The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 69, Ed. 1 Monday, March 28, 1949 Page: 6 of 6
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Communist-Dominated
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By POLLY HOWERTON
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RENTAL SERVICE
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Electrk. Lawn Mower Si.00 per hour.
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ROY PARKER
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Our Assortment is Complete
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In All Wool and Mixed Fabrics.
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by BUSTKR BROWN
Pleated or Plain.
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We Deliver An. where in
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$8.25 TO $16.50
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BASS SHOE STORE
For Shoes That Fit.
105 Heaton St.
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master., .
, copal Diccest of Texas.
rfhlmer
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an even
break!"
Rool Your House with
First Class Shingles.
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The SKIDOO
Schuman,
science at
BullMWl
TIMBERS TO
SHINGLES
[r. and Mrs. W. B. Cunningham,
and Miss Mamie Brawner
Mrs. H. L. Mueller
week end In Victoria.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Newman drove
to Coleman Sunday where Mr. New-
man was called on business.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. McCrabb are
visitors in Coleman.
tv
V'-
Hal
French Government
Honors Executive
Of Nieman-Marcus
The Cuero Turkey Trotters will
work out every day this week, be-
ginning this afternoon at 5 o’clock,
it was announced Monday by Man-
age? Henry Wood.
The Trotters opened the practice
season March 20, with seven play-
The handsome school house in
west Cuero for the Negroes nearing
completion. Three beautiful old oak
trees located in rhe yard are scene
of the prettiest in this section.
= RING AROUND A STEW
Serve stew in a noodle ring made
by packing cooked noodles in a greas.i
cd fold for two minutes, then turn-1
ing out o na chop plate. ,
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CONFECTIONBRT
A. K. (Neighbor) Hensley
cemetery
became
broke
I
i
tional players are expected to report
for the practices to be held this
Air
WT7CIL.
The practices wil include throw-
ing exercises and hitting practice.
Frank Hadamek and Rees Shan-
non in conference on Esplanade.
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Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rickman a.~-
>unce the arrival of a 9 pound, 6
xnce baby boy bom March 23. He
is -been given the name of Derryl
TROTTERS
TO BEGIN
PRACTICING
EVERY DAY
PRO CONTRACT
Star First Baseman To
Join Brownsville
For '49 Season
fey
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- Easter Pull Toys . . . Carts, Ducks,
v,_. Toys they will play with long
liter they’ve eaten the eggs, (advt.)
CALLANDER’S.
Evers Bros.
Apparel for Men.
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P^ONE 144
A new motor oil,, developed,
.....
Lizzie Wofford passing thru Cue-
ro this morning enroute from Uvalde
to Beaumont for a visit with a sis-
ter.
II.
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I?7 Tuesday Only - Bargain Day
tsdames H. G.
dd Peebles and
lion Sunday. Mrs. Emma Kesel-
febb has been visiting there re-
ad with them. - i
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LAST DAY
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SLACKS?
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Morris Frank, sports editor of the
louston Post, was a Cuero usiness
tatto? Sunday afternoon.
Chester Evans. Victoria Advocate
eporter, was in Cuero Sunday af-
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Crain and two
. children of Houston visited his par-
i ents, Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Crain dur-
ing the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Coot Coppedge and
sons and Jerry Putman spent Sun-
day in Muldoon.
Dr. J. W. Cross of Yorktown was a
business visitor in Cuero Monday.
worked out several times with the
Beaumont team.
|U Cunningham and son, Sunday.
Rev. A. A. Hahn returned home
om the Cuero Rospital and Clinic
anday afternoon.
BY rO
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G0KET X BOW0IT BOYS 1
inxmoneyJ
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int with precision detailing so ■ >
..jtning.. In Town Talk, a rayon
fabric. Parte! blue, pink or grey with white.
Mid-sizes 16% to 22%. $12.95
Eisenhower Flies To
Key West for Rest
WASHINGTON, Mar. 28.—(UP)
—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who
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Peg Palmer’s special genius means a
new Fashion idea for half-size figures.
Weep no more my lady, now you can
have youthful mid-sizes that outmode
the old half-size look. Now you can
look as young as you feel. Now you;
dresses will rate the backward glance
of envy, of flattery.
kJ
Exclusive print
young, so slimr
DO YOU
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March 28.— <U*P)— procession to
Hoffman. 72, Brown- for the burial.
---- ----—. ---J at clear and a
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HADAMEK
Lumber Co.
Whisthe <top for any mere mar
.... that’s the Skidoo!
Plotted to perk up your mood
with cut and color cheerful
as a robin’s song!
‘Note the new. new back loop
the cut-away curve across -
the quarter Will they charm
you? Cpme and see*
tnan Sdott <A Dallas, formerly
aero with the Brayton Flying
se; was a visitor in Cuero Sun-
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Peg Palmer’s rare understanding of half-size flattery is your answer
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"Never give a
bachelor
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Greetings to Bess Blanton who ;s ;
having a birthday anniversary to-
day.
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Features at — 7:48 _ 0:47
NEED AN EXTRA PAIR OF
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LETTER CARRIER DIES
Brownwood,
Gustave A
wood's first letter carrier, died
his home here yesterday. He first through
went to work for the post office in The brief serfrice was read by
1909 and served unuer seven post- bishop Clinton S. Quin of the Epls-
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tessrs. H. G. Keseling. Ed Win-
and Donald Peebles attended W. B. McClung, Jr., were m Edna
Hlg races In Ft. Worth Sunday. Sunday to attend the dedication of
Keseling and
son were In
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Mr. and Mrs. John Fischer of San
Antonio were visitors at the home
of his parents. Mr. and Mjs. Arthur
. . .. . - Fischer during the week-end.
Antonio visited Mr. and Mrs. b
Miss Jean Ann Friar, student at
the University of Texas, was a
; weekend visitor in Cuero.
I ■ Ji- ■ • ’
Carroll Phillips, student at Hous-
ton University, spent the week-end
in Cuero with his parents. Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Phillips.
to defend free speech.
Some 18,000 persons crowded intc
Madison Square Garden last night
to witness the finale to the confer-
ence and to hear the noted compos-
er Dmitri Shostakovich, one of
Russia’s delegates, play piano se-
lections from his own fifth symph-
ony. # |
The crowd filed through picket
lines of 2,000 Catholic and Jewish
war veterans and other anti-Com-
Mrs. W. B. McClung, Sr., and_Mrs. munists. Some 320 uniformed police
and detectives maintained order.
When they left the arena, the au-
dience was sprayed with insecticide
by a woman who leaned from an
upper-story window near the Garden
entrance.
During the show three newsreel
cameramen were roughed up by-
members of the crowd who objected
tc having their pictures taken. One
of the attackers was arrested for
disorderly conduct.
Tenor of the meeting was set
Ik when the audience wildly cheered
the raised-fist Communist salute of
on? of the Russian delegates when
he was introduced.
The audience who paid 60 cehts
■t . —
days’ visit with relatives in the Val-
ley.
BUDGET FOR
INTERIOR CUT
Recommendations Under
Requests Abpve
1949 Amount
—
WASHINGTON. March 28.—(UP.)
—The House appropriations com-
mittee today recommended funds of
$536,211,908 to run the Interior De-
partment for the coming fiscal year.
That Is $80.593.,112 below adminis-
tration requests.
The recommended cut was slightly
Jess than 15 per cent. But the sum
proposed for fiscal 1950 was $126,-
821.934 over the amount granted the
department in 1949.
"In addition to the appropriation.,
the committee recommended that
the department be granted $41,112,-
500 in contractual authority. The
budget bureau had asked for $54,-
300.000.
The largest single slash—$55„538„-
463—was taken out of the funds for
the Bureau of Reclamation,
committee granted $317,790,036.
The committe ereduced the
quest for the Bureau of Indian Af-
fairs from $59,001,520 to $52,127,917.
In passing, the legislators sharply
rapped the conduct of the organiza-
tion in cailn^ tor the Indians, Es_
kimos and Aleuts under its juridric-
tion.
“The objectives of the bureau are
said to be to assure these persons
opportunities enjoyed by other raci-
al groups jn the fields of education,
health and self-government,” the
committee report said. “This bfireau
has often been accused of merely
rendering lip service to these prin-
ciples, and has frequently epitomized
blatant inteptitude in the handling
of its affaiK.’’
Leading Southwest
Musician Succumbs
•j DALLAS. March’28.—iUPi—Fu-
| neral services are planned tomor-
' row of Hraold Hart Todd, professor
of piano and theory at Southern
Methodist University. Todd. 60. was I
known as one of the Southwest's j
leading musicians. He wrote SMU's
Alma Mater and compiled a book1 Last rites
of hymnals used by the Methodist c *
church. i Church
___________ _ |
Yours truly enjoying- a trip about
town in the red convertible Olds-
mobile with Edward Mugge, who
also showed us a flock of the new
1949 models just unloaded.
MAGNOLIA HAS
NEW MOTOR OH.
Company’s Modernization
Program Produces
New Lubricant
to
meet the lubreiation requirements
of modern automotive enginers, was crs ou^ ^or the club. Several addi-
announced Monday by Magnolia Pe- ’
troleum Co. The New Mobiloil,
available at all Magnolia Dealers,
Is a heavy duty type and is the first
automotive lubricant resulting from
the company’s refinery modernize- .
tion and expasion program.
Company engineers point out that 1
today’s smaller, . .fast-running and |
more powerful engines impose pres-
sure and temperatures higher than
ever before, placing increased de-
mands on lubricants. Stop - go
driving, combinde with high speeds
for varying intervals present dif-
ficult lubricating problems, especi.
ally to passenger cars, the engineers
report.
Extensive laboratory and road
tests show that the new product re-
sists excessive thickening at low
temperatures and excessive thinning
at high temperatures, begins to flow
as soon as the engine starts and
maintains a separate film between
parts even at steady, high-speed rT-
driving. • ormea
New Mobiloil also displays good
anti-acid properties. It does not
easily deteriorate or oxidize to form
acidic materials, and because of the
type of crude oil used, together with
solvent refining and special addi-
tives,, it offers strong protection
against corrosion and rusting.
Tests also have shown that the
new lubricant helps to keep engines
clean.
George Hartman and Herman
Schaefer are spending a few days
on the coast.
__ . . ____ _ .
WASHINGTON, Mar. 28.—(UP)
—Stanley Marcus, executive vice-
president of Nieman-Marcus. Dal-
las, today held the Chevalier award
of the Order of the Legion of Hon- Electric Vacuum ( leaner 50c per hr.
j is recovering from an acute stom-lor' bestowed upon him by decree | Electric Floor Waxer 75c per day.
I.«u ----- ----> of the president of France.
French Ambassador Henri Bon-
net made the award at a dinner in
the French embassy last night for -
“eminent services to the cause of
French industrial and commercial.
recovery.”
In a speech , the ambassador
praised Marcus and stressed tlje
importance of cooperation between
I France and the United States.
Marcus has been importing some
’ of France’s finest products .such as
I linens and laces, to show that the
I French still are producing some of!
the things for which they were
wcrld-f^nous before the war.
KOEHLERS
Cuero’s House of Quality
Since 1890
v>' ’’
x-'- '< -s'-
Something New and Delicious in Party Food *
Swifts Ice Cream Nut Roll
Last Rifes Read For
Ex-Gov. Ross Sterling
HOUSTON, March 28.—‘UP>—I
> were read for former
Governor Ross Sterling in Christ"
Cathedral yesterday
'seme 1,000 persons looked on.
I» Most of them followed the long
Glenwood
as skies
warm .sun
the new organ and chimes at the
Presbyterian church there. The
chimes were given by Mr. apd Mrs.
E. H. Seidel of Edna In memory of
Mrs. Mary Fuhrmann . Franke,
mother of Mesdames Seidel, Me-'
Clung, Mamie Yoas and W. H
Spangle.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Howell re-
tuyned Sunday night from a few
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I
al lawn chairs special $4.95.
•y Furniture Co. Phone 445.
The first bluebonnets- and Indian i
' Pinks making their appearance in
I DeWitt county.
WHAT CAN HF DO?
Sha goes after him < !
got. .. and b rothe r
d»*s got 9VTylUqjt
Vertical bands subtract inches from your
waist, add inches to your height. In check-
mate, a spun rayon. Grey andyeUow, navy
and pink, spice and blue. Mid-sizes 12%
to 18%. . $ 12.95
ach disturbance, left today aboard
[ President Truman's personal plane
; to fly to Key West, Fla., for a rest
; at the “Winter White House.’’
. Eisenhower has been on leave
from his post as president of Col-
umbia University. He has been act-
ing as temporary chairman of the
joint chiefs of staff since early
February.
‘Peace Conference’ Ends
—— * I
to $3.60 for admission heard bitter j
denunciations of Winston Churchill,
President Truman, the U. S. State
Department and the North Atlantic
Security Pact.
Shostakovich in a speech to the'
delegates read for him by an in-
terpreter said that if he had achiev-
ed “a measure of success' as a com-
poser it was because he had "man-
aged to establish intimate contact!
vzith the life of my people.'’ H? said
tc 1 he had failed in some of his post-
. .. con_
tacts—those were the works criti-
tized in Moscow for showing “bour-
geoise tendencies.”
The ccmposer said that Igor
Stravinsky, who left Russia to come
to live in the United States, had
betrayed his native land and was a
“reactionary modernistic musician.”.
Last week Stravinsky refused to
take part in welcoming Shostako-
vich to the United States.
At the plenary session of the con-
ference yesterday at the Waldorf-
Astoria, Frederick L.
professor of political
Williams College, declared thar
Russia must bear some of the re-
sponsibility for worsening relations
and the danger of war.
He was quickly contradicted by
Alexander A. Fadeyev, chief spokes-
men for the Russian delegation
who declared:
’’Professor Schuman is mistaken.
There are no elements in our coun-
try which desire war against the
United States or any other country.”
Schuman then returned to the
speaker’s platform tp say that he
“agreed completely with Mr. Fadey-
ev.
Bryan Stubbs, star first baseman
for the Cuero entry* in the Guada-
lupe Valley League the past three
seasons, will play baseball with
the Brownsville club in a newly
I Rio Grande league, it was
announced Monday by Atiey Don-
ald, New York Yankee scout, short-
ly before the Beaumont Exporters
left for Beaumont.
Stubbs reported that his contract
was expected to arrive in Cuero
Monday or Tuesday.
The young left hander has been
the regular first sacker .for the lo-
cal club sir.ee the reorganization of
the GVL in 1946. He also played
outfield and pitched on several oc-
casions. L
He has been one of the best
fielding first sackers in the league
and last year developed into one
of the leading hitters on the
Cuero Seven-Up team.
During the spring training ses-
sion of the Exporters, Stubbs
Eula Mae Edgar figuring o i
steaks on the hoof as she raises a
calf in a pen at her home on Austin
Street.
NEW YORK, March 28— <UP)—
A permanent committee of the
Communist-dominated “World Peace
Conference” met today to plan me-
thods of carrying out resolutions
voted by delegates of 16 nations dur-
ing the three-day meeting.
Organized as a committee of the
National Council of the Arts, Sci-
ences and Professions which spon-
sored the conference, the group ga-
thered. at the Waldorf-Astoria ho-
tel where 2,500 delegates voted yes-
terday to work for peace, 1
strengthen the United Nations and war works to establish those
___, ________t.
Parker Ellzey, assistant county
attorney, getting publicity in‘a Sau
Antonio paper, a picture stowing
him gallantly* holding the door open!
for a girl assistant at tile courthouse!
in Jim Wells county.
I’OLLIWOGS
MOE SIX—
THE CUERO, RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
MONDAY, MARCH 28, IMS ,
a
Your LUMBER
Is Here!
BlftLTO
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 69, Ed. 1 Monday, March 28, 1949, newspaper, March 28, 1949; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358368/m1/6/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.