The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 249, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 9, 1948 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cuero Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
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RED STRENGTH
RADIOS MILLION WORDSl A MINUTE
SEEN WANING
REPRODUCTIONS
MUSICAL
FINAL GRAIN
BING CROSBY JUNIOR JUTE BOX
woman said
HAVE
Studebaker trucks top ’em alt in value!
Llvet
Cuero Representative
JEROME W. KOENIG
ROY PARKER
JAMES RALPH WOOD, PRESIDENT
jury in
ing of 1
Police Desk Sergeant
Knows The Answers
L Not.
ne, former
these 1949
er trucks to
Henry T. Mayne Is ;
No-Billed In Shooting
Communist
the world
ANO
Henry
15.95 Down
82.54) Week
VUOTHERRi fflMT
FUEL OIL HEATER!
And,
ee it,
ram a study by Bryn Mawr College.
sea'T.
the jsmell-
You’re throwgh messing up your
living room with coal aud ashes
when you get a new Duo-Therm
Thrift Circulator.
With a handsome new Duo-
Therm you tend the fire by turn-
ing a dial—keep nice and warm
with no work, no dirt!
Kelly plans to stay up there for
90 davs .which would put him back
on terra firma next February 9.
'Cpld weather and rain are net
expected to better Kelly. Dry
clothes will be hoisted to him in a
basket.
Tp keep in physical shape, Kelly
> down for a
and to rub himself with ice
(orrow
the1 new
Uncertain
had slight losses
the Netherlands,
gains in Finland
was off; fractionally a
Ua and Kansas City, an
all grains declined a
'■ CHICAG O, NtV. 9 —(TTP")—
Grains were mostly hieher orr the
Chicago Board * of Trade- today
with earn leading. the way.
Despite ah imAsy, tone through-
out the .aetfskn, ^orn closed 1-8 to
I’ 1-8 cento a bushel higher. Oats
Ware unchanged to up 1 cent. Soy-
beans were unchanged to up 1 cent
Wheat was up 3-4 to down 1-4, and
rye unchanged to off 1-2 cen4
nd. when things get dull, he’ll
:orm acrobatics to amuse
KEATS YOUR HOME WITH
NO WORK. NO MRTI
ROCKFORD, Ill. —<UP>—Rock- I
ford police don’t mind helping out
with crossword puzzles, if the peo- ■
pie say it s included in their chores |
as public servants. ■ ' •
A woman telephoned Desk S?r- I
geant Charles McDonnell and ask- I
l—k kt Tbe»« fMfvmf
* FRMOBS DUAL CHARMER BURNER-
gets more heat from every drop
of oil!
★ PATfNTEB MWEB-AIR-distributes
heat evenly—saves up to 25%
pn fuel bills!
AM TWENTY OTHER BIO FEATURES to
give you more comfort —mere
economy—with Duo-Therm!
& Motor Company
701 South Esplanade
LONDON. —(UP) —rwimuni’" 1
is on the retreat in the small j
countries o‘f western and no’-the^i
Europe and there is a cleur trend
towards the center everwhere.
Political experts draw that con-
clusion from an anal”sis of m-,
turns of narliamentarv and muni-,
cipal elections held during the last
eleven months in Scandinavfa and I
the Low Countries.
In three countries where parlia-
mentary elections - were held—Den -
mark (Oct: 27,1947). HoHand (July
7. 1948) and Sweden (Sept. 19.
1948). Communists lost more than
250,000 votes and. 17 parliamentary
seats.. Communists parliamentary
representation in the three coun-
tries aggregated 43 seats before the
elections against 26 seats now.
Finland Wavers
The Communist defeat is even
more impressive if the returns of
the July elections in Finland are!
taken into account. There the!
^Communists are hidden under the r
name of Popular Democratic Lea-1
jue. Together with left-wing So-1
cialists, the .Finnish Communists'
lost 11 seats. ,
Political experts stressed that
all the Communist defeats occurred
after the foundation of the Com-
inferm which meant the starting
point of increased
propaganda activities
over.
Apart from Communist losses,
gains of liberal parties are a trend
common to all recent elections in
northern and" western Edrope. The
liberal gains are slight in most
countries except in Sweden, where
Flashes while playing—has volume
Plays Nursery to 12” Records.
* . '■ X ' * **•'**’ »• 4 a •
M. Harms at Swerttafc'
. . ’> ,W-
a warnylt for CUb dt-
Cold Shoulder .
It was suggested a few week
avo that Markos now is willing t
talk to the U. N., or send a ren
resentatlve to the political com-
mittee session in Paris. A British
the September elections brouybt a
.liberal landslide.
i .
I Otherwise, however, tlicie '-re
considerable ' discrepancies in Eu-
i ropean voting trends. Thus the
I conservatives lost heavily both in
' Sweden and Denmark and had
slight gains in the Netherlands
i and Finland.
Socialists
The Socialists
i in Sweden and
I they hpd slight
i and made considerable headway
in Denmark.
In Norway, no parliamentary
elections took place during the last
lent
Trend Is Toward Center
In Small Countries
Of Europe
“What’s another eight-letter
word fof sawhorse? I called several
machine shops, and they said to
try the police station.’’
How about scaffold?" suggest-
; Oats: December 81 5-6. asked
May 77 5-8; Jirffc Y3 3-8; Septem-
ber 11.
Rye December L82; May 179 1-4
Soybeans: November- 259; De-
cember 360 3-4 - 261; March 25
i cution of 10 Greek labcr leaders
i charged with raising money and
j buying arms for the guerrillas. -
But the attitude : of Australia
i and some cf tire -other small powers
’ seems to be that it makes no dif-
ference if Markos is a brigand tr
the eyes of the ’■ American and
British governments.
Their point seems to be that
the American military program
while it has resulted in a few im-
pressive military ’ victories, hos net
brought peace anywhere near in
Greece, so negotiation must b.
tried again.
Way To Make Peace
as these smaller power,
the way to make peace i
to sit down with 'our adversary
whether you recognise him cr not
If you stand on legalistic inter-
pretations, you never can makt
peace until your adver?ary i
lead. In Greece, that would mean
until the last guerrilla is dead
and everybody concerned seems t
admit that' Chefre 'are just as many
guerrillas* new as when the civil
war began.
The Australian hope that f
Balkan conference might brinr
about peace may be based on th'
idea-that Yugoslavia Marshal Tit'
would welcome ’ an opportunity t'
settle the Greek question and im
prove his relations .with the wes'
But is probably based more o
hopes that the Greek Royalists
having seen the futility of the war-
fare, will offer the guerillas i
peace that can be accepted .Th;
Western powers, on the other hand
are proceeding cn the theory tha'
Maskos—acting as a Soviet puppe!
and with Yugoslav, Albanian am
Bulgarian . packing—would use i
Balkan conference ,as well as an?
peace resulting from it, or ly t
prepare a new and worse revolt.
But the view of the Australian
seems to be that the only real de
tense against Communism i
Greece is the one that hasn’t beei
iried—basic- social inform.
N»w •<■*• In lending ohd
nnUodlng! The 4*or level
ie iuet right in the «tre« re-
lined Studebaker pick-up*.
COPIES OF LEGAL PAPERS, PLANS,
LOGS, MAPS, TRACINGS, Etc.
Continuous Prints up to 42-in. wide.
HOUSTON, Nov, 9.—(UP)—
teem years of normal living is too
long for 69-year-old Shipwreck
Kelly. . ■-••.‘..-’7^^
Kelly has bsen resting 16
on his flagpole*itting laurels, J-M-‘
ta Wished in 1932 when hestayed
aloft for 59 days.
Since that kog ago day,‘»z*tt»w< PkMM to sit upside
record of almost 71 days has M6R ?'
set.
Kelly W0J hoist himself o)ftsr j
Shipwreck Kelly To Go
Back Up
investment^, assets, money in the bank. Security—to her—will meao happy, conlmted human refaK
tionships... an unbroken family"... a home safe against the darkness outside ... a placid place to
nurture chillren. And you can give hex that security through Southwestern flfe lsstinnce.
H you are H and your wife isfsay, 32, by saving as little as $13.50 a week you can aasure he^flQO
t month for life. If she lives until she is 52, she will get a total of $24,000 in .$100 monthly chedn.
Mn< the United States, who .afe-
fauentiy convinced Chat yen
ean’^ talk ot argue with the Ureel
Cotnmuhtete. The American and
British delegates also are report-
ed by United Press Correspondent
Robert Manning it Paris to b<
nnenttnisiastic at the ; Australia*
that she can
needs today.
ULTRAFAX, A NEW and fantastic communications system through
which 1,000,000 jThorofllmed words A minute can be radio*teleyised, is
demonstrated in Washington, where “Goha With the Wind’s" T.04?
pages were transmitted in Just two minutes. Donald S. engi-
neer, holds a reel of the film, received at Library of Congress front
three miles away, white Jean Wfontgomery bolds a copy of the novel.
Ultrafax la RGA-Eaatman development { Aotunatidnal Soundphoto)
......f, .. . i. ‘ ' - ■ • '
DRUMS - AU Sizes
XYLOPHONES — SOUSAPHONES
By WWI POPE
Uaited Pmbb Staff Writer
The wcabgm rowers meeting at
Paris are enthusiastic about
the Australian
Man peace coi
fully cadOMd inside the cab doors!
Exduaive new Studebaker “lift-
the-hood” accessibility—no standr
ingona box to service? Time-savi ng,
spMe-enviag, coat-saviag improve-
aaeoa everywhere you look!
/'led ‘MeDmuiell
I- . “Ttiat’s it,”
“Thanks."
Will your widow have to go to work "to keep diings together and make ends .meet?"
be prepared to enter a lucrative profession... fill an executive’s chair r.. start a business of
Or will she have to seek employment wherever she can find it, at whatever she dus»g0?
■
More than 90% of all the women employed in our country work bototut bewe i
need the money to supfwrt otbers> (tPomen’s Bmemt, V. S. Depmtmern of Labor) *'
guerrilla leader, General Marka
Vaflades.
There seems to be a feelin <•
among the smaller nations rejt-e
sented at Paris that the Unite'
States and BrDaln have taken '
position much too extreme on thf
FSRtoUl Will win a lot question. The resent re
liytathe United Nations Ject,on of a11 suggestions that Gen
l_ united eral Markos be heard in the U. N
St the fame investigation -did not appeal t
B be .taW despite the U. the sm811 naticns^';
d CbUilWiMae*s cohdemna- They rernembered that dnly ■
www..ftnt| Yug- year aeo’ the N- investigatin'
r helMhg the Orrck committee sent to Greecev trie
. i «■■■— . without success to get testimor
A1’ '’r*from °«nOTal Markos. Markc
IPade appointments with the com.
5^^*****^^^^' ddttee and failed to'show up. Th:
18 committee whose repot
uerP -P^le£$te Vishin«kv has a
.on \> .sailed as "a pie of^gartaje.” It i
walehdog tcmimltfce whose’ lif
i Che western powers want to ex
r^CfUW.1 I tond.
year but tho • munkns
of October- • 194^. - cm
trend consplcuotfc ' fif ’
tries, since die dodu
about. 103 municipal e
Little Luxembourg, ’
est country of western Europe and
the only one with a right-win^
government, showed ’ a ex-
ception to the rule. TRWartial
parliamentary - elections ‘ ofNlune,
1948, brought fno loss in sraft to
the Communists, white the Social-
ists gained at the expense tf the
Catholic 'Party. ’
(Nioese Produce . ; ■
Sistoxk Film h "
HONGKONG. — (UP) —CWniter
film history was made -wbeii ^^rfto’
Soul of China,” one Of t,be O’
Chinese films ‘ever to be release''
for general distribution abroad
had its world premiere.
Filmed originally fci Msndnrtn
English dialooue is nCw be’ng ^d'-
bed in for exhibition in the Unit-
ed States and Europe.
The historical movie, which *
more than U. S. 8250 '*'0 and to**'* I
seme 13 months to make, is s tv
cry , from the usual “quickies’
which Chinese film ctud^os '
ally grind out. Its c^st inilurt*’'
many of the leading screen sta/t c*
China, and scenes were fPm^ aC
the way from Peioing to Cajjton. ’
The story is that of Wen Tier
Hsiang, noted scholar and ststes-i
man. who in the 13th century
fought fruitlessly to prevent the
overthrow of the decadent Sun'7-''
Dynasty by the great Kublai Khan
It was Wen's unmovable faith ir
his country in the face of bribery
threats and ultimate execution
gives the picture its theme.
Mayn»__ __T. ___—
-est of'Majids on a AhaxgecrfwaWr.
>oUuti^l jUM went to Harmk’ tMwtt
to ceTV# warrant. . Harms fe-
portetly rnteted axraut
'd Mrvne With a chipping hamwiar
Atyer Harms continuad tUa atMkk'
Mayne shat him in the chest nt at
he heart. . ' •. *>'"*
Haims later recovered from his
vound in a Bity City heepital.';'
• Over 14 years of agd-
seeking work by 19)0.
VOCTING WIDESPREAD
GAZA, Palestine, Nov, 9.—(UP)-
Widespread looting is reported i
Gaea as Arab troops make a hast’
retreat from their Inst raajc
stronghold tai Palestine.* RsUabl
report* Irani tl^e fj-ont say Israel
feroes expect to capture the clt
at any hour. <
Mt'
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 249, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 9, 1948, newspaper, November 9, 1948; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1189568/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.