The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 151, Ed. 1 Monday, June 25, 1951 Page: 3 of 6
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THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, Tit***
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Now Battered Shambles
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The modern office buildings fared
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discuss ways of inducing the west- enlists.
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Surface Burial Vault
which has kept German scientists flights are perectly feasible right
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It was done in greatest
se-
Said in Beauty.
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he said, because the Nazis
had banned all private rocket ex-
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The men who designed and built
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epletehe
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—to
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their knowledge to help
assure
western leadership in the field.
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Yet ALSO GET
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rocket
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Let OUR
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Classified Ads
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YES, IT'S
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Whether your
probiem involves buying . . sellng . ; hiring . . renting . .
trading . . finding . announcing . . notifying - - Classifled
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Ads, ofer • eomplete, town-wide coverage for maximum
Don’t wetry or fret ...don hundreds of ecenemy-mid-
ed readers have done, make your sales, aervices and wants
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ADS REGULARLY FOR RIAL RESPONSE.
SLIM COVER-UP— This dress-
Phone 1 for Ad-Taker
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The Cuero Record
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SERVING TrH E
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In thr Got Business, tee
IT TAKES MANY SOURCES OF SUPPLY
toned
bodice.
LIONS ARE NICE folks to live with. is opinion of mama duck in Philadelphia zo0. where she is shown teach-
ing offspring how to paddle in the moat surrounding the lions' lair while Tarzan-suns himself She hatched
Germans Want To
Get Back Into
Business
but-
the
and-jacket maternity costume is
in Hue and black printed crepe
and black faille, from the 1951
1 collection of a New York design-
they
an
WMITI
WANT
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One creek doesn't make a river, nor
one river an ocean.
In the same way, one joint of pipe
doesn’t make a naturalgas pipe line. It
takes thousands of joints to form the
gathering lines which move gas out of
the field: it takes thousands more to
construct a main transmission line; and
still other thousands to build a system
of distribution mains and service lines.
in the world are located in AM
Pa.
WEST OFFERED
ROCKET SKILL
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Taxpayers Fooling Bill
For Adolf Hiller'
Promises
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ed or stolen.
These survivors of a war — count-
less thousands have died under the
, -Aad
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Kiecka
(^kic and
(dkannina
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JAESONOFFICEN
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101‘E Mein $.
Phone 109
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The two largest railroad > *
U.S. PAYS FOR
NAZI BIRTHS
nae
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RM AU minus os HMM** AIM
BkofMI MR men wi W pleased to
& doesm‘ mekeen Acton ..
When gas supplies from more than 200
fields are available to meet the needs
of such a system ... and when more
than 400,000 homes and industries are
being served from that system... then
you have United Gas. -
Always, United Gas is planning and
building for tomorrow; building to as-
sure adequate supplies of gas for our
customers of today, and of the future.
We de heppy Re offr jrhid
eomplebehenery
• Civilians are not being allowed
to return to Seoul in any great
flood. A few trickle across the Han
River dally it they can prove they
own undamaged property in the
city but most are halted definitely
at the bridges which lead into the
8:
4- $
3-
BEELN (UP.)- American tax-
payers are paying off today on the.
4
. A Memorial
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The wise, economical way to valve your everyday problems
•As—-----•
3‘ISHIN
Typewriters - Addipz Machines
is worn with the collar
little, better. If you drive down the i
streets at night or on a foggy day :
you might feel that section of the .
ctv is hardly hurt, for the walls of
concrete and steel stand.
health authorities who have sprayed. cpove v .
DDT over the rubble and yaccin- Germanys V-1
a ted or inoculated most residents. | which blasted
tea nroud pageant — stretched back
lhr centuries to the years .before "the
American continents first trembled
to Rie sund of a white man’s gun.
a • In'this metropolis Uved approxi-
,1,600,000 persons. < *
S 4 Heday Seoul i "a battered sham-
Wes of a city. Entire Hocks are lev-
elled completely. Countless of the
^nkmful sway backed tHe roofed mud
MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1951
*..... 1 ■■ 1 - —e—
and V-2 rockets
London late in
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paa..
the Classified Ads! READ AND USE THE CLASSIFIED
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srg-
"German kuowiedge of rockets
A SMALL hand bike pump is a hand)
thing to have along if you are carry- ,
ing live minnows with you. Even if
you have one of the late model
bucket* that provide for letting air
. into the minnows, you can still give
a couple of pumps with that bike
pump and keep the water better
I supplied with oxygen. Most fisher-
men make the mistake of trying to
carry too many minnows in a live
bucket. If you plan to carry the
minnows any distance, do not put
more than 15 to the gallon. It is
Far better to carry about 10 to the
gallon of water. You'can also fresh-
•n the water by dropping chunks of
ce into it.
J3G8
Sgk-
er The • cap-sleeved dress.
today is still far ahead of that of crecy,
scientists in any other country." - -
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2,9, ‘
mm
known far and wide by placing your message in our
out of the rocket projeciltes field now. under the plans he and
•O NOT try to renew water by
idding water scooped up from
litcbes or small streams. Very often
his added water will kill the min-
ows.
BY ANDY ANDERSON
---------------—--
ce-Beautiful Seoul
down the front of
200-6
—
ing. There are many shops and
The walls have few roofs. They ,
have fewer floors at the levels where
elevators once unloaded their daily j
cargoes of office workers. Inside
those’ ghostly walls you can look
from the basement to the Korean
sky without obstruction.
The walls which face the street in
scarred splendor are deceptive. They
hide the real ruin of a city.
Colonel Charles R. Munske of
Nations civil affairs command in
Korea. estimated the city of Seoul
was 45 per cent destroyed beyond
repair. That means almost half of
this city will have to be rebuilt.
■ And in the ruins live an esti-
mated 300,000 Koreans, seeking a day
to day existance—chiefly by loot-
the"first full automatic ;
mail service."
The scientists also said
have been invited to attend
Problems!
But take a look at modern Seoul ini h.®
the merciless sunlight of midday. ’ -6
markets, but few have the money to
buy.- There is no manufacturing
AIL heavy machinery has been ruin- svn ducklings in quarters of Tarzan and two other lions.
have disinte-
Moslem followers of Aga Khan •
plan to give him in 1954 a 70th
anniversary present of his weight
in platinum. It> six-two-nd-even
foxy old Aga goes in for a steady ।
diet of meat, potoes and double
desserts. ,
V < OUT OF THE BAIT BOX
Do yu have a pet charity? If so,
vou can win $100 or $1,000 for
that'charity by competing in the
Grand Prize State-Wide Fishin'
Tournament starting May 1. There
ire thirty-six monthly prizes of
$100, and two grand prizes of
$1,000 each. All money won must
go to some charity designated by
the winner and approved bv th*
tournament committee.
Copyright 1951- Grand Prize Feafures
YOU AND INDUSTRY, TOO
Solve YOUR
■ In
L y.
coI
• n
In 1934 it was 1,198,000 in193
1,263,000 and in 1936 1,278,000.1
In terms of births per thoustiM
in population, it went froa rail
of below 16 to 20 6 in 1939 (Toda
it is back around the 16 mark»i3
What to do with these young
sters about to graduate is a prob
lem occupying the minds of man
West German leaders. The wes
Berlin house of deputies still ha
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d.
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UNITED GAS...
te be held in London by the
“Astronaut k Corguss" scheduled
British Inderplanetary Society in |
September.
t This, they feel, is a promising
beginning of reacceptance and I
recognition of German rocket sci-
Classifled Ad columns! De business ...get resuits in
d guns of the armies which have
t fought for Seoul four times—depend
i almost entirely for their food on
•Colonel Munske’s UNCAC...
, The U. N. purchases food for the
e refugees through the South Korean
t my and supervises its distribution.
Each person gets three bops of rice
per day. One hop is less: than one
pound of uncooked polished rice.
"The people are not starving,".
Munske said, “But they are hungry.
They could use more food."
: Authorities attributed that to
ceaseless work on the part of U. N.
IN TIME OF NEED
FKW FREUND FUNERAL HOME
' ----_-----_ ---
iBWLIAM CHAPMAN homes of millions
hHte4 Press Staff Correspondent (grated.
MBOOL. June 23—(UP)-- After a
linear of modern war the capital
Korea is a petrified forest of
arrech charred buildings.
enui is the exemplification of
K Under the dust of'itt streets
id buck alleys are the smudges of
god left behin by dommunist and
efatle armies. Behind its re-
ining boarded doorways and the
zhileas sockets of its glassless wih-
rs lives an army of dirty, fright-
bed, bewildered, hungry refugees
Mb horror.
OncaSeotl was one of the proud
auties of the Orient.1 - It had
anaing modern office- buildings
mg* HOcks in the modern section
88215- -1
A Shrine for those you love . ... A
. (Memory to Live on Forever. J
3 f
Kar Poggensee. who were other
"brains" behind Germany’s war-
time roibit development. , Nebel
claims German experts are ready
to constuct. immediately, rockets
capable of carrying men 20 miles
above the earth’s surface.
AHthe plans and designs for
■ their construction are completed,
they claim.
The Bremen meeting of these
rocket “greats”. was their first get-
together since the war.
The three leaders are members
of the"Northwest German Society”
(Norwestdeutsche Geselschalf
fuer Weltraumforschung.)
They said they have been in
coneact with the government of
Hati on plans for development of
tleninasapumemd
•
gA A had museums and palaces and
“ hall which stretched back
jenob the pages of recorded history
THERE'S PLENTY FOR
periments at the time.
The piloted rockte soared to
only 60 meters (about 200 feet)
Poggensee said, but it proved that
#t ean be done.
The three scientists are con-
vinced rockets are going to be-
come increasingly important in
the future as the only feasible
means om inter planetary explora
tion
They think the western powers
shculd give them a chance to use
Surface Burial Vault
flipped outside of the jacket I’ »
has an plasticized waistline *
/N y Drese phf,to)
World War II. want to get back in
the business of making rockets
again. •
They have met in Bremen to
Poggensee said piloted rocket
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S*--u--
Lt ,7 e -r,. N -
-------
- - 3 —/4 -Atrizie
Many of the Members hope.
delay the date so that new an
of job-hunters will not j
the already high (285,000) numl
of unemployed here too soon.
Competent authorities estim
that there will be 28,000 You
under 18 unemployed in Beru
after graduation. They are part
after graduation. They are prart
ularly worried that this growl
high figure of juvenile delinquen
1 one of Germany’s greatest rocket
experts. , -
FRANKFURT. Germany (U.P.- With ' Albert Pullenbug and
his
isince the last V-2 was fired against colleagaes have devekoped. As a
imatter of fact, he said, he con-
ern allies to lift the rigid ban
promises Adolf Hitler made to
German women that children born
in and out of wedlock would be
supnorted by the state.
The sons and daughters of the
first German mothers to win Hit-
ler's thanks during his baby-
breeding program are now gradu-
taing from high school.
They are the children who were
born in 1934-1936. the years Hitler
' was handing out the "Mutter-
kreuz” (Motherscross) to women
for fulfilling his demands for more
children.
A bleak future faces most of
these teenagers, of the 25,000 who
are graduating this year from
West Berlin’s high schools,, more
than half will go on the jobless
rolls.
That’s where the United States
taxpayers ccmesin. It is American
aid to West Berlin that enables
the city government to give the
children the necessary relief to
exist.
What’s more, the problem will
increase next year and the years
thereafter, according to Allied off-
cials until the peak period in 1956
and ’56 is reached.
The birth rate climbed steadily
during the reign of the "Fuehrer.”
rising from less than 1,000,000
births yearly to 1,413,000 hi 1939
Cuero, Texas
—।-------- , -i. j— . ......
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• orr tow mst Bins in
26’,
guuk
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a - #9 n** seamd
t ■ handspfpeg
. aademmaaa
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~.18
he city could have been mistaken
Indianapolis or Peoria.
dareetiwere paved and Gere Brooklyn. N. . Y.. and the ’ United
^INSTITUTION SERVING
:-ygen,
said a spokesman. Rudolf Nebel,
' a
. . ..., —5-Ma
not decided when graduation should
take place this year.
Engiand. u structed the first rocket in which
Thej- think they have a per- a passenger was carried.back in
suasive argument: . . . 1937.
mm
e-"-
capital.
Munske said civilians flooding in-
to Seoul would hamper military op-
erations, create a food problem, a
water problem, a fuel problem and
a sanitation problem.
The street cars have not run here
since, mid-September when" the first
Marine and 7th Infantry Division
began thelr assault on Inchon and
Seoul. And the only traffic is mili-
tary. > ,
--e
DUCK, THERE’S A LION!
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 151, Ed. 1 Monday, June 25, 1951, newspaper, June 25, 1951; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1551882/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.