern textile mill owner n.is Kenneth Doutv Geoigia dneetpi
parked four wartime army-navv of the TWrU, said -the union- had mm *■ ■* |*
"E" flags m mothballs and'closed filed charges with the national I Avar II r#irillt\l
his. plant in protest 'of national labor relations board charging the 11AU j U« I UVUIIJ
labor policies and federal govern- company. with> failure to bargain . _ « j
ment regulations which he said in good faith and that formal Af I |*A((fA3n(
forced him to “violate the law or .lockout charges would be filed lat-MI vl VJJI l/UUJ
lose money,'-’- . _. er. - —- ’
President T. W. Tift, of'Died- Doutv charged Tift with “going Vote Of Confidence
...... -n strikp against the Civilian e-.r ... i ■ <
(•JStoM&it -- sssift ,;r:.sfriri.'
fcA.,0.,, May SC. --Cftre stated that you Uoa j| bVMavor
E»“ today answered «|U«not make a silk puisb ou' '
^Iw. ton * «vr j «r« sulent ou
i nousanas or visivors imcaea 10 - — •“ —»»• -*■-
— ——mT:::tZz SSSl.t.'SS sr® iswfjfe
When 750 mem- „n army and a navy. T cant sec terial for shirts, underwear and ter a vote of confidence. ’ '
oD-loco- kow a poor.man may be expected other wearing apparel. , At a three-hour closed session
railroad to operate .hi* business, without Tift said four month* and $35^; jast- night, the faculty voted 1&6-
* and $35.^; jaslr night, the faculty Voted 1B6-
wer^ consumed in setting the i^o in UVor of a resolution offered :
t. reorganized for reconversion *>v Dr. Charles* W. -Haokett. overv
. .. *■ -a-. ' He explained tliatS^* and Alvan-
iww sz "A »,.ny gaAS»gia3&:-***•■“■ ->■ >■» ;»*%»»jg*srsz ■ ati1:?”1*'
reorganized for reconversion fev Dr. Charles- W. Jfadcett. over
........... . .. ... . . . . .textiles. ,It was alter only two one offered by Dr. Walter P. Webb;
by President Truman - setting pending operations because he had fhonthff'-of normal work, he said,. . Hackctt's resolution, which wil'
an executive board to inveati- been unable to get approval by the that CPA stepped in and asked.be voted on finally today, stated
J__J Cfnhillaatinn hoard u:™ t., m aiSSr -r.. ,u.
,vw JHTjiOBS M ,,u •<aw*«»'- .... . _____ -
sj*
““h-iiiflrtriit Forced To Act -
'&j*SSSg SfottS mm WiiAtH*.1
Bagepe Cook to flie While Houle. ^^ When they Mdd Mr.
1 * m warranto atalnat' Tr,urhanj their poaition ; was-; uny.-.jBy PAUL MAfcLON ■" - .-eveetoteitemerit he may have ml
TOhififin‘ AM rr.J... J.’ ali.ai nhanffftfl B/f iofntniMl
.jsssttasiaras ,
>t;= ORA Hikes
- "B“a i;
2130 a. ih. . • , prices for-its proc
The' strike ,was' called to protest ^Officials of thciopal. unit
the refusal Of the H. and M. to pay e^cl ..ejenied they had approved
the tlHs-cent hourly wage in- ,u. L.t.„ .. « final
iicase awarded workers :“
the raise as a final “settlement of
Miforporation .in this state taking over the railroads. . F.nrlf,,! stories ate getting around ^ knowledge'that the-ooti^
i"" in. that it 1* not l On May 18, the day set for the Fanc,fuJ *WW» Kettm« arouml proposed was the one urged oh :
rnra-atua___ «,... .iriu» WMtnnv enl.I the President about President Trumans reason* seVoral weeks be(ore, fr.f
assurances for'turuing about so swiftly to s?yk 1Vgajnst Lewis in.tlic.coal ^\k%
■d the rati- vongressional-authbrity Jb^draft Uic -the weighty eongrZssidnal
jar. ■- • “**». afatuf—.......
t posing as a non-political that if a truce was called the rail
■> It i* actively engaged <sTf Truman t olled. Page 2)
... • * - .A ' —i ’
Johnson To Head
Cheese Prices
espe, .... ...... ..
ion that: have existed concerning
personalities and* policies, we 'as-
sure President Painter-of our sup-
port and cooperation in all meas-
ures conducive to success and
sound progress.”
Webb's resolution,- signed by nine
other faculty members, -stated:.
(See Texas lT, Foculty, Page 2)
A ' ’ *
1 *#* of vial i
ence Wve
J^ffjinkation wa* engaged
rail and coal strikers/
tious yarn being told’
was threatened by a congressiom;! *n* ™ I ............_ .. ......,
leader with much mentioned' in the sjtoctacuiar crease accepted by other roads
One fioti-
:» that- he
strike; last week.
The company contended that it_J
was not,'represented during the-' tktf 'll
negotiations in Washington which y A ||ff|/>A Hpffi
settled the national walkout. fM VI MViv llvlv
Therefore, officials said (jhecom^M
/Washington, May so. |/a|Ara|if Cifa
• The government'"has .authorized T vlwl Ull) sHUv '
price increased on milk'; biitter and . gg « g
..s^UK ■ ¥Trom Reinduction
Economic Stabilizer Chester
; .....
lissi SBSto, **
one, although It' was not- pany waS not bound to paQf the ' Itt-l. Rayborp C. Johnson of the con- Bowles announced’ last night that Ex-servicembn Will not be rein-
’ ' t H ' RMhM" ‘jr;"' J' ...... of the regional vet- consumer prices on milk will be ducted because of, the shortage of
Exercises Tonight
" r. v "I • ■ .. ■ ■
Break Appears In
young men for draft material, ac-
" to a survey made among
service officers in the
tact division
.brans. administration^ Office in raiscd l cent a quart..’ approxi .
Houston has been placed in charge mutely 11 cents a pound on butter, cording
of a Trinities-branch, to be Aeti-, „nd ,6 cents a pound on chcijdar selective
' vated Saturday, -according to Leon • cheese. The increased prices will Houston area.,
P. Howell, manager of the regional become effeetive June 1 “or as soon A’'regulation expressly forbids
office-. ’ thereafter'as- practicable," • drafting a man honorably dis-
Johnson was . located in Tesar-"- < Bowles- 'added -that “further charged from the armed.services, It
, - -»>,■«. », jrnmuf « a B. m ioma.it ... wa ataa.. Wat - ■ kana before joining the Houston shOTp thcreases’’ on the three was. learned.
NWf mountain near auditorium with the students them- OlO dealmgs. -. The ^ 0j th" actloi\^ VANCOUVER, B. C. May 30. rt’.E» Veterans admjnUtrrtlww!ast ApnL dairy products wUJ be necessary While the Harris "<ni^ ^
oonrfncfino- the entire com-.- Another common story is that er08siv over estimated CIO Hopes for complete settlement of His office will he at 118 North after ju]y j ,f congress approves boards are down .to the bottom o*
yND TOWN
.Y Vit
selves conducting the entire com
nencement program.
There are 36 students
sssr-irssrsse, ***•>■*■* •» <-*«,
2«*«,K,i,ry «7^= K'sss‘££%zxs “= s,;r£rr;,ux.1 - •,, ^vs%?iMJssss- r«Ts««
' °f hM<«« ‘h“ ^ government. What- —‘.h"‘ the br^t'he Cston oU P" hun^-dwel*ht ^ dair>' f‘
the International Wood- ‘ - "bowIcs^’announced that ceiling es™,. ,.
prices also .will go up about one Removal of the IS and „ 19-year-
cent a can on evaporated milk, old boys from the eligibility ~n
U..4S___ill, hoc oliminaforl *11
Ss^trS4?SSL &
• - ^J^srtss^z: ETC SS'^iSaeSS
ill ed. He was certainly angry, m. the right to strike, but try tieup appeared brighter today
- xUike w«s wt d^ a^nst nation^ mamfe'vt| * nol Uue_\ny. as tbout^ODO workers-resumed op-
n, &l transport ; but against his -an- .reika'aM-iPit 'anv,J>.v. ■ eralkms in 96 small Canadian
er generally *exempted
g»nii»«3rj> ctli^onra
would make workers “subser’vicn\ wid«p«d lWay“ wa« off.- ‘rofthe Houston'oG ^ hun^weight for dairy farm- groups are college ««
,,i■ - - ■ - sr:::r
....... P. r . ri in the smaller ojlerations'
“fer.sr Iran Premier
continue. -f* nmu-nvi^ofniv tvwt inflrs»rfk arid
continue. ' approx-ilnately 34,000 loggers and
, ■ Strikers would bo drafted, itmi- sawm„iWorkers in-the sprawling
the gradila11ng^ c!or the onyinal Truman pioimsitlon piry^nciajJlpdustQ' who struck on v . / ,(M
night that the United States will gree in history. . • in -the army at *60 a month but for hourfy'inetwS^ 40-hour' week’’ H|„_«sN u.T SA _(CF)
to fight -for the “right .Referring u. reactian to his S-»t- there increased wag-s^only if they union oecurfmr. * •
■ ir Pi - member of t
Prices on buttermilk, cream (ex- has eliminated about ail of the
cent in b"'k>, cottage cheese and new material, It was stated,
some similar by-products will be - , ,
Petty Hall Delivery "*
Ofl of the individual- despite any dif-
l bit of Acuities or emergencies it, may en-
urday appearance before a joint (See Strike* Forced, Page
session of congress rn which he
hi nabor
--1-:-
„o.H that thi, mm, 5^’jygfjJfK 85S
VAU'ABLE CAMERA
STOLEN FROM CAR
*■ “.all'll'
SSSPMf iiSk t T. HoHinflswortti Date Is Postponed
STS.^MSSSff?r* Dies Here Suddenly
Pepper
-3S£ HH
the the country is p
The Preside nt
smiling when
gress. Last 1
“seemed in
„«>,n
and un-
con-
Delay in receiving supplies neell-
fii^TyTpleadlnH”an’sgeafisde Robert T. Hollingsworth” of Win- r^°se“te Sf^SSd ,
against the Soviet Union at the nie died early this morning at a Mrs, Maude Richardson, postmas-
United Nations sceuritv ’ couneil local hospital after a heart attack ter, to. announce postponement in
Ci„ ut,u„.,„, w ...___________...has ended. His days as ambassa- suffered at the home of his son, the starting date,
valued at $100,’was stolen from his^f may be numbered. M. P. Hollingsworth, Goose Creek. “Wc anticipated receiving ear- *
zr&vsf&zwsi
•i*
By Olin Miller a Kodak Duo-«20, valuable
era -belonging to R. B. Jacobs ai
| ^ ^ ’ ___l..„J «*!- -R1AA ‘iirae etnlmi fw«« f
body coul^b*
*
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 296, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 30, 1946, newspaper, May 30, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101012/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.