Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 181, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 23, 1949 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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1
PACE FOUR
the mii v democrat voiu. comiAv, ttk
ECHO
Bewey Ckson, they brnu g h t
tJrenda Cason home , a f ter
ight<
R Bn
riey, i:
i tal for an
t Wednesday,
rmgton
B, eck*
she had
,, !th
three- weeks visit-
out there.
I day and
appe
retuned
doing nit
ias: Dodson l.oine Sunday evening
sters
By Mrs. T. H. Crosby
(Special Correspond at ,
Thursday ni
Shubert Eei
Mr.
uui
Mr
Mon- were Juanita and Patsy Barnes
and Mr and Mrs. Woodson Dunn
of New Mexico, and Mr. Dos-
son's mother, Mrs. E. G. Simp-
ujjb-
® Kd
Mr
nd Mrs. Billy C >me
, spent ! he wet*
mis, Mr and
icr
nd Mrs H. D. Smith awl had as visitors ?
Sited Sunday with Mrs and his faftiib
mother,VJlfrs Burroughs and* their . ug
r Valley The boys, Dot> Matson, Mr. Wj
James D, remained for tei. also of !'•
: '■dsit : Mr. ,;i!11 Mi
of Abilene
Bessie Pearl Sanders, hjs patents.
- taken to Overall Hospi- The
skins of Glen Cove.
! )ud
ni eh-
Goss home Sunday were Mr. and t
THURSDAY, JUNE US, 1949
Mrs. Frank Sanders, Mr. ary 1
Mns. F. H. Walker, Patsy ar.d
Curtis, Loyd Walker, and M'iss
Alberta Svler if Abilene.
Miss Zelrna Beeler of Abilene
Spoilt Saturday night and Sunday,
Stnida; wi
visit
Mrs, ganders Edmundson and
MisS Daisy, with Mrs. Charles ________„„
Hickman add children of Cote-! with her parents,
man went to'Burkett Sunday I ' — ———-
hi evening. | Mr. anil Mrs. Chester Jenn-
ings visited Sunday evening at
Those visiting in the Leon Grosvenor with her parents.
Articles On
Antarctic Region
Are Misleading
SfWi
inder nre- V ,,
».t. •
SWAP and SAVE
NUNLEY’S
• Two ]0-quart sliding crispcrs!
• Bonus Cold Space . . . Refrigerated
Fruit Freshener keeps a big supply
Guaranteed Used Tires
four big. new
of fruits, a rase of soft drinks deli-
ciously cold!
O Kelvinator s famous sealed-in-sleel
Polarsphere. lops for dependable ojier-
alion!
i
^MvestFarrriTiresjnjQW
, ^ g
i
Up to $100°° for your old
Refrigerator SWAP & SAVE
Swa]> mid Nave On
TRACTOR TIRES
Up to 50% off REGULAR PRICES
YOUR OLD TIRES SWAP NOW!!
FOR
p
SAVE GAS TIME AND MONEY
I Built for both ground-driven
_ -’ and free-rolling implements.
Delivers mtnmum cushion-
ing and easier steering. ,
BY ARTHUR SCHOI.E? ■
(Written for* the United ^rens)
SYpNEY, Australia (U P.)—
lossal. ,
Even if the Antarctic.
! were to hold great wee
Irate it and mine it, under pre
I s'ent-day conditions would seem
:t i be’impossible.
Quite a few scientists consider
the Antarctic coal measures will
not, be worked until those of
1 the rest of the wprld have been
exhausted.
Much of the Antarctic contity
Fnntastic stories appearing i n . ,,nt resembles the uriiiiium-henr-
populuf" "scientific” magazines jng distriet of the Arctic, but to
in the United States about the; sav that it .therefore contains de-
so-called untold mineral wealth | posits of uranium and vast quan-
of Antarctica are giving the wo- j tivieS of other raw materials is
ild a misleading and completely Jlisl guess WOrk. It will be many
unrealistic picture of the sou- vears before the entire continent
them continent, ium beeii 'geologically surveyed.
Such headlines as "Nations 1 other Misconceptions
Race for Antarctic Uranium," or similar misconceptions exist
i'‘Secret Plans to Bore Thousands . .pout the potentialities of l li e
'of Feet Through Ice," are high- j continent as an aviation hasp for
! ly colored and imaginative. ' living great circle routes in the
i Articles on those lines were |Southern Hemisphere. Flying is
Included in a bunch of maga- possible with reasonable security
tzines taken with the Australian \ onjy „ October and November,
expedition to Heard Island. They At other limes jponditions are
were a source of intense an>Use-..j mogt uncertain.j
intent to all of us. “j ,\t Heard Island we experienc-
Nnwhere could there be found - ,,<( jreyuent winds exceeding 1-00
greater admirers of the rnagni-; mi)tn Weather predictions for
Ificent work done by Admiral ; more than 12 hours ahead are
Byrd and his colleagues among almost impossible Then there is
| the Australian expedition men, |no certainty the forecast ’will be
jbut such stories detract from the neeurate
real scientific value of work \ interest of different nations
done by the Americans. Scion- |.j„ Antarctica itself is being aftri-
Itists have found little evidence I buted to the desire to establish
of mineral wealth in the Aiitarc- j bases for defense purposes, such
| tie; The expense'of exploiting the Ls strategic air or naval bases,
existing discoveries might well-1()r testing grounds far sub-zero
I exceed the cost of the Manhattan warfare.
i project ($2,000,000,000). j Argentina and Chile c 1 a i m
To understand the enormous , their share of Antartica merely
difficulties involved in the min- j because, in their opinions, the
'era! exploitation of the southern j section south of South America is
( continent requires only a simple a continuation of South America
j knowledge of physiography. | ;md therefore a continuation of
Vast Ice sheet j Chilean and Argentihiun ten itor-
Apart from the ever-shifting jPS,
(moat of pack ice and icebergs, ! Both those questions are bey*
| a girlde of hundreds of miles : ond the realm of the scientists,
j around the continent, the land I To them the wealth, of. the Ant-
mass is- a vast ice sheet thou- ‘arctic lies in its vast field of stu-
I sands of feet thick. Only the ‘ dy-meteoroiogy, Vosmie
highest mountains remain un-
buried.
Australian scientists who ae- ,
companied Scott and Shackle- j
ton's expeditions 40 years ago)
i found iron, copper and1 molybde-
num, but there have not yeti
been found deposits that would
| he commercially attractive.
[ The remoteness of the eontin- I
l ent and the conditions that would j
j have to he overcome by any or- !
j ganization endeavoring to c o n-J
:duct an industrial undertaking.
| there would make the task col-
rays,
marine biology,
geology.
glaciology and
o£*S 10 BIG
oS'ClQUS
0/*/nks
1 FLAVORS I
REPORTER SLUGGED—Clarke Stallworth, riciht, a Birrnina-
ham. Ala.. Pest reporter tells Walker County (Alabama) Sheriff
i Grovei B. Baqqett how he was slugged bv tw; man in Sumiton
IjUa., as he was investigating activities of the Ku Klux Klan.
Baggett has bean recommended for impeachment by a Grand
Jury on charges of neglect of duty and corruptcn in his office.
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CLOSING NOTICE
Beginning next Sunday, June 26th,
stores named below will not open in
the
afternoon in order that their employees
may have a period of rest on Sunday dur-.
ing the hot summer months. Business
hours on Sunday morning will be observed
usual.
BOWEN DRUG STORE - COULSON DRUG
STORE - CROSS PHARMACY - HOTEL
DRUG STORE - MAYES DRUG STORE -
OWL DRUG. STORE
I i eJd5HS2S!S2SaS-S2SS?SZS2S2SES2S2S2S2Si£HHS2S2S2S'dS25?S2S2S2S3aSnS2S25S25HS2!SZS2S2S:3Z52S2St».
f
a- £ .,■* ■* •
■J-.-,* s//.V.V.V
- - •• V*,-.
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Reavis, Dick. Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 181, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 23, 1949, newspaper, June 23, 1949; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth746436/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Coleman Public Library.