The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1949 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: New Ulm Enterprise and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nesbitt Memorial Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I ■'
THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1949
Slowing Down
Buy U.S. Savings Bonds!
*
V
It
•••
1
> *
TEACHER
•5
*
a
No Cooking! Great Eating!
■ I
<1 4
Bethlehem Appeal
*
i
/
T
A
T
I
I
T
7'
P.
P.
— WflKlf NtWS'ANA[m5====
Bethlehem Steel Signs With Union;
Confusion Shrouds Defense Policy;
Industry Profits Reflect Up-Trend
rSl
It uWt*
_ MAY
3 •’
FiMAoe
<4 aht
Pattern* art ISc tach.
WOEKSBOP PATTERN SERVICE
Drawer 1#
■•Atari Hills. Naw Park.
relish—and garnish with orange segments, whipped
cream or meringue. Sounds good? Just wait until
you try this one: freeze Cranberry-Orange Relish
to a mush—spoon into orange shells or halved avo-
cados. Serve with whipped cream cheese or
mayonnaise.
It’s a relish you’ll relish—and often! Here’s a good
eating idea: start today to keep a big bowl of
Cranberry-Orange Relish on your table from now
to the end of the fresh cranberry season!
.
Co
/I
F*
- 2
mabvmus
FREE! Send today for Cranberrtn
and How to Cook Them. 40-page, full-
color recipe book packed with picture*
and deliciout, eaey-to-make fresh cran-
berry recipe* I Write Eatmor Cranberries,
Dept. IS C, Box 1083, New York 8, N. Y.
Protestaftt churches during the
Christmas holiday season will seek
funds to provide clothing, education,
recreation and spiritual leadership
tor refugees in the Near East.
Church World Service. Inc., over-
seas relief agency tor 23 Protestant
and Orthodox denominations, said
a special Bethlehem Appeal com-
mittee would seek gifts to aid refu-
gees stranded in Bethlehem and
other Near East areas.
fafa far Ohm, C4MEL-
M/LMESS TEST!
I
u I
•*» ’
U
New Processes
“Molasses" from aspen trees,
sulphuric acid from sulphurous
iron ore, mushrooms raised in
peat compost — these are some
projects on trial for commercial
development in northeastern Min-
nesota.
They
that
nod
&rt Mom! Eatmor Cranberries
_______________________________________________________________________________________________"M . . 7
1 ..................................——— i ■■■■■hi i —a— , i sms ill——
4 . *
Hr
Unit Shelves for a Corner
•THESE shelves are as much at
* home in the kitchen as the liv-
ingroom. Pattern 271 gives direc-
tions and actual-size guide for cut-
.
United Steelworkers
agreement with
Football’s Big Gap
One main trouble with football’s
schedules is the big gap that often
separates rivals. For example
Cornell was 50 points better than
Yale and Army was at least 70
points better than Harvard. Notre
Dame could have run well over 50
points against Tulane.
Army and Navy should have ex--
changed schedules these last two
years. Army was equipped to face
Navy’s schedule—and Navy could
have done extremely well with
Army’s schedule.
One of the main features of
the year so far is the rise of
Captain Tom Hamilton’s Pitts-
burgh Panthers. They have
beaten the team that beat
Michigan. Here’s a nod to
coaeh Walter Milligan who has
turned in one of the season's
best jobs.
And we might as well slip anoth-
er chaplet of wild plum blossoms
to Paul Bryant, Kentucky’s coach.
Paul Bryant is one of the best of
the younger coaches. He is an old
Alabama end, brought up under
Frank Thomas, one of the masters.
si
meon," I
1 _
•;v- i
2
0)W
v ay
XMNJlAdO
Meat dishes been looking a
little tired lately? On the
platter, good looks matter I
But a good cook’s time is
valuable, too. Here’s a relish
that peps up meals, but takes
almost no time to make:
CKANBDUT ORANG! MUSH
4 cups letmer Cranberries
a oranges, gaartered and seeded
3 cups sugar
Put raw cranberries and oranges through food •
chopper. Add sugar and mix well. Chill in re-
frigerator a few hours before serving. Makes
one quart relish. This relish will keep well in
the refrigerator for several weeks.
And you don’t have to stop there! Cranberry-
Orange Relish can do ’most anything for any
meal! Vary the basic recipe by adding chopped
pears, apples, carrots. Spice it up by stirring
in a pinch of powdered cinnamon and cloves.
Add diced celery to Cranberry-Orange Relish
and yoA have Crunchy Cranberry Relish-
new garnish for hamburgers that makes them
Cranburgers! Substitute part honey for part
sugar—that’s sauce for the goose—and,duck
and pork, too! Add horse-radish to taste for a
little extra kick with all kinds of meat! But
whatever you do, don’t serve Cranberry-
Orange Relish in little dabs! Serve it in gen-
erous mounds, in big, big spoonfuls—and
watch it do a fast disa ppearing act!
And did you think that Cranberry-Orange
Relish was just a relish? No, ma’am, it’s also
a quick ’-n-’tempting dessert! It’s all done with
tart shells or hollowed-out cupcakes—buy ’em
or make ’em yourself—but heap ’em high with
7 he Home Workshop
Unit Shelves Useful Anywhere
ting curves or marking them for a
woodworker to cut. Units A and
B are made with 270.
HowTo Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the trouble
to help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes. Tell your druggist
to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion
with the understanding you must like
the way it quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs,ChestColds, Bronchitis
What Price Bic Man?
On a recent football excursion
with Gene Tunney, Bernard Gim-
bel and General Reed Kilpatrick a
slight argument arose as to the
value of weight and size. It was
Bernie Gimbel’s idea that a player
weighing 190 pounds was big enough
for anybody.
“How much better football
players do you want than Doak
Walker of SMU or Charley
Justice of North Carolina?”
Gimbel asked. “They stand at
165 or 168. Red Grange was 175.
Jim Thorpe was around 180.
I’m not a great believer in
these 240 or 250 pound masto-
dons.”
“It depends on how they can
move around,” General Kilpatrick
said. “If they can- move, weight’s
bound to help.” Kilpatrick was a
210 pounder at Yale—one of the all-
time greats.
Anyway the debate took us west-
ward to a pair of teams known as
Notre Dame and Minnesota. Bern-
ie Gimbel’s side of the argument
was right most of the time.
But recalling what happened to
Tulane and Ohio State we felt
something like Steve Owen who
saw Minnesota practice—
“I was glad I was on the side
lines,” Steve said, “at least 60
yards away.”
The men I happened to think
about were Jim Martin, Leon
Hart and tackle Bob Toneff of
Notre Dame—Clayton Tonne-
maker, Leo Nomellini and Jer-
ry Ekberg of Minnesota. Leon
Hart, at the age of 20, is 6
feet, 4 inches, weighing 245
pounds. Toneff at tackle is only
240. Martin at the other tackle
is around 220.
Minnesota goes far beyond this.
Tonnemaker at center is only 240.
A great center. Nomellini, a tackle,
is 255-Ekberg, the other tackle, is
255. So here are three linemen who
have a total displacement of 750
pounds.
And it might be mentioned
that Martin, Hart, Toneff, Ton-
nemaker, Ekberg and Nomel-
lini can all move. There is
nothing lumbering in their
work. Hart of Notre Dame is
as fast as most backs. In ad-
dition to being a great end and
a fine tackle be is also an able
pass receiver. I doubt that foot-
ball has another man quite as
valuable as Leon Hart — 245
pounds of speed, experience
and about all it takes.
Imagine such fast backs as Wil-
liams, Sitko, Coutre, Gay, Swisto-
wicz, Spaniel, Mazur and others
working back of that crashing
Notre Dame line?
Or such backs as Bye, Gregory
and others working back of Min-
nesota's set of mastodons and
mammoths, including one or two
dinosaur! — comparatively speak-
ing, of course?
3®
i
IEBITOR'1 NOTE: W»aw aplalaM sr. ,•«»»••••* ‘V’**” VJwww’ar’J
Westers N«w»|Mb*«r MWt aaal>»U aaG at tkia ■•wepsgsr.)
If PEter Bun knots you up with
Muscle,
Aches
NICKEL CUT:
Howl of Protest
The Eatonton, Ga., city council
recently devaluated the nickel and
right away got a taste of the trouble
Britain is having With the pound
sterling.
The value of the nickel went
down when the council raised the
price of Soft drinks by levying a
penny tax. The bottling business
immediately went to pot. Some
stores quit selling soda pop al-
together to escape the customer ire.
pOCT0^
BIG STEEL: |
The Breok Comes
The break had come in the steel
•trikt.
The United Steelworkers had
signed an agreement with the
Bethlehem steel corporation end-
ing the strike for that company’s I
80,000 workers and breaking the j
otherwise solid front that had been
maintained by big steel in the
strike issue.
IT WAS A TRIUMPH for CIO’s
President Philip Murray who an-
nounced that the agreement called
tor Bethlehem to pay the full cost
of minimum $100-a-month pensions
for all employees 65 or over with
25 years of service. A social insur- |
ance plan also was included in the
agreement.
Bethlehem, the industry’s second
largest producer, was the first unit
of big steel to capitulate to union
demands tor a company-financed
pension and welfare plan.
No one could say just how much
the pension program would cost the
steel company per hour for each
employee once it begins operating.
It was expected the pension plan
would start to function in January
and the social insurance program
would get underway at about the
same time.
Murray told newsmen that a
“very conservative” estimate of
the pension cost to the company
would be about 10 cents an hour, but
added actuarial studies would have
to be made before the cost could be
determined definitely.
THE CIO LEADER said the
Bethlehem action would set a pat-
tern for the steel industry, but de-
clined to say what companies he
was talking to privately.
“Bib Steel.” speaking through
U. S. Steel corporation President
Benjamin F. Fairless said:
“We renew our earlier proposals
to sit down with the steelworkers
union in an endeavor to negotiate
a mutually satisfactory program
... of course we will study the
Bethlehem settlement.”
The question was: How long
would the remainder of “big steel”
hold out? The Bethlehem pact was
a forceful argument for the unions
tor, they could argue, if Bethlehem
can do it. so can you.
STETTINIUS:
Was Hard Worker
With the death of Edward R.
Stettinius, another major figure of
the Roosevelt era passed from the
American scene. The former secre-
tary of state died of a heart attack
at tiie age of 49.
STETTINIUS’ contributions to his
government were many and val-
uable. A rich man’s son, he scorned
a life of leisure and, instead, de-
termined to make his own way,
which he did rather well. He was
chairman of the U. S. steel corpora-
tion at the age of 37. At 44, he was
U.S. secretary of state, the top
cabinet post. He was lend-lease ad-
ministrator, taking over the post
in 1941, a job in which he directed
the 60-billion-dollar flow of sup-
plies that played a major role in
defeat of the axis powers.
Youngest secretary of state since
the administration of George Wash-
ington, Stettinius held the post only
11 months. He resigned to became
the first U.S. delegate to the United
Nations general assembly. He was
one of Roosevelt’s advisers at the
Yalta conference with Winston
Churchill and Joseph Stalin.
ALBANIA:
New 'Strong Man'
The Communists were beginning
to throw their weight around in
Albania. A new Communist “strong
man,” Lt. Gen. Mehmet Shehu,
Moscow-trained army chief of staff,
was reported gradually taking over
control from Premier Hoxha.
ACCORDING to reports reaching
western diplomats, Shehu appears
to be the actual ruler of the coun-
try. Hokha, Albanian leader for
five years, was reported to have
been shoved into the background
although he retains the title of
premier.
The “strong man” is only 38 and
he not only is the boss of the army,
but also chief of the secret police,
interior minister and vice-premier.
He is described as the most ruth-
less Communist in* Albania. He
gained considerable fame in Alban-
ia during the war by leading the
first Albanian partisan division in
many deadly raids against Ger-
mans and Italians.
widely weuM*nsm.
aim •* r**“.a**0*’ CIU
-
' 4
The Coaeh't Happy Dream
The coocb looked up with • hoppy
smile
At be lamed end be spoke Io me—
M "Tbit it tbe greatest
year I’ve known,"
He said with e look of
glee.
"Tbit it my finest tern
son yet,
Whelever the old gredt
toy,
And I tey my preyert
et 1 go to bed
For whet fete's sent my
GranUand Rice
"W'beddye
seid to him,
"With ell those no good bums—
You’ve lost five gomes end you'll lose
some more
Before December comes."
"I know tbul, pel, but remember this
He seid, with bis eyes uflurne—
"1 don’t bove to ploy Minnesoto,
kid—
And I don’t hose to meet Notre
Dome."
Ben-Gau
THE ORIGINAL BAUME ANAL&ESIQUB
Indicative of the general slow-
down in industry and field af-
fected by it as a result of the
coal strike is this photo of a
store of the Westland mine of
the Pittsburgh coal company.
Because sales dropped so much
with miners out of work, the
store cut its operating hours
from 9 each day to 4.
DEFENSE:
Some Confusion
It was difficult to reconcile Mr.
Truman’s constant emphasis on the
grave defense problem, that he said
confronts the nation, with his slash-
ing of the air force budget which
limited the groups to 58, and the
more recent decision of the navy
to cut 31 warships from the active
fleet.
THESE ACTIONS served only to
intensify the average citizen’s con-
fusion and puzzlement as to what
actually is the status of the coun-
try’s defense needs.
The navy’s top admiral had been
ousted because he contended pres-
ent defense policies would destroy
navy value and effectiveness. Other
navy officials were facing probable
punishment for speaking out. Uni-
fication and harmony were urged
on all sides as a desperate need if
this nation is to protect itself in
the world of today.
Despite all that, the air force was
to be less than it generals de-
clared it should be and the navy
was being deprived of much of its
strength. This left still hanging the
question of who was right in the
row over armed service unification
and the proper defense setup.
THE NAVY was taking 77 ships
out of active service—cutting the
operating fleet by 31 warships in
line with fund reductions. The fleet
by mid-1950 will be made up of 237
combat vessels, instead of the 268
it had on September 1. Most of the
cut was to be in the Atlantic force.
It was also-' reported that 54,891
men will be whittled from the navy
and marine corps by next July to
correspond with the reduction in
ships.
INDUSTRY:
Profits Climb
The first upward trend of U. S.
industry profits since the peak of
earnings was reached in the third
quarter of 1948 was reported in
New York.
Profits turned around and headed
upward in the third quarter of 1949,
the report said, and pointed out that
1948 was a banner year that sur-
passed even the fabulous 1929. Thus
it appeared that industry earnings
were at a record peak.
BUT THE PICTURE was not
quite as bright as it may have ap-
peared. Washington had a different
report. Commerce Secretary Saw-
yer reported that the coal and steel
strikes had increased the number
of jobless by 225,000 in the week
ending October 8, as compared with
early September. It was quite pos-
sible that the strike effect had not
been felt strongly enough as yet to
influence the roseate report con-
cerning earnings in industry.
The future was uncertain. As
strikes continued, so would purchas-
ing power dwindle, and with that
fall-off would come an inevitable
decline in industry earnings.
HE EMPHASIZED that the fig-
ures released do not show the full
effects of the strikes because they
were compiled while the walkouts
were in their early stages.
As for industry profit, a compila-
tion by the Associated Press
showed net profits of 314 companies
amounted to one billion, three mil-
ion, 664,061 dollars in the third quar-
ter of this year—an increase of
4.3 per cent over earnings of 962
million, 102,819 dollars in the sec-
ond quarter of 1949.
w
CAM0S’
^7
me 30-Day Test was really fun!
And I didn't need my doctors
report to tell me
i Camels are
I wonderfully
I mild!'
NftfH SAILS TV POP
retrofit-
CAltP-
H0
twuuS!
IwHlTI oertlUM
!
-J
.•n
4
1
I
>
*
(
r
■
II ’
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1949, newspaper, November 17, 1949; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1216193/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.