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*AGB TWO
DAILY NEWS
QUMBV MELTON
Publisher
tit;: IfiY MELTON, JB.
Editor
The Griffin DaUy News will not
Ik icipoubible for errors in adver
tising beyond the cost of the ad
vertisement. Published daily ex
cept Sunday at 120 East Solomon
street, Griffin, Ga.
_
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled
exclusively to the use for republica
tltoi’ of all tlve local news printed in
this newspaper, as well as ail AP
news dispatches.
Doth olr law judge awy man, be •
fore It hear him, and knew what he
doeth.—John 7: SI.
Georgia Offers
Summer School
Nursery Workshop
ATHENS — The University of
Georgia School of Home Economics
is offering f. Summer School Work
shop on Nursery Schools August 1-
16 for nursery school and Kinder
garten teachers and persons super
vising ‘j&e-school children. The
problems of children from two to
six years of age will be considered.
Tjie workshop will be developed
to meet the needs of those enrolled.
The program will Include studies of
the growth and development of the
child from two to six years of age;
new materials in the Held of child
development; nursery school man
agement; methods of guiding younv
children; creative activities f •>
children; and parent education
Observation and participation will
be] at the University Nursery
Schooir No college credit Is offer
ed I for the course.
The staff for the workshop will be
Mips Margaret E. McPhauU super
vlt^ir of University Nursery Schools.
M»s J. P. Carmichael and Miss ye
niia Paulk, -both teachers of Nur
• *M*y School; and Miss Laura Byrd,
assistant teacher in the Nursery
School. A visiting staff member is
M&e Murjorle Badger, project ser
vises advisor, Federal Public Hous
ing, Atlanta Housing Authority, At
laijta.
Registration is to be in Dawson
Hajl from 4 to 6 p. m., Monday, Au
gust 4. The first meeting will be at.
8 p. ra„ August 4. in Dawson Hall.
Tl4 meetings end by noon Friday,
August 18. Anyone Interested in
attending tlu* workshop should
write to Mrs. Pauline Park Wilson
dr*ii. School of Home Economics,
D^Jvson Hall. University of Georgia,
Athens. The prospective entree
•should give the school she is em
pldyeri the date and approximate
hour .si,(■ expects to arrive, and is
asked t list two or more problems
with which she needs help.
i L. B. ADAMS
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Men’s TROUSERS.............. 75c To $1.00
T-shirts .................... 49c
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Men’s SOX.................... . 10c To 59c
Children’s PANTIES, 2 To 8 Years 10c
Indies’ NYLON PANTIES........ 39c and 49c
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I
German Economic Rehabilitation Is Vital, i
AP News Analyst DeWilt Mackenzie States
BY DeVVlTT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
Washington s new yoiicy for eco
nomic rehabilitation of war-ravaged
Germany is being welcomed by her
loaders, who Interpret It as a step
toward readmitting the country to
world economy and saving the
German people from idleness. i
This !
And well they may rejoice,
1*. n wholly unexpected visitation of
good fortune and 1
one to which they!
arc not entitled,
for they have sin- j
ned greatly, and ;
probably thought **%. i
they had been 1
,
sentenced to eco- !
nomic and politi- j
cal death. i
The springs of DEWITT MACKENZIE
compassion become sluggish when
the question of easement for Get - ;
many arises. If someone suggested
that, all Prussians be put in solitary j
confinement for life, thereby ex-1
terminating the race, I wouldn't
raise a little finger in opposition, for
I have seen those Huns in .operation
at close range in two wars now.
They're no good.
However, the rank and file of
Germans, whose blood does not car
ry the Prussian poison, are needed
for reconstruction of shattered Eti
rope.
Tlie well-being of Germany is the
well-being of Europe. Germany is
the economic heart of the continent.
General Lucius D. Clay, American
np commander, told a news con
ic ; nee ln Berlin that European
. t •, uvery couldn't be attained with
out the revival of German industry.
He added that he would be very
Intel ested in any proposals for A
mertenn and British big business
men to underwrite western Ger
many’s Industrial recovery.
Why western Germany? Becnuse
ec.-tern Germany is under control
of the Prussians who have" refused
to cooperate with their allies in eco
nrmic rehabilitation.
A striking example of the Soviet
attitude was furnished during a
meeting of the Allied Control Au
thority in Berlin. The Russians
asked that German steel plants
capable of producing 13,0150,000 toils
annually be allocated immediately
for reparation*.
The United States and British re
presentatives refused to discuss the
utat^eg, uuuiieqtftild jjincejthey held that the de
be met only bjr. aktip
ping the great industrial area of the
Ruhr. The Russians claim that the
sieei capacity in question is “ex
cess"
| A German view of tlie American
P"ogram comes from Dr. Hans fi
liat'd. minister-president of Bava
ria. who says:
"If the Germans are given more
It they can dispose of their
.raw materials and ,lf the dis
of jj*tr factories is stop
I am convinced that better
and economic conditions for
Germany can be attained before
That is an Important forecast, in
light of tlie continued deteriora
tion of the general economic situa
tion in Europe.
The American proposal to put*
western Germany on Its feet econo
mically doesn’t mean that we are
cutting the Germans loose before
they have purged themselves of
war-guilt; It means that they will
be set to work under military con
troi, and will be provided the faclli
ties for increased production.
There has been no indication that
, hr alUes have the gllght4 . 8t jnten .
t|n|) nf withdrawing theli troops
Horn Germany before the husk of
Teutonic reform is finished.
An nllied military control will
see to it that the economic recovery
doesn't Involve the creation of *
new German war potential.
Vets Making Good
In Interior Dept.
w H 1 lift—The Interi
o. Department r is proud of its vet
-IT vi^nn V te C .‘ epaitment. ime bllck to V laice goud
for instance, there's To m Atke
son, an assistant biologist for the
*, n v-dlilc sc.vice in Deca
ur a. A eson makes speeches
and shows wildlife films to sDorts- spoils
men s groups 1 in the area aion«
®
with W hi 18 ° lel dutles Yct thli
'
young vi tt ran lost the sight of
° l ' yes and both his hands in a
an mini t xplosion in the Ekiro
p esn thpRtcr
no. u i voung veteian, Wayne
iarre o tus, Okla., has made
a un que m ord at Interior. He
priori clamatlon out as in an the engineering bureau of aide
' vl th a $l,440-a-yea* salary,
Garrett served as a marine pilot
cui , When
ng h war. he returned
to the bureau it needed a man to
Hy its plane in the west. Garrett
tot the Job—and a jump in
to $5,905.20 a year.
.
Coon and Garrett are just
»o examp es of 60 percent of the
n ei or vetnans who are holding
better jobs in the department than
they had when they went into thi '
service.
* or The Rc.s( iti i <•/>
,
Re‘Ad Grit tin News
.
n iM m 3 Af* u
& it Tt fi ■
I
m 1 |
1 ?
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GRIFFIN (GEORGIA) NEWS
You / re A Little Premature, Aren't You?
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* HELPHEPE
rj*: . ■ : 4W/ -TO BC IN
h', FMi _i*A48
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1L Y
Old Moore'! Almanac Predicts That World !
I h In For Plenty Of Trouble During 1948
i
By ROBERT MLSEL
United Press Staff Correspondent
LONDON lift—'They laughed when
<_>i d Moore's Almanac said there
wou]d , be a world crisi3 _and 18
months later along came Munich.
They tittered when the venerable
volume founded ln 1697 a* "Dr.
Francis Moore . s Prophetic H eir
ogiyphte Engravings" said there
wou ] d be a socialist sweep—and
something , over a year later ..... the
Tones were out in the cold. . .
Hitler's anchluss with Austria,
tlle g enera i strike of May 3, 1926
( .. l0 thc da y») i the outbreak of war
(•• exc j US j ve to readers of
Moore's”), the abdication of King
- ;jdw . ird v 111. and the atom bomb
on j apan _oid Moore's has called
t hem all.
Thus> ye of llttle fa ith, harken to
wha , old Moore al i e g es is in store
for the world in 1948 which it
terms "The Year of Realism.”
Har ^ en — and c i e an out the storm
I cellars. Hard times are coming.
| The big tip for Britain from the
Old Moore's forecast is a national
! strike in the latter part of Febru
ary Troops may have to be called
ou t, S ays the almanac. But New
York and other parts of the United
States won’t have much time to
worry about their wartime ally for
tli^J' will be experiencing a "wave
of crime and arson.
MOSCOW MAY RELENT
Washington will be involved in
"bitter feelings” resulting from ox-
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ports and international loan*.
There is one ray of hope. Moscow
will show “a more constructive and
peaceful trend in both domestic
and international spheres.
All that is for the winter quarter.
Comes the spring and the “Intensi
fied” winter clashes in India will
resolve through the Influence of
the fabulous princes. Great Britain
and Eire will have political trouble
over trade extension, conditions in
France will be "rather confused”
and there will be trouble over the
Saar mines.
Looks like a good summer,
j though, for the most important
j item Old Moore detects is the
} "marriages of people In high posi-
1 tion making front news."
page
1 Autumn will bring changes in the
British cabinet, temporary trouble
“and bomb incident^" in France,,
“controversial conditions in Bel- :
gium regarding Royalty” but par
tial solution of the Palestine prob
lem. ........
Old Moores editor is nothing if
not specific. He says the St. Leger
Stakes in September 1948 will .be
won by the favorite after an at
tempt has been made to 'nobble'
or tamper with him. He cites Aug
ust 9th as the date of an attempt
cn the life of the Japanese emperor
Sind asserts British and American
troops will be called out the same
j month On August 19 a death will
plunge Britain into mourning—he
says.
Thursday, July 24, 1947.