Help ID this car from 1950 time frame...

The "Crosley" appears to be the right answer and I sure appriciate the help as well as the person I am assiting. I told them I knew a bunch of MOPAR guys on-line at that I was sure they could help! Thanks again! Below is a little bit of infor on the car I found interesting.

From the cars you don’t see parked on public roads everyday department comes this 1949 Crosley car in red. The Crosely was manufactured by the Crosley Corporation, which to this day makes appliances and portable traveling turntables. 1949 was a pivotal year for the runabout, as the brazed aluminum and steel engine block that served with valor in World War II was upgraded to cast iron for durability. Peacetime engine coolant formulation combined with poor owner maintenance waged war on the coatings inside the The Mighty Tin’s cooling water jackets. The corrosive brew ate away at the bonds that held the the engine block together. The lightweight engine that worked so well buzzing along at a constant RPM to power generators for the war effort lost the battle against demands imposed by civilian automotive use. This particular Crosley was seen on the same block as one of the largest American road tankers cars ever built. The Crosley had a for sale sign in the window for over ten times the asking price of the Newport. Crosley scuttled the Mighty Tin engine for an iron block version in 1949, but it was ultimately too late for an automobile built with wartime thrift in mind to appeal to a public hurtling into the interstate highway age at turnpike speeds