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talin, FDR, Churchill Agree On War, Peace Plans
\
ol Of State
\
\
poation May
yckworth-In Favor
Eliminating :
esidential Primary
\TLANTA—(AP)—
orgia’s Democratic Exe
ive Committee, rather
o call - a Presidentizi
Jferential primary, prob
ly will give Governor
lis Arnall control of the
(s delegation to the na
nal party convention next
ar, but a final decision 18
likely before January.
pirman J. lon Duckworth said
gy that the consensus seems Lo
pot to have a primary,” al
igh meeting of the commit
o settle the question, first
cduled for this month. is not
ued now umntil next motnh.
for the two years of Reid's
mary,” said Duckworth, “I think
committee will vote to send
gninstructed delegation with
m-mnr——.\rnull, for example—as
gman with authority to in
wt, or else instruct for a favo
. <on who would be given con
|of the delegation.” f
wckworth previously has as
ted that Arnall might be put
ward as a favorite son, appar
ly with the primary intent of
pling him to swing the state's
es at the convention to the
{ advantage for Georgia. But no
iter what procedure is followed,
all seems likely to have con
| of Georgia’s delegation.
h the state’s regular Democratic
nary next year, equivalent to
otion, the ballot will be un
ally short. since the Governol
(Continued on Page Two)
e At
.
rgia (10 Forms
ups To Work™
.
1944 Elections
\TLANTA — (AP) — A Po
@l Action and Legislative
mmittee was organized yester=
y by members of unions affiliat
with the Congres of Industrial
anization (CIO) in Georgia.
H. Gillman of Atlanta, CIO
der .in Georgia, was chosen’
irman of the committee which
the announced purpose of get
g all CIO members, their fami
« and friends ready to vote in
1944 elections. Plans were
de for organization of local un
committees and immediate em
sis will be placed on registra
and poll tax payment, the
nouncement. of the organization
i
fllman declared “Labor must be
pared to take its place in the
t-war plannigg if we are to be
ured of a lasting peace and
ithing like economic gecurity
the twenty-six or seven mil
sof people demobilized from
armed services and war indus
s when this war is over.”
.
.M. D. Collins In
lanta Hospital
llowing Accident
TLANTA—{/P)—Dr. M. D. Col
, state school superintendent.
sered 5 broken collar beone and
rations about the head in the
lision of his car and a truck in
Mt of his home at nearby Fair-
N vesterday.
¢ was brought to Piedmont
dital here where his condition
describeq as “‘satisfactory.”
.M. Robertson, Fairburn police
k. said Dr. Collins was turn
into his driveway when the
ident occurred. Robertson said
Colling' car was knocked under
fee and Dr. Collins was thrown
i the front sea into the back
i
-£-A-T-H-E-R
GEORGIA. Mostly cloudy
"d mild this afterncon and
Night with occasional light
s in north portion this
fternoon and tonight. Partly
budy and mild Tuesday ex-
Pt slightly colder in extreme
°'th and west central por
" Tuesday afternoon,
———
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Mehest ... ey Luil £ TOO
OWeSt ..oyl chil sNO
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frmal ..., Sl N SRS
RAINFALL
Ches last 24 hours .. v.iw 00
‘lal since December 1 ... .08
\‘ht-n since December 1 ~ 91
“sage December rainfall .08
al since January 1 .. ..46.45
‘ess sinece January 1 ..s 322
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service.
Iran Parley Drops
“Unconditional”
Surrender Dictum
Goebbels Is Deprived
Of Mighty Propaganda
Weapon, Lochner Says
By The Associated Press
The miost significant fact
about the Teheran declara
tions, from the viewpoint
of their effect upon German
morale, is the absence of
the words “unconditional
surrender.”
It was wise statesman
ship to omit these words.
We on the United Nations side
all know that the . phrase is not
intended to reduce the adversary
to slavery, but, on the contrary,
to enable the victorious United
Nations to.make the blessings of
democracy accessible even to the
defeated enemy.
Goebbels and his henchmen,
however, have for months insisted
that the United Nations demand
unconditional surrender as a
means of creating a coolie colony
in the heart of Europe.
Derisively they have pooh-pooh
ed the idea that a nation which
surrendered unconditionally would
ever be allowed to participate in
creating a postwar world of co
operation and security.
The German people, or rather,
that large section which is fed up
with Nazism, militarism, imper
jalism and master race nsycohlogy,
has been listening in vain for
some message from the TUnited
Nations that would help them in
their struggle for freedom, The
phrase “unconditional surrender”
was for months - permitted to
stand as' the only method for
Germany . : 5
Prevented Colliapse
1 have feared, and not without
reason, , that this phtase, if left
undefined ~ or . unsupplemented,
might weld Germany into a com
munity of despair and thus pro
long the warv greatly. . T
The Teheran = declarations- are
calculated to bring hope to those
German martyrs for _liberty who
are filling' the Himmler concentra
tion camps, to that underground
that I know exists despite terror
(Continued on Page Three) ;
Motor Freight Tied
Up In Aflanfa
) .
By Workers Strike
ATLANTA — (AP) — A strike
of more than 1,600 truck -drivers
and helpers in Atlanta and Mem
phis, Tenn., tied up 42 southeast
ern motor freight transport. com
panies today.
The workers, who belong to the
International Union of Teamsters,,
Chauffeurs, . Warehousemen and
Helpers ~ (AFL), are. - protesting
government delay in giving final
approval to wage Increases ap
proved by the War Labor Board.
The War Labor Board approved
increases contingent upon sanction
by the Office of Price Administra
tion.
W. T. Archer, business agent for
the union in Atlanta, said only
city pickup and delivery drivers
and helpers were involved,. but
that over-the-road drivers were
staying out with them.
At Birmingham, Ala., Presilent
A. E. Gamble of the local union
said drivers had decided to strike
if necessary to obtain the raises.
Mrs. (ase To Show
2 -
Pottery-Making
. o
To Art Associafion
Mrs. George Case, pottery in
structor at the University of
Georgia art departqmnt. will con
duct a demonstration Tuesday
night at the December meeting of
the 'Athens Art Asscciation, ac
cording to announceiment by Lamar
Dcdd, program chairinan. The
meeting, which will begin at 8:15,
will be held in the Pottery Room
of the Fine Arts buiiding. instead
of the usual meeting-place, the
gallery, so that members and
guests may have the opportunity
to watch pottery being made on
the potter’s wheel. .
Besides her natural talent for
ceraméc work, Mrs. Case's back
ground of training qualifies her
as an expert in the field. She took
her B. F. A. degree from Syracuse
University, New York, and her M.
A. degree from Ohio State Uni
versity. Prior to coming to the
University of Georgia, Mrs. Case
operated her own kiln and pottery
shop on the Oldfield Farms, Clark
Summit, Pa., and at the same time
conducted a class in pottery at
‘the Everhart Museum for members
of the Lakawana County Art Al
liance. .
l Everyone 1s cordially invited to
attend. the meeting. .. ~
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L
—~—NEA TELEPHOTO,
Marshal Josef Stalin, President Roosveelt and
Prime Minister Churchill are shown in the order
named on the portico of the Soviet embassy at
"gn "
British Eighth Army Less Than
"’ % 8 " N,
Fourteen Miles From Pescara;
Reds Threaten Three Strongholds
Natis Show Signs Of Lacking Reserves; '
Finland, Hungary, Rumania Urged To Quit
‘By RICHARD McMURRAY
; Associated Press\War Editor
The British Eighth Army _drove to the banks of the
Moro river, less than 14 miles from the Adriatic port of
Pescara, while the. American Fifth Army captured more
[talian heights west of Mignano, command the road te
Rome, Allied headquarters in Algiers announced today.
Giano I Reporfed
E By Nazi
xecuted By Nazis
Benito Mussolini’s
_ Son-In-Law Shot By
German Firing Squad
LONDON = (APY ,—"A" Reuters
dispateh from :thé’ Swiss-Italian
frontier - said today * “that - Count
Galeazzo Ciano, fermer Fascist
Foreign Minister -of Italy and
Benito Mussolini's son-in-law, was
shot this' morning .by a~ firing
squad, according to reports reach
ing the frontier. !
The report did not make it clear,
but -any. such execution - presum
ably would be under direction of
the German authorities, who have
been . reported holding . Ciano for
trial for alleged war crimess 1t
was a story-book tale of, a rise to
that Ciano was expected to “stand
trial:™ : ;
Mussolini's son-in-law turned
aginst him _in the Grand Council
. . (Continud on Page Six)
‘"
December 15 Deadline
For Payment Of & f
\ -
Other Half Of Taxes
WASHINGTON —(P)—lt's - time
for all federal income - taxpayers
to determine just what, if - any
thing, they need to do before the
next tax payment deadlln_e. Deec.
18. g
If you filed a declaration of
estimated tax in Septcxgber and
paid halg the indicated debt to
Uncle Sam then. you must: pay; the
other half.
If you're a farmer with sufficient
income to require filing yoh -must
send in an estimate and pay.
(Farmers weren't requireft ta file
in September, by special dispensa -
tion of Congress.)
I¢ you filed in September and
your income was changed to the
extent that your estimate is prov
ing more than 20 percent too low,
you must send in an amended
declaration and pay the higher tax
if youre to escape penalties next
March. . i
I¢ you didn’t have to file -2
Athens, Ga., Monday, December 6, 1943.
The advances in Italy provided
a realistic backdrop for the an-~
nouncement at. 1 p.. m. Bastern
War Time, of the results of the
Roosevelt-Stalin - Churchill War
Council in Persia, Enemy radios
said President Roosevelt and
Prime Minister Churchill conferred
with President Ismet Inonu of
Turkey in Cairo Saturday in anx
ious reports reflecting fear that
Turkey would enter the war.
- Russian armies pounding ahgad
in the worst snowstorms this yoar
in White Russia threatened Mogi
lev, Zhlobin and Regahev. The
Germans were reported showing
signs ,of lacking reserves. Sev
eral strongpoints in the Dnieper
bend south of Kremenchug were
taken and Nazi attacks in the
Cherkasy area were thrown back.
The Germans said the Russians
were attacking violently in the
by-passed Crimea, and had broken
through south of Cherkasy.
As the Russian armies drove on,
Mescow applied new pressure on
. (Continued on Page Three) ,
World Today
By The Associated Press
« DIPLOMATIC FRONT: Ger
man Radio says Rooseveit and
Churchill conferred with Pres
ident of Turkey in Cairo.
ITALY British Eighth
Army drives to banks of
Moro River, near Adriatic port
of Pescara. American Fifth
captures more ltaiians heights
west of Mignanon, on road to
Rome. :
e 4
RUSSIA: Red Armies forge
ahead in worst snowstorm of
year on White Russian front.
Several strongpoints in Dniep
er Bend captured by Soviet
troops.
s et s
ATLANTIC: U. S. Naval
and RAF coastal planes sink
six submarines. 2
N ——t
PACIFIC: Australian troops
push toward Wareo on stra
tegic Huon Peninsula of New
Guinea. U. S. Air Force ac
tive, hitting Bougainville, New
Britain, Marshalls. Japanese
plane attack on U. 8. Gilberts
beaten offy - e
ESTABLISHED 1832
Teheran. Stalin wears the Order of Red Star on his
tunic and Churchill is in the uniform of an RAF
air marshal. (12th U. S. Army Air Force photo.)
2
e
&‘ ’N'-.,Zfl,nnh » g * .
Personal Appearances
.
Of Candidates To Be
.
Curtailed, Is Forecast
BY JACK BELL
WASHINGTON — (AP) — Both
majer parties may cut their 1944
campaign io a mew wartime pat
tern, short on personal appearances
by Presidential eandidates and
long: on newspaper, radio and
newsreel appeals.
The difficulties of transporting a
Presidential nominee ahd his party
about the country in the middle of
a war will be ong of the ' ehief
topics of discussion when Repub
lican National Cemmitteemen and
state’ chairmen mieet ‘in Chicago
January 10 and 11:
The Republicans already are toy
ing with the idea of having their
nominee announce that because he
does not wish.to place any added
strain on a transportation system
(Continued on Page Six)
Senate (ommittee Is
Busy Considering
%’ .
War Coniracts Action
WASHINGTOS .~ (AP) — The
Senate Finance Comunittee called
on Secretary =of Commerce Jones
and high War, Navy and Mari
time Commission ‘officials today
for their recommendations on the
war contract I'enegnl'ia.tiun law
which Chairman George (D.-Ga.)
savs should be repealed.
The pending $2,140,000,000 tax
increase bill upon. which the com
mittee is winding -up public hear
ings contains a serieg of house-ap
proved amendments to the rene
gotiation statute. Billions of dol
lars worth of war- contracts have
been rechecked under the law and
excessive profits reeovered.
George says the act has outlived
any usefulness it might have had
at the start of the . rearmament
program. He “ointed out that
costs of war goods are becoming
tirmly established and declared no
useful purpose would be served by
subjecting contractors to what he
terms abritrary and capricious de
cisions.
The house approved a score of
changes. One of the most import
ant would establish a Central
War Contracts Price Adjustment
Board in charge of renegotiations.
¥urther, the house provided that
if a contractor was dissatisfied
with the revised price, he could
appeal to the tax courts.
Contracts aggregating less than
2100,000 a year now are exempt
from renegotiation. The house
raised the minimum to $500,000,
and exempted all contracts for ag
ricultural commodities.
‘ Apart from these changes, the
tax bill, as it stood 'today, heid
little promise of major increases
in federal revenue. The $2,140,-
000,000 approved by the house
was about a fifth of the $10,500,-
000,000 asked by Secretary Mor
genthade - ost
Food Chief Jones
Backs SllllSidiES' '
Administration Backers
Work For 60-Day
. >
Delay On Final Action
§
WASHINGTON ~(P)—Adminis
tration, leaders cuugd Food Ad
ministrator Marvin “Jones .up to
Capitol #HiH ‘today: ine. an . . effort
to save their food subsidy program
—the lid President Roosevelt says
he needs to hold down the cost of
living . .
While Jones was e¢alled to ap
pear before a Senate committee
openly , hostile to.the: already-bat
tered subsidy plan, administration
backers worked for a 80-day delay
of ginal action so as to enable them
(Continued on Page Two)
. P .
Dairy Short Course
Opens Wednesday
At University Here
The Dairy Production = Short
Course which will co}&fiene ?Ved
nesday at the University. of Geor
gia will be divided inte three ma
jor subjects: feeding, breeding,
and m:n):(gmn('m. Prof. H. B.
Henderson, head of the dairy de-,
partment, states thatiearly regis
tration indicates a remarkably
good attendance, in view of war
time . travel restrictions’ and’labor
difficulties,
To give expert advice and ups
to-date information on these three
subjects, the University is bring
ing together some of the outstand
ing dairy authorities of the nation.
(Continued on Page Two)
5 :
Sevenly-Five Burned
By Blazing Gas
In Florida Accident
FORT MYERS, Fla. — (AP) —
[lleven persons were in tlle hos
pital and 64 others Were nursing
varying degrees of burns today as
the result of being. sprayed with
blazing gasoline after, a truck
loaded- with 5.000 gallons of. avi
ation fuel exploded here yesterday.
The gas-laden vehicle blew up
with a tremendous rear and sent
a sheet of flame towering 400 feet
into the air five minutes after its
collision with another truck had
attracted a crowd of' spectators.
The force of the blast knocked
down almost all of the spectators
(Continued on Page Two}
; R i
Condemnation Action
- -
Occupies United
States Court Today
All cases docketed in United
States District Court, opening the
regular December _term today,
were excused until Tuesday ‘morn
ing at 9 o'clock with one excep
tion. o 3 A
The exception was a condemna
tion proceeding against 228 cases
of oysters under the Pure Food
and Drug Act. The oysters were
shipped by -a - Biloxi, Mississippi,
CONCEOTIEG ~ .;i a e ik it i e
W
ABC Pader—Single Copy. 3c—sc¢ Sunday
“Big Three” Say Germany
Will Be Hit On All Sides
CAIRO, Egypt. — (AP) — President Roosevelt,
Prime Minister Churchill and Premier Josef Stalin
have agreed completely on “the scope and timing of
operations” to smash the German army from three
sides, an announcement signed by the three states
men in an epic four-day meeting in Teheran, lran,
and released here today disclosed. '
The Allied leaders also chartered a peace era in which
all nations would be invited to join “a world family of
democratic nations” based on the reaffirmed principles of
the Atlantic Charter. f
The history-making conference of the heads of the
world’s most powerful military and political combine was
held in the Iranian capital from November 28 to Decem
ber. 1, attended also by scores of top-flight military chief
tains. and diplomats from the United States, Britain and
Russia. . .
Heavily underscoring the urgency of the military
phase, the combined British and American general stafls
subsequently returned to Cairo, scene of the November
92-26 meeting of Chinese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-
Shek with President Roosevelt and the Prime Minister,
and staged concentrated planning sessions from last Fri
day through today.
Churchill joined in these and other sessions, leading 1o
the probability that other disclosures of paramount in
ternational importance are still to come.
President Roosevelt’s whereabouts since the Teheran
confrences were not disclosed, however.
' Two Teheran declarations signed simply “Roosevelt,
Stalin, Churchill,” and dated December 1 announced
these results:
War “Our military staffs have joined in our round ta
ble discussions and we have concerted our plans for the
destruction of the German forces. We have reached com
plete agreement as to the scope and timing of operationy
which will be undertaken from the east, west and south.
- Common Understanding
. “The common understanding
jwbie?%‘v‘e mé? r%phe‘dv‘mth
‘that ‘victory will-be ours; -
. “No power ‘on earth:.can pre<
vent our destroying the German
armies by land, their ‘U-boats by
sea and theit war plants from ‘the
ajr. .Our ‘attacks will be-relentiéss
and increasing.” f . minenive 38
Peace—“We are sure that our
concord will make it an enduring
péace. We recognize fully the
supreme responsibility resting upon
us and all the United Nations to
make a peace which will command
the good will of the overwhelming
masses of the peoples of the wond
and banish the source and terror
of war for many generations,
“We shall seek the cooperation
and active participation of all
nations, large and small, whose
peoples in -heart and mind are
dedicated, as are our own peoples.
to the ‘elimination of tyranny and
slavery, oppressjon and--intoler~
anc¢e. We will. welcome them as
they may choose to come ‘into 'a
world family of democratic’ na
tions. : e
The concluding paragraph -of one
declaration devoted to thé status
of Iran as an ally of the three
nations apparently was the key'to
the envisaged “world family' of
democoratic nations.” ’ aiid
After expressing their Trespect
for Iran’s independence and terri
torial integrity, and promising eco
nomic aid to that country which
has facilitated the flow of Allied
supplies to Russia, the three lead
ery said:
“They (the United States, Bri
tain and Russia) count upon the
participation of Iran together with
all other peace-loving nations in
the establishment of international
peace, security and prosperity af<
ter the war in accordance witp the
principles of the Atlantic Charter,
to which all four governments have
continued to subscribe.’
The Atlantic Charter declaration
by President Roosevelt and Prime
Minister Churchill after their his
toric sea rendezvous in August,
1940, set out these general Allied
principles and post-war aims:
I+They seek mno territorial or
other aggrandizement,
2—No territorial - changes that
do not accord with the “freely ex
pressed wishes of the peoples con
cerned.”
Respect For All Peoples
3—Respect for the right of alil
peoples to choose their own form
of Zovernment; restoration of
“sovereign rights and self-govern
ment” to those ‘“forcibly deprived
of them.”
4—Endeavor, “with due respect
for existing obligations,” to pro
mote a better distribution of raw
materials and trade to all states,
“great or small, victor or van
quished.”
s—Full collaboration among na
tions in the economic field in ordje
to improve labor standards and
social security. \
6—*“After the final destruction
of the Nazi tyranny,” a peace es
tablished to assure all men “free
dom from fear and want.”
~ 7—Freedom of the seas for all
nations.
L B—Abandonment of the use.
force and disarmament of nations
LOCAL CQTTON
15-16 INCH MIDDLING .... 19%0
1-INCH MIDDLING .. .... 20¢
Swhich | 1, WM LER),
:agfespiomfifi thelr fl;ntiers
pending eéstablishment of “a widet
ana pefmanent system of general
Security.” W i
« Dispatdhes from Telieran said
the confereénce atmosphére was one
of extreme cordiality. The main
declaration by the three leaders
epßeludedsion fonds § i K iau sk S
#Wie came Hhere ‘with hope and
determination. We - leave here
friends in fact. in spirit and in
purpose,” !
It was the first time President
Roosevelt and Premier Stalin had
met. e
On the first day of the confer
ence Stalin, accompanied only by
his foreign minister, Vyascheslav
Molotev, walked up the steps of
the Russian embassy compound,
whicis was the President's resi
dence during his stay, He left.
Molotov talking in an ante-room
with Harry’' L. Hopkins, the Presi-.
dent’s official adviser, and stroda
on-alone to come face to face with
the ‘American’ leader who had
flown thousands ©Of miles across
ocean and’desert for the rendez
vous furthér ‘cementing Allied unity
in war and peace,
Tt was' believed to he the first
time Stalin had left Russia since
the Communist revelution in 1917,
~The Russian émbassy conferencs
area, and Teheran itself, swarmed
with Russian tomm&gunner guards,
and even the embassy servants
were packing pistols, : *
Security measures were height
ened because it was learnd a
number of German saboteurs had
been dropped by patrachute in Iran
a few weeks before the hig three
arrived. Most of them Wwere report
ed captured,
A number of Iranians whose
loyalty was questioned, including
at least one army officer, also
were locked up during the con
ference, : ; :
One of the ceremonious high«
lights of the conference at the
foot of the snzflzupped Elburz
mountains was th€ jpresentation by
Prime Minister’ Ghurchill of the
“Sword of Stalingrad” to Premier
Stalin—a British ~recognition of
the Russian heroes who turned, the
Nazi tide at Stalingrad last win
ter.
¢ Main Declaration i
The text of the main declara
tion’ by the three leaders:
“We, the president of the United
States of America, the Prime
(Continued on Page Two)
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