Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
2 Ay . £ -
Waco Garrison Dies
Tuesday Afternoon;
~ r
Services Thursday
Frederick Waco Garrison, 16-
vear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Garrison, died at the residence,
290 William Street, Tuesday af
ternoon at 5:80 o’clock following
an illness of two weeks.
Services are to be conducted
Thursday afternoon at 3 o’clock
from East Athens Baptist church,
The Rev. W. 0. Cruce, pastor of
the church, officiating.
Burial will be in Oconee Hill
cemetery, Clyde McDorman Fun
eral Home in charge of arrange
ments. Pall-bearers will be Tyson
Cruce, Ben Mitchum, Thomas
Spratlin, Milton Hammond, Carl
ton Spratlin and Tom Eberhart.
An honor escort will include mem-=
bers of the ROTC Unit at Athens
High School.
He is survived by his par
ents; {ive sisters, Mrg: 3. ©.
Baughcum, Mrs. Reba Wood, Mrs.
W. E. Cobb, jr, Misses Emma
Sue and Minette Garrison, all of
Athens; five brothers, Robert Gar
rison, Thomaston, Trenton, How
ard and Harvel Garrison, 4l of
Athens, Private Jesse Garrison, U.
S Army, Monroe, Monroe, La.
A native of Athens, he had liv
ed here all his life, being & stu-’
dent in the eleventh grade at
Athens High School. Waco, as he
was known to his many friends,
had recently been promoted to the
rank of Sergeant in the High
School ROTC and was making an
enviable record at that institu
tion. His death brings sorrow to
his many friends at the school and
over the city generally. He be
ecame ill about two Weeks ago but
seemed to be improving until only
two days ago when his condition
took a turn for the worse and he
was unable to rally his strength.
s e
Army dentists installed more
than 7,500,000 filings in 1942.
SN
Poland has a fleet of 30 ocean
going vessels.
The growing of tulip bulbs has
been a leading industry in Hol
land since the 17th century.
Read
Banner-Herald
SIDE GLANCES —By Galbraith
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1 1"=10 COPR. 1943 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG, U, 8. PAT. OFF.
“I never heard you mention the térm before the war, but
now your excuse for everything is that you must keep
up your morale!”
et
THIS CURIOUS WORLD o- '
° Fergusom
e e s B o b e =
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E : By USING ARTIFIKIAL LIGHT 100 IMITATE
THE CHANGING DAY LENGTH OF THE
SEASONS, ANIMALS CAN BE FOOLED
: INTO PUTTING ON THEIR W/A/7ER \®
COA7S IN SUMMER. ( e
A B - s ;
COPR. 1943 BY NEA s:v:r T
T. M. REC. U. S. PAT, OFF. I “ OD"
I CIR
SOME STARS e
ARE ESTIMATED TO HAVE = e (nacsas%q
INTERIOR TEMPERATURES OF - /1‘
1,800, 000,000 DEGREES I %
FANRENIEST ; N it &
X ¥ W\ [ : (RO
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B e . . | 'How strancE iT S, AND YET
s &XN IT'S TRUE, A PAIR OF PANTS
/ . SO IS OMNVE , NOT THO,” Sess
240 Iw\ %\ CAROLINE MCCAREY,
// / / PR 72/lohassee, Florids.
s % \ 9-20
'*Roouvolt Approval
For Anti-Father
Drafting Bill Seen
(Continued from page one.)
WMC non-deferrable occupation
order, and generally permit the
induction ol pre-pvar fathers only
after all iwailable non-fathers
' have been called.
The legislation recognizes de
pendency as a prime factor in de
ferments by providing that pre
war fathers, regardless of occupa
tion, shall not be called up while
there are avaliable anywhere in
the state in which they live, or in
the entire nation, non-fathers not
deferred because of essential oc
copation or for other reasons.
To meet an administration ob
jection, the legislation provides
that the induction procedure be
followed only insofar as it does
not interfere with the orderly flow
of manpower to the armed forces,
the President to make the determi
nation. :
i et e
PECAN PRICES
HAWKINSVILLE, Ga. —(AP)—
Pecan prices approximately 10
percent higher than last year were
reported here today. J. L. Mims,
a local buyer, said seedlings aver
aged 18 cents a pound, papershell
varieties 28* and Schley's about
85. The crop was rated about 75
percent of the 1942 harvest with
some growers. having difficulty
finding. labor. -
SEARCHLIGHT GUIDES
CAMP STEWART, Ga.—(AP)—
Use of searchlights to guide shat
iered Allied planes to their home
bases after they reach the KEng
lish coast while returning from
raids was described here. Officers
of the first composite British anti
aircraft battery, now on the last
leg of a coast-to-coast tour, said
the searchlights throw beams in
the direction the pilot should fol
low, the plane passing from one
beam to another.
Ernest Poole's “His Family”
won the first Pulitzer prize in
letters.
GRANDMA KNEW
So she put faith in mutton
suet she medicated herself, Anou;
to relieve coughm%,umuscle co'-n
aches, soreness. Mothers ’
now rub on Penetro. Modern medication
in base containing old fashioned mutton
suet. Relieves with double action. 25e.
Double supply 35¢. Demand Penetro.
; ¥
Services Thursday
¥
For Mrs.
Eva Clara Bullock
Sérvices for Mrs. Eva Clara Bul
lock are to be held Thursday af
ternoon at 4 o'clock fromn Winter
ville Methodist church, The Rev.
Rutherford Coile, pastor of Win
terville Baptist church, and The
Rev. Hugh Eberhart officiating.
Burial will be in Busbin ceme
tery, Bernstein I"uneral Home in
charge of arrangements. Pall
bearers will be J. E. Busbin, Wil-,
lie Melton, Jimmie Melton., James
Fleeman, Ralph Edwards and
Charlie Tucker.
Mrs. Bullock, wife oi° Howard
Bulloek, is survived by her hus
band; two daughters, Mrs, Henry
Myers and Miss Aunnie Roberta
Bullock, both of Winterville; “our
sisters, Mrs. Major Rouse, Brasel
ton, Mrs. Hershal Partin, Statham,
Mrs. Cornell Thornton, Sogart,
and Mrs. Joe H. Black, Colbert,
and a brother, Nell Holbert of
Clinton, 8. C.
A native of Oglethorpe county,
Mrs. PBullock had been 2 resident
of Winterville for the past twenty
four years. She was a member of
the Methodist church and died
Monday night at 10:15 o’clock at
her residence near Winterville.
Defeat Is Seen On
Subsidies When
House Takes Vote
(Continued from page one.)
over the radio last night by Price
Administrator Chester Bowles,
who predicted that abolition of
subsidies would lead to a rise in
all food costs, with the result that
the War Labd¢ Board would * be
unable to resist pressure for high
er wages.
Specifically he predicted milk
would go up a cent a quart, butter
four and a half cents a pound,
cheese three cents, and meats two
to six cents a pound.
There appeared but little ehange
in the line-up for the stand taken
by congress last June. Then, the
house and senate passed a gimilar
subsidy prohibition which was ve
toed by President Roosevelt. The
veto was upheld by the house.
R ——
.
United Warfare On
.
Tuberculosis Is
Objective This Year
“for the first time, the Christ
mas Seal of the National Tuber
culosis Association and its 1,700
affiliated associations in the Unit
ed States wlll be used this year
by the national tuberculosis or
ganizations of four other of the
United Nations — fingland, Cana
da, Brazil and Mexico — to raise
nmoney for their respective cam
paigns against the disease,”’ Alex
Bush, chariman of Clarke County
muberculosis Association, said to
day. ’
The Christmas Seal Sale will
open here on Monday, November
99 and continue until Christmas.
“Phe use in 1943 of the identical
Christmas Seal by five of .the
United Nations is particularly sig
nificant in the face of the war
time rise in tuberculosis that is
o¢curring in many parts of the
world,” he said. “Wigures are not
yet available to show exactly
what is happening in this eountry
as a whole, but a rise in the dis
ease has occurred in certain indus
trial areas.
“«A unviersal Christmas Seal, to
be used each year by all the coun
tries belonging to the Internation
al TUnion =~ Against Tuberculosis,
with headduarters in Paris, has
long been the plan of the tubercu
losis associations (in the United
States,” Chairman Bush said. “The
war, of course, has forced the in
ternatfonal otganization. to curtail
many of its activities, and the plan
of a universal seal has had to be
temporarily abandoned . However,
having five of the United Nations
\sing the identical Christmas Seal
this vear lis, we believe, a long
step toward the final fulfillment of
the plan.’ he said. .
The plans calls for the various
countries belonging ot the interna
tional organization to take turns
in selecting the seal to be used
each vear. The seal, of course,
wonld have universal appeal.
Chairman Bush pointed out that
this vear's = Seal. which shows a
little girl watching Santa Claus
drive aeross the sky. has such an
appeal.
The artist of this vear's Seal is
Andre Dugo, an American-Hunga
rian, who lived in Paris before
coming to this country years ago.
M. Dugo, an American citizen, fs
married to an American woman,
and their son is an officer in the
U.: 8. Navy.
Tk e
SHOULD BE PREPARED
INDIANAPOLIS —&)— Senator
Richard B. Russell (D-Ga) says
the United States “should be pre
pared, if mnecessary, to enforce
peace after the war.”
Addressing a conference of state
commanders and adjutants of the
American Legion yesterday, Rus
sell asserted that this country,
“gradgually moulding a fighting
machine that is the touhest the
world has ever seen,” sholud not
destroy it in the hope of preserv
ing peace without arms.
TO HONOR WILLIAMS
ATLIANTA —(P)—Governor KEllis
Arnall will speak Dbriefly at a
luncheon here November 29 honor
ing A. H. Williams of New York,
president of the Western Union
Telegrapn Company, and .several
members of the company’s board
of directors.
The Mackenzie river of Canada
is 2,350 miles long, yet has no
jmportant town along its banks.
’ ———————————————
Women constituted 25 percent
mfim employees in manufactur
ing industries in. 1939, .
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORQIA,
!Would King Cole Be Merry
With Stomach Ulcer ‘Pains?
The legendary Old King Cole
might not have been a merry old
soul if he had stomach ulcer pains.
Sufferers who have to pay the
penalty of stomach or ulcer pains,
indigestion, gas pains, heartburn,
burning sensation, bloat and other
conditions caused by exXecess acid,
should try Udga and they, too, may
be merry. Get a 26¢ box of Udga
Tablets from your druggist. First
{ dose must convince or return box
Ito‘ us and get DOUBLE YOUR
MONEY BACK. Crow's Drug
’Storo and drug stores everywhere.
Dr. F. S. Porter Is
Named By Baptist
As Convention Head
(Continued rom Page One
worship God as one may choose,
or not te worship Him at all, as
he may elect; withut coercion from
any source whatever,” said Dr.
Neff, who also is president of the
Southern Baptist Convention.
Dr. PFrederick 8. Portér, pastor
of the First Baptist church, Co
lumbus, was re-elected president
of the Convention yesterfiay. The
Convention selected th following
vice presidents: Dr. Maurice Trim
mer, Macon; Dr, H. P. Bell, Car
rollton; Dr. R, D. Hodges, States
boro, and Dr. W. A, Duncan, East
Point. b
Dr. B. D. Ragsdale of Macon,’was
re-elected secretary for the 47th
consecutive time. eH named Dr.
J. L. Clegg, Dalton, as his assist
ant. Dr, Spencer B. King of Blake
ly, was re-elected treasurer.
Dr. Sanford Urges -
Spiritual Unity
To Combat ‘“‘lsms”’
(Continued from page one.)
Both these conditions are going to
be changed.
“A beginning has been made in
slum clearance, housing, public
health, unemployment, retirement
and even education. A vast pro
gram along these lines is a cer
tainty after the war. To a greater
degree than ever before individual
welfare is a concern of the group.
“Private enterprise will be given
the opportunity to do all these
things. If the banks and capital
ists refuse to finance these newer
things then the federal govern
ment will.” :
Dr. Sanford said blame for hav
ing “made a mess of this world”
belongs to “this generation,” and
added that “if 1776 was the time
for the declaration of independ
ence, then 1943 is the time for the
declaration of interdependence.” |
Quill pens were first wused in
the sixth century.
The wardroe for the averags
movie takes just about as llong
to make as the time required to
shoot the picture.
FUNERAL NOTICE
EDWARDS.—The friends and rel
atives of Mr. Howard M. Ed
wards, Mrs. Pauline Edwards
Cason, Evansville, IN.; Miss
Edith Mae Edwards, Washington,
D. C., are invited to attend the
funeral of Mr. Howard M. Ed
wards, Thursday afternoon, Nov
ember 18th, at two o’clock from
the graveside. Dr. J. C. Wil
kinson, pastor of the First Bap
tist church, will officiate. Inter
ment will be in the Edwards
family cemetery, Ogilethorpe
county. Bernstein Funeral Home.
BULLOCK.—The friends and rlea
tives of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Bullock, Winterville, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Myers, Miss
Annie Roberta Bullock, Winter
ville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Major
Rouse, Braselton; Mr. and Mrs.
Hershal Partin, Statham; Mr.
and Mrs. Cornell Thornton, Bo
gart; Mr. and Mrs. Joe H.
‘Black, Colbert; Mr. and Mrs.
Nell Holbert, Clinton, 8. C, are
invited to attend the funeral of
Mrs. Howard (Eva Clara) Bul
lock, Thursday afternoon, Nov
ember 18th, at four o’clock from
the Winterville Methodist church.
The following gentlemen will
serve as pallbearers: Mr. J. E.
Busbin, Mr. Willie Melton, Mr.
Jimmie Melton, Mr. James Flee
man, Mr. Ralph Edwards and
Mr. Charlie Tucker. Rev. Ruth
erford Coile and Rev. Hugh Eb
erhart will officiate. Interment
will be in the Busbin cemetery.
Bernstein Funeral Home.
GARRISON. — The relatives and
friends of Mr. Frederick Waco
Garrison of 290 Williams street;
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse C. Garrison
of Athens; Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Baughcum, Mrs. Reba ‘Wood,
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Cobb, ir.
Miss Emma Sue Garrison, Miss
Minette Garrison of Athens; Mr.
and Mrs. FKobert Garrison of
Thomaston, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Trenton Garrison of Athens;
Pyvt. and Mrs. Jesse C. Garri
son of Athens and Monroe, La.;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Garrison
and Mr. Harvel Garrison of
Athens, are invited to attend the
funeral of Mr. Frederick Waco
Garrison, Thursday afternoon,
November 18th, at three (3:00)
o’clock p. m. from the East Ath
ens Baptist church. Rev. W. O.
Cruce, pastor of the Bast Ath
ens Baptist church, will officiate.
The following gentlemen will
serve as pallbearers and meet at
the residence, 290 Willlams
street, at two-thirty promptly:
Mr. Tyson Cruce. Mr. Ben
Mitchum, Mr. Thomas Spratlin,
Mr. Milton Hammond, Mr. Carl
ton Spratlin, and Mr. Tom Eb
erhart. Interment will be in Oco
nee Hill cemetery. Clyde Mec-
Dorman Funeral Home, 220
Prince avenue. 23 s
Give it that well groomed
TAME look. Add lustre, Ke‘erp your
UNRULY nair lying flat. Always use
“ A'R Moroline Hair Tonic Large
s bottle 25¢. Sold everywhere.
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£ SRty 2
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*
Keep Them Alive--
Don’t Say It,
)
Don’t Write |
Don't Write It,
’t Phone I
Don’t Phone It!
To Service Men: — Your lefters, calls and visifs home should
bring news about the cherry pie served al mess, NOT how many
of your buddies have been shipped ouf and so where! To The
Home Folks: If you learn where Johnny's been sens, how many
went with him and why, keep if secref! Too many Hitler aides
would just LOVE T 0 KNOW!
KEEP YOUR MOUTH CLOSED AND KEEP YOUR
PURSE OPEN FOR MORE AND MORE WAR BONDS!
L he |
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17 1043
m