The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 232, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1949 Page: 1 of 6
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I
The Weather
.. 55 —NO. 233.
CUERO, TEXAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1949
X
£. &
I
the
i.
h.
i q
i
want to drink
n Cuero win be as-
PRAGUK Czechoslovokia, Oct. 27.
o'clock in the afternoon and night. -
Air Corps.
&
i
1
i
i
&
3
*!•
5
1:25)
7J ■< i<«£. -•**-
said
11 be
he
the
THREE NEW
ENLISTEES
IN GUARD
Negotiations In Coal
Walkout Recessed
Until Tuesday
140-MPH yiNDS
RECORDED
IN TYPHOON
CZECH GET
U. S. PROTEST
OF ARRESTS
400 Texan
PerMMNl
in tii
feet i
T®
for the parade and for its part in the
Band Festival to be held tonight at 7
o’clock on the high school field.
Gunshot Wounds Fatal
To Yorktown Man
Activities on Friday, the closing
day for the three-day celebration,
will include the Hound Dog Show at
■ Rep. Cheatham pointed to the
In addition to being an honor stu- plans, being made for more farm
feet frot
orded W
At VI
23.5 feet
ill
,e in
more. Scores of others, nessmen who
i to join the n
r, /
ting milk bottles in
ires over town for
to go toward the
ey.‘-
In. Juneau, Territorial
Halloween ‘Haunting
[Season’ Drawing Near
5P miles an) *
u
i I
I Fi
U. S. STUDENT
• - —- _
e is a
1 cof-
• £ ) 1
■ !
Band, Turkey Float And
■ Royalty Participate
In Bicentennial
•
Cuero High School Band and Cue-
ro float were in Goliad Thursday for
the big parade, feature event of the
Goliad Bicentennial Celebration.'
The Band drilled Wednesday night
F« All Departments
Of The Renert
Wephene he. 1
ative Association in El Paso at which Cuero duchess in the coronation oer-
**‘ f emonies Thursday afternoon at 5
? f o’clock. Her escort was James
Club now is keep-
I alive with a $15
f GpBtlon—which will
I — but more
ded adequately
underprivileged
(test rejected spy
——h the action
Americans was based.
The Czechs gave the Frenchmen
only 12 hours to get out of the
country. A note delivered to the
French embassy accused them of
spying.
The attache was Col. Georges
Helliot, 50. Ousted with him was
his secretary and aide, Marcel Sal-
abert, 36.
An official announcement said a
former employe of the French em-
bassy. Qervais Garcette, had bien
arrested along with two Czeh citi-
zens named as Gustav Marim and
Oldrich Adamek.
Flood
River ap
day.
At 10
J Hous
Program of Scholarships,
Loans Suggested
By Official
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct.' 27.—
■ UP)—U. S. Education Commis-
sioner Earl James McGrath pro-
posed today that the federal gov-
ernment undertake a broad pro-
FATHER DIVINE IN ALL CASH DEAL ,
S^ate Representative Tom Cheat-
ham pointed out the urgent need
for the
takp an
■■■»■■ 1
TOKYO, Japan. Oct. 27.-^UP)—
Typhoon with winds up to 140 miles
per hour roared toward eastern Ja-
pan today, raking sea lanes in the
west Pacific.
. ’ The U. S. typhoon warning net-
| work predicted .however, that the
' typhoon would swing eastward
j from its present course and spare I
I the Japanese islands.
Torrential rains and winds rang-j
I iug between 40 and
, hour as a result of the typhoon |
’were predicted for southern Hon-
Three men have enlisted in the and as far north as Tokyo.
Cuero National Guard company in
the past week in the latest phase
4 may not get all
to they want to drink
CZECHS NOW
ACCUSE FRANCE
IlEpil
AID PROPOSED REP. CHEAT
.. ; * • j- -> AlrJ&tU
Take|Acfive Part taj
Government tie
- Urges Group
t" 1
<5
■■vh®
,1
people of any nation to
HH active part in their gov-
ernment at the regular meeting of •
the Rotary Club Thursday noon at j
the Gold Fish Club.
Ml
Neal had made a key speech Tues-
day.
They were en route to Safford in Friedel.
Pery’s 194J Chrysler when the ve-
hide collided head-on with Sos-
tick’s 1949 Cadillac on U. S. Highway
so. . - •'
Mrs. Perry, Injured in the accident,
was taken to Las Cruces hospital for
treatment. ” ■.!
SUM
Turkey Market Now O
- _.r - . ... T . : J.:. ■ '-t; ( ; 1 . - _ .
Felix Broil died in a Cuero hos-
pital Thursday morning at
o'clock of gunshot wounds.
He was brught to the hospital
Wednesday afternon.
An inquest was being held Thurs-,
day.
Lower
Last Ye
I —
i|, DeWitt county’
ting turkey mark
; ed, and the turk^
Yilng to roli in la
i It was reported h<
' -
, Latest norther to hit the city sent
| the mercury to a new low for the
fall, season, according to Mrs. Marion
, Leonardt, weather recorder.
■
iod ending at 8 o’clock Thursday
morning was 49 degrees, two dgerees
lower than the previous record of 51
set on Wednesday October 12.
During the <entire 24-hour period
the temperature did not rise above
the 65 degree mark, the 65 being the
codJest maximum recorded for the
fall season.
While no rain fell, the cloudy
weather during the day Wednesday
caused many cold shivers.
Cuero coffee guzzlers are
icing the Mack prospect of
tber curtailing their appetite
• of possibly paying $1 a
nind for a can of java next
sar. ~ '
- Ji ' I
OWSI of father Divine rests Kis feel on satchels in front of a
window at the Federal Trust Company, Newartc, N. J, waiting -
»it the suitcases* contents—$W0,000 in fives, tens and twenties,
agey was brought to the bank to get a cheek to pay for a Newark
dnternattxwiaD
--.i
tte “lead”
lets /will be
uv»*i»av*v, w^-«»v*av«a ' I'wHH
The iow mark for the 24 hour per- I Bid
juat another indica-
the impact of an
some .part of tnc
ffcich some ’ persons j
gfl cmS as “jttrt anoth-
|pe (or the newspa-
tgtually is felt in vir-
ery nook and cranny
pth. That is why The
|llthough it is
te doings in thS im-
>rea, turns at times
’ t PRAGUE. Czechoslovakia, Oct.
27.—(UP)—Czechoslovakia accused
France today of smuggling uran-
Smuggling Uranium Ore
In Diplomatic Pouch
Is Claimed
• to 7 cents io
1M0 pric®.
.yWarvSieW
to endorse the strike as ‘ the. real
(Continued on Page 6) ,*|
1
EAST TEXAS—Fair, exeegt SOM
cloudiness in southeast. Warmer in
the northwest tonight. N til1 the—I
and north winds.
help deserving student* through
college.
Dr a speech befme the Associa-
tion of Land-Grant Colleges and
Universities, McGrath said such a
program is necessary to prevent
“waste'of human resources.” •
“Inadequately educated, > more
than half of American youths hav-
ing college a tali ties go through life
functioning below the level of
/ r,
CRASH KILLS
NATIONAL
REA OFFICER
LAS CRUCES’ N. M.. Oct. 27.—UP.
■ Ml 11111m- —An automdbfle collision 29 miles
west of here yesterday claimed the
lives of three men. including Deputy
Administrator William J. Neal of the
Rural Electrification Administration,
Washington.
The other dead were Ted C. Perry, at Gobbler Stadium in preparation
Safford, Ariz., an employe of the U.
S. Department of Agriculture, and
Charles M. Bistick of Peoria, Ill T.-——- ----»- —----------
Neal and Perry hwd been attending Miss Mara Sue Kirk rode the Cue-
the regional convention of the Nat- ro float. .
ional Rural Electrification Cooper- Miss Renvia Ann Jemigan was the
‘ joid flierrw-edT U» .backed up his charge.
flats and going back to FaAr-
■f whom catae M the first wave
a week ago, kept panning and report that the strike was a “phon-
g ftr the precious metal. ey.”
— this booming tent city of In. Juneau. Territorial Department
svered men spread farther in of Mines official Art Glover refused
sections, other prospectors Who
Bturned to their homes emp-
.......* 7-------------
3 SOUGHT
ISEFIUNG
sir-
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Oct. 27 However, be wanted to do better ’
—(UP)—DOh Lee, 18, who Jost his than that.
legs in a fire when he Was a year I AH he needed was to gel on the
old, wore the Boy Scout Eagle badge hike. His scoutmaster said he would
today for passing tests that includ-.have to walk every’ step. Another
ed swimming and a 14-mile hike. scout went with him, but Don made
Don’s fester mother, Mrs. Anna-out all right on his own. He walked
last night in behalf of his troqp. It ion. the trail that night The next
Is the highest award in scouting. | morning, he cooked his breakfast
Don, who never has been satisfied and finished the hike. .
with being a cripple, could have be-| The youth is a second nontenant,
cwne an “achievement scout by in his ROTC unit st high school,
passing seomd and first" class tests.}where he is a junior.
ROTARY HEARS
Wight
AUSTIN, pct 27^-(UP)-.
government that stifles Texans representing bu
" ; Cheatham ex- industry, education «nd goven
I opened a two-day •» peiaomi
urged active participa- management conference tai
ool affairt, citing the the University of Texas,
teachers to) Participants will hear M
more than 80 miiiat,gpfr |a
Gov. Allan Shivers wMkwifl
uled to apeak tonlgbt on *fl|
the State’s Bustoe®."
Elmer Luddeke of the On
and is one of i to wake up and do something about fice, Tex— SmpMgNflghJkjj
•uaifl-up, Bay- < participating in a government for slon, is one of ttaaf
> the people. L conference. J-OL
a
FISHWHEEL, Alaska, Oct. 27—) ty-handed claimed the Fisliwheel
IP)—Prospe&on continued theii vgold strike was aihoak, a “put-up
verfah search for ‘gold along the^ JOb?’-,
ndy banks of the Yukon River
we today despite cries of ‘Itoax’’
hrtag tbrouglMsut .Ai—fra .
Btop • busit jiitate Were busy uh-
the past week in the latest phase f n • Mnalmn
of the recruiting program, it was re-1VUD rfllK uiUvilliy
ported Thursday by Lt. Harvey TAn:n|1f ai 7«?A
Wehman, company commander. i lOniylll QI I»JU
The new men. are Pfc. Paul Willie
Kuchler. Jr., and recruits Merle [
Walter Buckless and Faustino Saenz.
Kuchler is a former member of the
ditorium
All
the British fetes and otft
tries, K-stiw sakt
- A dog owned W a Tn<
as. breeder, won the title
champion
M the MM, He reported.
MOVIE ACTRESS Olivia De Haviland is shown to Good Sa
pital, Hollywood, Calif., wjth Benjamin Briggs Goodrfch,
and her proud husband, Marcus A. Goodrich, a writ
weighed 8 poinds. 12 puaces birth. - (International
. - • * '
Legless Youth Wins
■ ■■ 4.-s
—' a s'
SIX PAGES TODi
4-M .si
hich now becomes cult's newest oronerty.
■ “ , ' ; ______________________________________-
)es of ‘Hoax’ Echo
Alaska Gold Search
PLANESAIDING Mercury
SEARCH FOR 8 Slips To
JAILBREAKEB Low Of
|j Heavily-Armed Convids 49 Degrees
Put Police In Four i Latest norther to hit thp citv ■
Slates on Alert
■ WILMINGTON, Del , Oct. S7
IjB-r* (UP) ^-Hundreds of state
police, * aided by two “seeing
eye” planes, searched a four-
| state area today for eight
' convicts who escaped jail,
heavily armed and led by two
youthful fitters.
National Guard
planes took off from the New Castle
county airport to an effort to spot
' the fugitives, who fanned out after
their spectacular break using two
guards as a shield.
Thirty thunderbolt Lighted planes
also were based at the airfield, ready
to chase, or even strafe, the con-
victs if they arc spotted in automo-
biles. ®
Local police m all Pennsylvania,
' 3 Library" ;
■ • - ■'L0V81andScPt^
.diversity of Texas :
©hr ©umi IRernrb
) A NEWSPAPER reflects its community
FILM STAR'S BABY MEETS FATHER price |s |
kUAA|i^MM| j?
*r rJ-e
Chief Federal Ntediator Cyrus
Cffiing resumed talks with CIO
President Philip Murray and with
U. 8. steel today, searching for a
----- b—is for settling the steel strike,
kte milk, the Uons but negotiations in the coal walk-;
...... . out were recessed until Tuesday.
A high government souce re-
ported meanwhile that President
TYuman planned to step into the
twin strikes unless they were end-
ed by next weekend. Other officials
disclaimed the report, however.
Mr. Truman had a press confer-
ence scheduled for this afternoon
at which he was certain to be ask-
ed what his Jntentions were re-
garding the strikes.
Some —perts believed that Mr.
Truman would take no action so
l<tog — there was a possibility
fl®t C9ting might be able to bring
peace to the steel mills and coal
fields.
Murray went to New York for a
(Continued on Page 6)
military attache and his assistant
on espionage charges.
The charge against the French
was made a few hours after the
United States had protested against
the arrest and ouster of members
of the embassy stall here. The stiff Rosenkilde, presenter him the badge eight miles the first day and eamped
— charges on '—’ —•*- -.» ■ . *_ --.x-..t . .*-z-iisat«.-«»rai
against the
.... ...•
— (UP.)— The United States today «ram of scholarships and loans to
9 a. m. on the Goliad softball field handed Czechoslovakia a stiff protest
and rodeo performances at 2 and 8 against the arrest and ouster of
members of the embassy staff here,
rejecting the spy charges on which
the action by the Communist regime
were basedT
James K. Penfield, charge d’af-
faires here, detivered’ the protest to
Vavro Hajdu, deputy foreign minis-
ter. »
7:30) Penfield said the note “rejected
jthe Czech charges”—presumably the their full potential,” he said. “This
spy charges on which the Czechs *as*e of human resources is found
have arrested one embassy clerk, ex- to all parts of the -country.’ ■
pelled two diplomats and implicated
others in various ways.
New Jersey, Maryland aad Delaware
communities also were alerted and
radio alarms were sent out to all
states on the Eastern seaboard.
The convicts were armed to kill,
police were warned. The desperadoes
reportedly have 10 revolvers and
two- rifles they took from the prison
areenal daring break from tite _
gg.Ca.Ue_ county . dtptomatte po^h and «.
Tiw searen iot two oi me lugxireei
was concentrated in the Kennett ered expulsion of the French
Square .' sectton of Pennsylvania
where an automobile they cocn-
: j. (Continued on Page 4)
MHTES IN I
GOLIAD FETEk
In Anchorage. Veteran prospector
Jess Courtney branded the strike
“the biggest hoax in the history -of
Alaska gold Four q^hens
,.n »,io . --f 1
In Fairbanks, three Alaska busk-
chartered a plane
returned with thie
Mr. and:
returned fa
Abilene. 1
tended thi
race meet
_
K7”Mb o—Mni
MMMMi J
MMMMMMr- money U r
youngsters at Oak View, John
C. French And Daule School.
We know Cuero won’t let the
dowik’. I "■
Cuero’s neighbor of Seguin
to returning to the county fair
circuit ftom which it has been
mtoring since 1831. On Friday
and Saturday of this week, the
i GuMtelW*- County Fair will
beheld flMer the sponsorship
•f the Guadalupe County 4-H
Clubs and the Seguin Chapter
Of the rutt<e Farmers of
ff . America. There will be the
traditional fair exhibits, llve-
stock entries Of beef and dairy
cattle, hOO. horses, sheep and
goats, and poultry entries.
M There to plenty of entertain-
ment, too, with a carnival and
a rodeo fe hfl held at 8 o’clock
IL tonight, Friday night and Sat-
urday, jerew gerved weapous.
Arthur Palmie Invited
B, HABMAN w. NICHOLS | pul his co» in the school house 1® i®'® NillOOil
United Press Staff Correspondent Now. some towns aorund the lAiimatlcIir CArialv
WASHINGTON. Oct. 27.—<UP.>—(country in cooperation with the po- JlMHwOIOIIL JlVWtJ
The Hallowe'en “haunting season” is hce and city councils sponsor con-) ) ------------
upon us. tests for the best soap-decora ted store Arthur G. Palmie, journalism stu-
•It doesn't mean much any more, (window One bold city in Maryland dent at Baylor University, has re-
thanks to the cops. To save the' this year even announced a window-, ceived an invitation to^oin Sigma
! trouble of chasing down the small, smashing contest but called it off at Delta Chi. national jouiaialistic so-
• Ornery ones. Police now provide a. the last minute on advice of counsel.’ciety. bis aunt, Mrs. J. L. DuBose, of
th er r rui Pirit niprniv. thp tieat for a trick. The festivities, Washington, accordto records this city has been notified.
, / ' . ... "... usually held in the town hall keep in the Library of Congress, once was Palmie is a son of Mr, and Mrs. A.
fan season v.Hl be herd Umight at,-^ the mischief la dty of things spooky lpg. F Palmie of Coiumbus. Ohio, former,
7.30 o clock in the High School Au- .. Jn OUJ. da^ w<? oR the >ponkl_ Wlds are many One waJS that tn Cuero residents and attended public’youth of the nation. '
. .. » . .11 est get-up we could find in the otticj the old Supreme Court chamber, and high school in this city.
Ftizt hour of the Wednesday night; All parents have beep^urged by went gallopmg across the coun. wiiere lhe senate met last session . . .
drill was spent in preparations for Ted Harwood. Cubmaster, to attend trysxdr Our object was destruct- while the capitol rof was being re- dent. Palmie is a staff member of the controls in his plea to the people
a command inspection, and the sec- the meeting at which the local pack m We upset small buildings, cart- paired, the marble busts of chief1 school paper at Baylor
ond hour was devoted to training on will be re-registered for the coming ed off the neighbors plow and wheel < justices nodded slyly when anybody [the editors of The Roi
. . 7" - \ * year, liiwwow. and maybe even managed to (Continued on Page 5) loi University annual.
of tbe
, to been
ffireed te boost its wholesale
price five times in the last
month
K«L V V* - - e. -r*.. . .
r •
The.i
I ,
r
To correct this, McGrath ]—
posed that Congress appropriate
about 8300^00,000 annually to be
awarded to high school graduates
---
; their government eventually led to
the worst debacle In the history of
the world. Rep. Cheatham said.
Rep. Cheatham added that the
Communist party is growing in-
strength daily through the contin-
ued lack of interest in government
i in this nation. England pursued
the same type cf thinking and end-)
ed up in a |
enterprise, Rep.
plained.
He also i
tion in school
need for first clasa
shape the public ’ destiny in the
that too many people are too busy
to take an active part in the gov-
ernment, and othdrs are afraid to
because of fear of hurting their
business.
To illustrate his point of what
can -happen by such continued ladk
of interest, Rep. Cheatham point-
ed to the rise of Hitler, explaining
that German people had been
warned of the catastrophe that
would befall them If Hitler came
“op the baste ot objective measures ' to power. Their lack of interest in
i - (Conttoued on Page 4)
!
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 232, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1949, newspaper, October 27, 1949; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418096/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.