Newspaper Page Text
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Non-rationed play shoes in many styles
both comfortable and flattering. A ga
laxy of colors.to choose from. Sizes 4 to 9.
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Men, Women !, old at
40,50,60! Warit Pep?
Want to Feel Years Younger?
Do you blame exhausted, worn-out feeling on age?
Thousands amazed at what a little pepping up with
Dstrex has done, Contains tonic many need at 40,
bO, 60, for body old solely because low in fron; also
prophylactic doses vitamin Bi, calcium. 35¢ intro
ductory Bize now only 29. Try Ostrex Tonio
Tablets for new pep, younger feeling, this very day.
At drug stores everywhere—in
Athens, at Crow’s Drug.
Radio Prgoram Of
OPA Studied By
Un-American Group
(Continued irom Page One.y
cript will show that they are sub
sersive.”
If it has time, the committec
hopes to question during the dav
Danie] Wooley, head of the New
York office, anq OPA Washing
ton officials in charge of radio
activities. Waiting to be heard is
Tex Weiner, $3,800-a-year radiQ
director in the New York office.
Yesterday’s witnsses, including
OPA boss Chester Bowles and
D. B. Stetler, White Flains, N. Y.,
advertising director of Sandard
Brands, Inc., told how the pro
gram originated.
Stetler said Standard Brands
agreeq ag a public service, and
mot for advestising pu-poses, 0
pay for the talent and time on
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MASONIC NOTICE
A regular communication of
Mt. Vernon Lodge No. 22, will
be held tonight at 8:30 o’clock.
St. John the Baptist night will
be observed. The Fellowcraft
degree will be conferred. All
membérs cordially invited.
M. E. OLDHAM, W. M.
E. O. KINNEBREW, Secty.
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ound the way to amazing
New VITALITY...PEP...
bhetter looks!
(| icesniveuices b SS T e
in the stomach %‘ gy W 3} ;'g 7
3 -Energize your M
= 2 Body with ] e :-;;j;
BLOOD! © , %%»
: P sl o W
HOW: WELL YOU KNOW that stomach DIGESTIVE [[UICES
and RICH, RED-BLOOD are the arch stones of bodily func
tions! Yet, inadequate diet, overwork, undue worries, colds, flu
or other illness oc}ten impairs the stomach’s digestive functions
and reduces the red-blood strength. So if you are subject to poor
digestion or suspect deficient red-blood as the cause of your
weakness, nervousness, underweight, listlessness, poor com
plexion, yet have no organic complication or focal
infection, SSS Tonic may be just what you need. /‘l-\
It has helped millions. ..you can start today... [SEE
at drug stores in 10 and 20 oz, sizes.©B,B.S. Co. @ =
SUILD STURDY HEALTH and keep STALWART - STEADY « STRONG f@ X
s\ Ss\ T’ N] fl C helps build =97
STURDY HEALTH
the program, broadcast every
Tuesday evening by station WCR
in New York. It was his under
standing, Stetler said, that the
script was approved in advance
by the Office of War Informa
tion in Washington.
i,Reconversion Wage
Policy Trend Upward
! (Centinued from page one.)
for the low and medium priced
lines of apparel.
A Navy spokesman said Navy
textile’ requirements would be cut
25 per cent in the coming three
months, but Maj. Gen. Clifford
L. Corbin, speaking for the Army,
reported that requirements could
not be substantially reduced.
“We are very anxious for in
creased production so that civilians
will have "enough to get along
with,” Corbin said.
LIGHT LIFEBOAT
A recent development in life
boats is one made of aluminum
that weighs less than a wood boat
and is only half as heavy as a
steel boat. It is resistant to corro
sive agents such as salt spray, and
because of its lightness when in
stalled on the upper decks of a
ship it improves the stability of
the ship.
SHELL TRACER
A device which sends out a se~
ries of radio signals to be inter
cepted by the tail end of a shell
and reflected back to a receiver
has been developed. It gives U..S.
ordnance and artillery experts an
insight, as to the course a shell
takes when it leaves a gun, its
range and its accuracy in hitting
its target.
Information and recommenda=
tions for the control of boll wee=
vil, flea hoppers, boll worms and
other insects which damage cot
ton may be secured from ‘county
agricultural agents or from the
Agricultural Extension Service in
Athens.
Generals Eisenhower and Brad
ley lived across the hall from
each other when they were at=
tending West Point.
On Education
Here June 27-28
The State Department of Edu
cation and the University of Geor
gia will sponsor the eleventh an
nual conference on education here
June 27-28 for Georgia public
school administrators. Director of
the meeting will be Dr. M. D.
Collins, state superintendent ~of
schools, assisted by Dr. Edwin D.
Pusey, professor emeritus of edu
cation at the University of Georgia.
Due to travel restrictions, the
conference this year will be held
in four sections as follows: West
Georgia College, Genola, June 25-
26; University of Georgia, Athens,
June 27-28; Georgia State Teach
ers College, Statesboro, June 28-
29; and Abraham Baldwin Col
lege, Tifton, July 19-20.
Georgia Holsteins
Make Outstanding -
Butterfat Records
BATTLEBORO, Vt.—Two regis
tered Holstein-Friesian ecows in
the University of Georgia herd
have recently cpmpieted official
production records of more than
360 pounds of butterfat, The
Holstein-Friesian Association of
America announces.
The higher producer of the two
was Ormsky K. P. Barbara with
a record of 445 pounds of butter
fat and 12,609 pounds of milk.
This is nearly two and one half
times the production of the aver
age dairy cow in this nation. The
record was made in 302 days on
two milkings daily, at the age of
8 years 1 month. .
The other high producer was
Jolan Lois, with 407 pounds of
butterfat and 10,707 pounds of
milk, made in 339 days on two
milkings daily, at the age of 2
years 11 months.
Albert J. Owens
- :
Buried Near }
Canon, Tuesday
Albert J. Owens, father of Prof.
Hubert B. Owens, head of the
Department of Landscape Archi
tecture at the University of Gor
gia, was buried Tuesday near
Canon, his home.
Rev. J. T. Whitefide, pastor of
the Universalist church of Canon,
conducted the services.-
Mr. Owens, a graduate of North
Georgia College inn 1883, was in
his 87th year. He was very active
in Franklin County civic affairs,
being chairman of the Franklin
County Commissioners at a time
when progressive road building
was needed, and was instrumental
in building many of the paved
roads in Franklin county. He was
mayor of Canon, and one of that
city’s outstanding merchants and
businessmen. He had extensive
planting acreage.
“GRAVE CESNCERN” }
VAEDOSTA, Ga., June 31 —-
(AP)— John Duane, special rep
resentative of the War Produc
tion board, says war production
officials have expressed “grave
concern” over the current low
receipts of gum and wood rosin.
He made the report yesterday
at a called meting of leadders in
the American Turpentine Far
mers Association cooperative and
government officials assigned to
forest products production: work.
Duane said increased produv
tion of naval stores in this coun
try “is absolutely essential to ihe
successful prosecution of the war
in the Pacific.”
g R
MODERN BUIDDING
MOULTRIE, Ga., Juné 21.—
(AP)—Construction of a SIIO,OOO
modern academic bull.dmg is
planned at Norman Junior Col
lege here. It will replace a strgc
ture destroyed by fire last win
ter. Work will start as the War
Production Board releases mate
rials. p
ENVY OF ALL
MACON, Ga., June 21.—(AP)—
H. M. (Pete) Polan’s Victory
garden in a downtown iron foun=
dry yard is the enevy of hundreds
of . bypassers. “I’ think it is the
patriotic duyt of every American
who can do so to grow a Victory
garden,” Poland said, as he put in
licks about his corn belt along
with his' work among leather beltS
in the stock room. :
MILK ORDINANCE
COLUMBUS, Ga., June 21.—
—(AP)—DMuscogee county com
missioners have adopted an ordi
nance that all milk. sold in the
county o after January 1, 1946,
must be pasteurized. \
are SAVING FOOD _o
and SAVING POINTS N
by canning fruits S A »
and berries!
It's your patriotic duty
to can as much fruitand
berries as you possibly J 3
can. Exira Sugar for W /2
canning is available JSuSE L :
NOW. Apply for it to | i
your Rationing Board. O _eseb P
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Broad Trade Bill
Passed By Senate
Ready For Truman
WASHINGTON, June 2)—(#)—
The broadened, extended recipro
cal trade legislation which Presi
dent Truman called “of the first
order of importance for the suc
cess of nsxiy administration” was his
for. the Bigning tpd:y’.
The Senate passed it late yester
da¥ by a vote of 54 to 21. l{nflst, it
restored a House-approved pro
vision permitting Mr. Truman to
‘reduce selected tariff rates an
other 50 per cent. Then it slapped
down a.series of proposed restric
tive amendments.
Chairman George (D-Ga) of
‘the Senate Finance Committee had
'made good on Tuesday his effort
to put back the additional rate
}cutting provision which had been
eliminated in committee, 10 to 9.
He and other administration Dem
ocrats, joined by a considerable
number of Republicans, followed
up the initial victory by defeat
ihg yesterday all other attempts
to amend the bill and by passing
it in the same form in which it
cleared the House.
It extends the trade law three
more years and, with the addi
tional rate-cutting authority, gives
the President and the State De
partment fresh bargaining power
in working out export-import
deals with other nations,
Admiral Royal
Buried Yesterday
In Philippines
MANILA, June 2! — (AP)—
Rear Adm. Forrest Breétton Rcy
al who died at sea Monday of
coronary thrombosis was Buried
in a Lexe cemetery yesterday.
Funera] services wers held
aboarq his flagship with Adm.
William F. Halsey, commander of
the Third fleet, and high Sev
enth fleet officers attending.
Roya] had just completed. his
assignment as commander of the
Brunei Bay assult group and was
returning to base when stricken.
His chief of staff, Navy Capt. F.
Dugan, took temporary command
of the assault group.
Charles Upchurch
One Of Veterans
Enrolled In Georgia
Charles L. {pchurch is among
the twenty-nine new vetérans
who havg énrolled at the Univer
sity of Georgia for the first ses
sion-of the summer quarter.
Ninety-five veterans are now
enrolled during the summer term,
according to Kenneth R. Will
iams, acting director of the Ve
terans’ Division at the Universi
ty. n
NO TAX HIKE
MACON, Ga., June 21.—(AP)—
State Revenue Commissioner Eu
gene. Cook said there will be no
increase in taxes under the pres
ent administration and that the
state will be out of debt next
year.
o —————
STILL A MYSTERY
Quinine, made from the bark
of the chinchona tree, has been
used to control malaria for more
than 300 years, yet medical
science doesn’t know just how
the drug works.
-
- Flavor Specials
TENDER YOUNG VEGETABLES r@d o
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52 Day before ‘
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56 Iridium !
(symbol) Q
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26 Human being
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form) s
28 Seine =
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Law School Grad I‘
Appointed ‘
Probation Officer |
John M. Gaulding, Jr., of Col-|
bert, graduate of the University |
of Georgia’s Lumpkin Law School,
has been appointed federal proba
tion officer of the northern circuit
by Judges E. Marvin Underwood
and Robert L. Russell of the U,
S. District Court. |
He will assume his duties Julyl
1, with headquarters in Gaines-|
ville. This circtuit includes At-|
lanta, Gainesville, Rome and New- |
nan courts. Gaulding was admitted |
to the bar last December. i
The court officer served in the
U. S. Naval Reserve as an Ensignl
in 1942, and was given a medical!
discharge. He served as first'com- |
mander of the Mangleburg-Elrod '
Legion Post, composed of World
War II veterans on the campus.
While an undergraduate, he was]
also elected president of Blue Key
and Gridiron national honorary |
fraternities, and was active in|
campus - activities. Gaulding re- |
ceived his B. S. degree beforel
entering law school at the Uni
versity. . !
A Mason and an Elk, Gaulding!
is well-known in Gainesville, hav- |
ing held a position with the Farm !
Security Administration there fori
two and a half years. |
Conference Ends
Real Work; Will
Adjourn Tuesday
(Continued from page one.)
sembly of Nations to discuss and
make recommendations on any
question “within the scope of the
charter” written here.
Thus ended a long struggle by
small nations to make the Assem
bly a “town meeting of the world”
potentially capable of exerting the
pressure of public opinion on
the big-power-controlled Security
Council, even though it could
exercise no control over the Coun
cil directly.
Evatt Praised
Victor Andrade of Bolivia, chair
man of the committee on Assem
bly powers, attributed leadership
in this struggle to Foreign Minis
ter Herbert V. Evatt of Australia.
The last commission session to
go over.a chapter of the charter
was called today to receive the
report of Andrade’s commijttee.
From the stage of commission ac
tion the Conference will move
through plenary sessions in which
the four commissions will form=
ally report various sections of the
charter for approval.
Sign Charter Monday
Secretary of State Stettinius an
nounced yesterday that the char
ter would be signed Monday. A
special room, with a huge round
table, blue-covered against a back
ground ,of United Nations flags,i
has been prepared for that cere
mony. 1
The President will arrive Mon-‘
day in time for the signing and
will remain through the closing‘
session about 24 hours later. When
he leaves to fly back to Washing
ton by way of his hometown, Inde-‘
pendence, Mo., he will take the
charter with him to submit to
the Senate.
FASTEST SHORT FLYER
The speed of the humming bird’
is extremely difficult to determ
ine since its flights are short and
spasmodic, but tests have shown
that no bird can make a short
dash with the speed of the tiny
hummer.
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FEATURE STARTS —— 1:14—3:16—5:18—7:20—9:22
. Friday-Saturday
FIRST,RIOTOUS HIT TO
PICTURE THE PLIGHT
OF THOSE MILLIONS OF
LOVE-HUNGRY FEMMES!|
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with
RICK VALLIN - Dorothea KENT - Hardie ALBRIGH
Produced by LINDSIEY PARSONS - Directed by PHIL ROSEN
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CIVILIAN CLAIM-JUMPERS
BUY WAR BONDS and STAMPS
PAGE SEVEN
—Today
“BELLE OF THE YUKON”
RANDOLPH SCOTT
GYPSY ROSE LEE
* Friday-Saturday
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Last Showing
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MIXED WITH....THRILLS AND
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THE SONS OF THE PIONEERS
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