The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 277, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 20, 1951 Page: 2 of 6
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I
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1051
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
TWO
SHOOT
ATOM FURNACE
Proves Most Effective
England, Nov. 20.—
HAR
THOUSANDS ARE Dial Phone Network
long
*
FLEEING REDS
#e
I
team. It could carry
4
Surface Burial Vault
>
to end up at the bottom
.Cs
.. A Memorial
Said In Beauty.
I
police reported Monday that burg-
3
Cuero, Texas
Olives
t
ist Drive" Americas
K
Sl Corral
favorite
0
—
0
58, called “an almost sacred re-
$
storm.
MARIE BRANTLEY.
K
g:2
10^2
K
y
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21 — FRIDAY, NOV. 23—SATURDAY, NOV. M. Limited Purehases
KOENIG’S
n fT-t n—ond trim subjed to chenge
LDEN YAMS
Retd Terque Cenverter
UDS
FORDOMATIC IAS BOTN
-
CITY PASSES UP CASH
TCA.
Cone in and TtST DRIVE” it today!
9
a
MV.
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31
6
R
E
14 Texas Cities lo
Be on Nationwide
BEST TEXAS
BOOK FROM
OU PRESSES
Finally Finds Time
To Become Citizen
pORDOMATC MM IS TWO DRIVES
IN on m TM nEwEST, SMOOTEst,
GomIGEST -AUTONATC D«fYl OF ALLI
" gained 329 yards
m, ripping through
Hereafter, City Manager
Ford said, all cases inve
STALK
18
a librarian on a group of young
persons.
school of journalism; and “OU: Ti-
tan of the Southwest,” in 1949, by
Dr. C. C. Rister, former OU his-
• Fordomatic Drive does more
things for you, more smoothly
than any other automatic drive.
Fordomatic is two drives in one,
combining the best features of
earlier automatics. You get the
smooth flow of power of a Fluid
Torque Converter . . . the GO of
Automatic Mechanical Gears . . :
plus the savings of having the txact
power you need, when you need it!
system Dec. 16 and a dozen other
Texas cities next year.
UNICEF stands for United Na-
tions International Children's Emer-
gtaey Fund..________ '________-
arles C.
g drtv-
Burglars Loot Home 01
$15,0,0 In Jewels
as the day—and not a
has been allowed to for-
at Bobby Jumping Jack
Gil Bartosh, the "Grang-
USED
CABS
• nothing better than Picayune," in 1943, by Dr. Fayette
with the champion- Copeland, now director of the OU
Boadil, last Moorish king of Gra-
nada, bore the nickname El
i (The Little).
sponsibilityDetails
were not released.
The story, written
“we’ve got a tough job ahead of us
and we know it.”
Still happy over Rice’s 28-13 de-
feat of Texas A&M Saturday Neely
remarked wryly:
“You just can’t stay happy in this
DEAR EDITOR:
While the Arizona branch of the
Brantley family read the account
of the Big Deer Hunt in New Mex-
ico on the rim of the Kaabah Forest
with many a chuckle and realised
the prime objective of the story
was to razz our brother Bunk, we
also shouted with laughter to think
the flying Dodo Birds didn’t know
where they had been.
Texas Gets $29 Million
in U. S. Highway Funds.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.— (UP-
The government Monday allocated
8500,000,000 in federal aid funds for
highway construction during the fis-
cal year beginning next July 1, with
Texas getting $29,681,979. Only New
York will get more- $30,724,302.
Texas will receive $14305,046 for
federal-aid highway systems; $9,-
577,321 for secondary or feeder roads,
and 85,799,612 for urban highways.
be-
the
*ytr RORD euos TME ONz ve
w Ta KUDt9
A Shrine for those you love...
A Memory to Live Forever ’
just a few ridges from camp.
Perhaps Bunk had a point not
i and Frogs are tied for
a the dizzy conference
record apiece.
Interesting Game”
XSUN
RANGE JUICE
CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERRY
NDY
GOOD FOOD &
ECONOMYPRICES!
46 Or. Can
24,
♦
r
10 POUNDS
58
POUND BOX
49
Defense Chopped Up
no title was at stake in the
ut rarely has any team chop-
i a Jess Neely coached de-
o thoroughly, unless it was
m Methodist in the same
tory professor.
V * ' " “ 1 ’
Texas Sfale Teachers
Assedafion Meets
Thursday in Houston
2 POUNDS
25
See Me for
DEKALB SEED CORN
and DEKALB CHIX
WEBER MOTOR COMPANY
112 N. Gonzales Street
9nt ne me on EMQwe
7 aousrys SiNoNs nr
§yovcwN
lauriovCA
i
enchantments, but never has it been
known to claim the Grand Canyon
of Arizona, and boys that is the
“Gully” on whose “Rim” you hunt-
ed.
Now as for Bunk bailing out and
leaving the flying Party.
-The returning hunters tell a story
about a certain pilot who killed a
deer and deciding the task of carry-
inging it out of the deep canyon
was too great, returned to camp to
get a hone, leaving Bunk and
begun to await his return.
After many cold and dreary hours
of waiting, the boys gave him up
and carried the deer out on their
hark* .. .
'notoi ouiiTNUMy,,
tZHILUOH ¥0^1
'nonAno uutnnnunuABO
uso won moor ontsr
noon makom ,
. wnASrBYAS!
p
IF YOU DO NOT HAVE SUF FICIENT BURIAL INSUE-
ANSE WHY NOT SIT DOWN RIGHT NOW AND CALL -
NO. 468 AND WB WILL GIVE YOU FULL PARTICULARS
FREUND FUNERAL INSURANCE CO.
gmd
RED
WHITE
*rmTeeFeowe
por“CAe,
Surface Burial Vault Co.
Man} Pickford To
Relurn lo Screen
Tulsa family of 815,000 in jewels
while the family was away on a
weekend fishing trip.
George L Blake, owner of the
Tulsa Canvas Products Co., told of-
ficers he discovered his loss when
AutemetieMecheniedG
by Daniel
Taradash and Elick Moll, yaa19-.. - -----
portedto concent the influence: ot strusting thiszpilot flying in a
etne--
Berlin, t is worse in the Eastern
sector which Is occupied by the
Russians.
HOUSTON, Nov. 1R-(UPJ loons
10,000 classroom teachers ahcpib-
Ue school oficials are expected to eat
thelr Thanksgiving turkey in Hous-
ton Thursday.
The 73rd annual onvention of
the Texas State Teachers Associa-
tien opens for three days on the
general theme of "Citizenship anrd
the Thre’R’s." - r-n
Simultaneous separate sessions of
the Texas Classroom Teachers As-
■oration. whose membership over-
laps that of TSTA, will be held
Thursday.
of the plot Pa86 be had lost his way and could-
n’t find the canyon his deer was in
and a trip to the Cot- Lone Star state, and was a surveyor
during the location of the city of
J Bit-By-Bit Peace Making BRITISH TEST
Now the state of New Mexico lists lars looted the home of a prominent
many wonders of nature among its
CELERY
85 . - 9
a memory like an ele-
the Owls paid SMU
at Dallas some four
2Jkanli^iuina
Fruit Cocktan
Roast Turkey With Dressing
Candied Yams -
Green Beans With Mushroom Sauce
Tomato Aspic
of Elsie the Cow, helped write the
Texas Constitution founded the
first permanent newspaper in the
he returned home Sunday night
He said the loot included a dia-
mond studded brooch valued at
82,600, an emerald ring set in plati-
num and studded with diamonds
valued at 83,400, and 14 other pieces
of jewelry.
3 Die, 10 Injured in
Chigago Hotel Fire
; CHICAGO, Nov. 19—(UP)—Two-
investigations began Monday into
the cause of a hotel fire in which
three persons died and 10 others
were injured Sunday morning in
Chicago's south side.
Five of the 10 injured guests
jumped from fourth floor windows
and 200 other guests fled in night-
clothes as the flow crackled
through the Norwood hotel.
Dead were Bart Cronin, 60; Miss
Edith Crocker, 71, and Owen J. Ben-
•on, 81. Damages were estimated
at $50,000.
g-T ANY amount
K” OPENS YOUR ACCOUNT!
• important thing about saving is to start. Open your
pditano, add to t as you wiah, either systematically or
TOUB sAvNGS ABB INSURKD TO $10,000.00
CUERO FEDERAL SAVINGS
"" , AND LOAN ASBOCIATION
. CUERO, TEXAS
ing and drinking will be filed with
the district attorney. For years the
city has handled hundreds of
drunken driving cases in its corpor-
ation court, disposing of them by
fines of 850 and up. ~
fashion.
The first instance was when they
decided the time had come to lift
the Berlin blockade. A Russian dip-
lomat dropped a hint and it
found Clete eating supper by a
warm fire.
Equipped with hone and com-
Tgb-
NATERH6,
CAMDEN N. J., Nov. 19—(UP)-
Mrs. Helen R Di Bernardino, 46,
who came here from Italy 30 years
ago, finally was a U. 8. citizen Mon-
day.
Federal Judge Thomas M. Mad-
den, who administered the oath of
allegiance, asked why she waited
30 yean before applying for citi-
zenship.
“Your honor,” she said, “my
mother died when d was young, so
I began raising sevn brothers and
sisters. Then I raised seven children
of my own. Now, I have nine grand-
children. It kept me ' pretty busy
making enough spaghetti and meat
balls every day.”
promptly was picked up.
The second was the cease-fire
talks in Korea. Jacob Malik, Soviet
UN delegate, made a speech. Buried
in the middle of it was a mild ex-
pression of opinion that it might be
possible to work something out to
halt the fighting.
The obvious place to take the
first steps in a campaign of bit-by-
bit peace making is where Com-
munists and anti-Communists are
shooting at each other—Korea,
Indo-China, Malaya. A workable
truce in Korea, for instance, might
set the pattern for settlements in
the other two places.
The advantage is that it gives
chance to save face. That has been
one of the thorny problems in deal-
ing with the Chinese Communists.
Obviously the Chinese are Inter-
ested in getting a cease-fire, or they
would walk out of Panmunjom and
not come back.
The question of saving face never
appears on the agenda drawn up by
the negotiators, but it Influences
everything they do.
The disadvantage of the slow-
motion move toward peace is that
many nations cannot afford it It
means stay armed to he teeth
while you are talking. Britain is ty-
pical of the nations which need a
quick decision.
DALLAS, Nov. 19.—(UP)—The
best Texas book of the year rolled
off the University of Oklahoma
presses, the Texas Institute of Let-
ters announced here.
The book, “Gail Borden: Dairy-
man to a Nation,” by Joe B. Frantz,
University of Texas history pro-
fessor, was given the institute’s
1951 award.
The volume was published by the
OU press last June. It was the
fourth time in 11 years the award
was made to a book published in
Norman.
Borden, founder of the company
that manufactures more than 150
By HARRY FERGUSON
United rress Foreign Analyst
The nations may decide before
too many more years that the way
to win world peace is to take one
small step at a time rather than
to try to cover all the ground at
one leap.
It has become apparent that in-
ternational Communism is un-
likely to agree to any over-all peace
plan when it is debated or negotiat-
ed in the spotlight of a big con-
ference.
For instance, the United Nations
General Assembly in Paris starts de-
bate Monday on a limitation of ar-
mamentz proposal by the western
Democracies. The dispatches from
Paris indicate there is almost no
chance that the Russians will ac-
cept the plan The Allies are equally
firm in wanting nothing to do
wit ha counter-proposal for limi-
tation of armaments made by Mos-
cow.
There have been two instances in
recent history when the Russians
decided to give ground. Both times
(UP)— A group of 129 Britons be-
came “guinea pigs” Monday in the
first major test of the peaceful use
of atomic energy.
They sat in 80 offices at Britain’s
main atomic energy station as a
rush of warm air swirled around
them—steam heat from the first
atomic furnace in the world.
The heat came from the Harwell
experimental station atomic pile
known as "Bepo.” Free of radio-
activity, water flowed into the pipes
of one Harwell building to provide
heat at a saving of 87,420 annually,
compared with coal-produced heat.
Harwells atomic furnace will
first have to be stoked by someone
in the next generation—30 years
from now in 1981.
The achievement gave Britain,
which lags behind the United States
and Russia in the atomic arms race,
a clear lead over the United States
in the peaceful use of atomic en-
ergy.
Russia claims it has used atomic
energy for peaceful purposes, but
it always has involved an explo-
sion of the same kind.
DALLAS, Nov. 20.—(UP)—South-
western Bell Telephone Co. an-
nounced that 14 Texas cities will
be joined soon to a nationwide net-
work enabling direct dial service to
any of more than 15,000,000 tele-
phones in some 1,000 cities through-
out the nation.
W. L. Prehn, general manager for
Texas, said the service will be start-
ed shortly after midnight, Nov. 24.
Cities to be connected t-o this sys-
tem are Abilene, Beaumont, Cor-
pus Christi, Galveston, Jacksboro,
Lubbock, Marshall, Port Arthur,
Tyler, Corsicana, Mineola, Fort
Worth and San Antonio. Prehn said
Austin and Midland would join the
R TITLE
See’ce
| By JACK GATES
USTON, Nov. 20.—(UP)—
5surprising Owls invade Fort
1 Saturday for a “sudden
struggle with Texas Chris-
with revenge in their hearts
be Southwest Conference title
m tetr noses.
O' ileslie for a revenge stems
the 26-14 licking they absorb-
Ethe hands of TCU last No-
DALLAS, Tex., — (UP)—Dallas
has lost a source of revenue that has
amounted annually to about 800,000.
TULSA, Nov. 19.—(UP)—Tulsa
Southwest Conference race
enough to enjoy it."
Hot Rolls
Apple Pie
61$150 Plate Child’s Plate 90c
Lunch Served from 12 til 2
I NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—(UP)—
1 Mary Pickford, one time “America’s
I Sweetheart" will return - to the
I screen for the first time since 1933
"ma production of "The Library.”
L 86TbeAlm/will be produced A by
Htaqley Kramer for Columbia pic-
tures and star the silent screen' he-
roine in a role Miss Pickford, now
Houston. /
Previous institute prizes for books
published by the University of Okla-
homa have gone to “Captain Lee
Hall of Texas,” in 1940, by Dora
Neill Raymond; "Kendall of the
BERLIN, Nov. 20.—(UP)—Some
6,000 fugitives from East Germany
are piling into Berlin every month
seeking to escape Communist dom-
ination. That is something the
Russians cannot laugh off.
German authorities in the Amer-
ican, British and French sectors of
Berlin accept about one-fourth ad
the newcomers as legitimate refu-
gees. A “legitimate” refugee is one
who can prove his life would be in
danger if he returned to the East.
Such a man or woman is given
a few cents a week for food and is
permitted to live in one of many
refugee camps. The others may re-
main here if they desire. But they
are on their own.
Being on your own means that
you live "gray." Living "gray*’
means you have no papers ,np
proveable identity, no access to
public assistance of any kind-
nothing. Yet thousands of Ger-
mans in the free sectors of Berlin
choose to live "gray,” rather than
return to the Russians.
They cannot often get wock.
There are 265,000 unemployed here
right now. The overflow from the
East and the jobless or half-em-
ployed here include professional
men and women, skilled labor and
the unskilled.
There is a surplus in Berlin of
2,200 physicians and surgeons. Some
are hotel bell boys. Others shine
shoes, get work M gigolos if they
are handsome, or do whatever else
they can.
A good physician is lucky to aver-
age more than the equivalent of
an income of a dollar a day. There
are practicing physicians in Berlin
who make their calls aboard bi-
cycles and carry their pills and in-
struments stuffed into their blouses.
The plight of physicians in Ser-
Un is typical of the economic tis-
organization afflicting the city more
than six years after the war end-
ed.
Bad as it is in the free sectors of
Better yet...
WITH FORDOMATIC DRIVE! *
W. A. LUDDEKE
RL 3, Box 155, Cuero. Ph. 1311W1
——————
- celery • - -
Cranberry Sauce
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Craze, Victor. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 277, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 20, 1951, newspaper, November 20, 1951; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418270/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.