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PAGE FOUR
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Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
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‘ TEXT
DAILY MEDITATIONS
And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt
hearken diligently unto the veice of the Lord
thy God, to observe and to do all his com
mandments which I command thee this day,
that the Lord thy God will set thee on high
above all nations of the earth.
Who Isn't Who
: By PETER EDSON . o
NEA Washington Correspondent
' WASHINGTON—A favorite indoor sport in
Waskington is making up lists of the most influen
tial pecple in town.
. A little over a year ago, Willard M. Kiplinger of
f’the business letter organization presented to the
‘Smithsonian Institution a beautiful collection of
ione-third life-size bronze statuettes done for him
‘by the late Max Kalish to immortalize the 50 top
war leaders in the capital. Kiplinger called his
;collection “The Living Hall of Washington,” and
‘he hamd-picked the 50 leaders himself. - .
Checking up on this collection the otner day,
it struck home that over half the people who were
considered tops in Washington a year ago aren’t
‘around any more. There are, of course, extenuating
‘circumstances. The war ended and a lot of the
war-time leaders are no longer necessary. Presi
dent Roosevelt died and many of his favorites have
been eased out.
' The important thing about this is that Washing
‘ton fame is exceedingly transitory, and it ought
‘to be a lesson to some of our people who take
ithemselves too seriously.
'LITTLE OF THE OLD CABINET LEFT
- Out of the Living Hall of Washington of a year
iago',only four of the 12 cabinet secretaries and
‘undersecretaries are still around—Wallace, Ickes,
JForrestal and Patterson. Chief Justice Stone still
tpresides over the Supreme Court and Speaker Sam
.Rayburn over the House of Represntatives. Kip
;linger’s choice as the outstanding senator, a man
«from Missouri named Truman, is still here but in
a different job. v
~ The eight top military leaders—Leahy, Mar
sshall, King, Eisenhower, Nimitz, Arnold, MacAr
‘thur and Halsey still rate. So do the three top
Jlabor leaders—Lewis, Green and Murray—and the
U. 8. Chamber of Commerce head, Eric Johnston.
+ Other survivors are Jimmy Byrnes in a new job,
Chester Bowles, Vannevar Bush, Barney Baruch,
J. Edgar Hoover, Adm. Emory S. Land, Walter
Lippman and Bob Hope.
~ _Among those missing, deflated, resigned or in
general not heard from so much are ex-Cabinet
members Hull, Stimson, Morgenthau, Biddle, Wal
ker, Wickard, Jones, Perkips and Stettinius. Also
Harry Hopkins, Don Nelson, Charles E. Wilson,
gMarv-in Jones, Pau! MecNutt, Bill Jeffers, Henry
Kaiser, Elmer Davis, Byron Price, Nelson Rocke
feller, Dewey and Bricker. Five are dead—Presi
dent Roosevelt, Frank Knox, Wendell Willkie
Raymond Clapper and Ernie Pyle.
THE NEW TEAM IS DOING ALL RIGHT |
' "Now look at who have come to take their places:
. Assistant President John Snyder, Secretary of
‘the Treasury Fred M. Vinson, Attorney General
‘Tom Clark, Postmaster General Bob Hannegan,
Secretary of Agriculture Clinton _P. Anderson,
Secretary of Labor Lew Schwellenbach, Undersec
retaries Dean Acheson of State, Kenneth S. Royall
of War. Spruille Braden precides over Latin-
Araerican affairs and William Benton over what's
Jest of overseas Office of War Information. Ken
meth McKellar of Tennessee is president of ‘the
¢ As White House advisers and intimates, there
‘are George Allen, Matthew J. Connelly, - Brig.
“‘Gen. Harry W. Vaughn, plus able Charles G. Ross
‘as press secretary, “three holdovers from-* -the
‘Roosevelt era—Judge Sam Rosenman, William D.
‘Hassett and David K.- Niles—and John R. Steel-
Jman, former head of the Conciliation Service.
! These are the much-sought-after men who oc
cupy the supposedly sacred soil “closest to Tru
{w..’ 5
i
3 '"Pgnama‘s total area is 34,169 square miles, in
‘cluding the Canal Zone. ' |
~ e, o ————— e— e e - .
%% -mined out of the slopes of Pikes Peak and
> Cripple Creek mining district in that section
from 1891 to 1941 is estimated at $389,973,147,
' Less Brass in the VA
f Gen. Omar Bradley, now Administrator of Vet
| erans’ Affairs, is an old Army man, anc¢i a good one.
'He knows, as even the proletarian-rninded Rus
!sians discovered, that there is no suibstitute for
rank and discipline in a fighting army.
, When victory or defeat, life or d¢-ath, can de
i pend on the carrying out of orders, ok edience must
i be prompt and unquestioning. Superior rank must
i be respected. Punishment for insubordination must
'be sharp. It all adds up to a most undemocratic
| arrangement, but there s¢:ems to be no other way
!of ‘conducting a war successfully.
: Such an arrangement, however, has no place in
{a democraiic couniry ouiside of military life. Yet
the habits of command and obedience are not al
ways easy to break. Some officers come to feel
that deference is due them as persons, even after
i they return to civilian life. It becomes almost in-
I_stinctive to give orders, to make decisions for
ggthers, to -expect that they will be accepted with~
Sout argument, to be impatient of any contrary
| proposals.
General Bradley has undoubtedly seen a good
bit of this in his time. He has probably seen it'
particularly in his present surroundings. Most
likely he has heard the compliaint of many vet
erans that there is too much “brass” in the Vet
erans’ Administration—particularly in Washington.
So the General has issued a simple but wise or
der. From now on, employes of the VA who for
merly were officers will drop the military titles
which they have clung io even though they are no
longer in the service, and are dealing with essen
tially civilian problems through an essentially
civilian agency. :
Colonel Jones henceforth is Mr. Jones. He is
mister on his name plate, on. his office door, and
on his letters. He is mister to the former Gls with
whom he deals. It is a small enough change, but
it ought to make a considerable difference.
For the former officer, the plain title of mister
is a reminder that the war is over. And for the
former buck private sitting across the desk from
him, there is no longer the barrier of a title to
frighten him and freeze him and call to mind a
lot of old diffidences and dislikes. The former pri
vate doesn’t even need to know who his counselor
is or what he has been unless the VA official
chooses to tell him. '
This not only promises a long-needed improve
ment in the conduct of the Veterans’ Administra
tion, but also gives notice that the new . adminis-
trator is a man who can operate with the same
quiet effectiveness in peace that he showed in
war. By a seemingly insignificant directive, he has
found a short cut to the solution of many vet-
erans’ problems. Y
Of course, General Bradley, being an active
member of the regular Army, will not become Mr.
Bradley. But his conversion to a civilian way of
thinking seems complete.
More Confusion In
Argenting
A new.complication was added to the confused
political picture in Argentina by the national lock
out of industry and business in protest against the
policies of: the present government in Buenos
Aires. : e
The lockout is traditionally a “reactionary”
measure. But in this case the paralysis of com
merce seems to be a liberal maneuver directed not
against labor, but against -the military dictatorship
which, - elaborating on the ward politician’s old
practice of giving away cigars to voters, has de
creed wage increases and bonuses in a bald at
tempt to get the labor vote.
Apparently Argentina’s Labor Party has swal
lowed the bait. At least it has unanimously se
lected Colonel Peron as its candidate for president
in next month’s elections.
How the Argentine workers, with the example
of Italian and German labor’s fate before them,
can choose to string along with a totalitarian boss
is hard to understand. It may be hoped that busi
ness, for once deployed to the left of them, may
bring them to their senses, and that the hardships
attendant upon the business lockout will not be
so severe as to alienate supporters of Argentine
democracy as their difficult and unequal struggle
approaches a climax.
The name originally given to Los Angeles by
priests who named the site in honor of the saint
whose feast day it was was Neustra Senora la
Reina de Los Angeles de Porciuncula (Our Lady,
the Queen of the Angels of Porciuncula).
George M. Pullman, who invented the American
type sleeping car, said he got the idea {rom the
double-deck bunks used in the Colorado mining
camps during the gold rush. i
There is plenty of room for a prosperous future
in non-scheduled flight operations without seri
ously paralleling or duplicating existing air trans
port.—William A. Mara, Bendix Aviation Corps.
I oppose for us the kind of government Russia
has, but the kind of government Russia has is more
its business than mine.—House Speaker Sam Ray
burn. . :
All of us know that isolation is impossible now.
Everybody must carry the whole world on his
heart. We must think globally.—Rev. Samuel M.
Shoemaker, New York City.
, This year we decide whether the people of the
earth will Tive in peace, prosperity and harmony,
or must take the other course which will lead to
utter destruction. There is no middle course.—Gen.
George C. Marshall, new U. S. . ambassador to
!China.
| America’s people are fully conscious of their
'destiny and their transcendent responsibility in
the world of tomorrow.—Adlai E. Stevenson, act
~ing U. S. delegate to UNO. -
The new year will mark the first step in the new
prosperity of the Soviet Union. But we will not
forget that the Golden Age has not arrived and that
swords canhot be beaten into ploughshares.—Niko
lai Tokhonov, Russian writer.
. We have political democracy, so we must have
democracy for industry to make workers feel that
they are.part of management, and that they have
a voice in what’s going on.—Eric A. Johnston,
president, U. S. Chamber of Commerce. @
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
: Good Intentions
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Bebe Daniels Back
"On Lot"” But Is
Producing Movies
By 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 22—(AP)
—Bebe Daniels is back making
comedies for Hag Roach, but un
der slightly di¥ferent circum
stances,
.+ More years ago than I cared to
‘ask her, Bebe starred in comedies
for Hal. They took a week to
make. “We would all get in cars
'and drive to the hills or the
beach,” she related. “Then we
would put our heads together and
figure out a plot. If it was sunny
we'd shoot it. 'lf it rained, we
would go indoors and play cards.”
Bebe is again on the Roach lot
and this time she is producing
comedies. She told me screen com
dy has changed quite a bit during
her absence.
“Before, the emphasis was on
action,” she said, “but now we
have to concentrate on the story.
The public demands a good story
and much more subtle comedy
situations. That doesn’t mean we
aren’t going to have a few prat
|falls, though.”
The actress is well suited for
her new capacity. She knows all
branches of the business, includ
ing cutting and writing. She wrote
all her radio scripts in England
and also some of her pictures
when she was a star at Para
mount. Under her Roach contract
she also will direct pictures. With
megaphone by Adrian, no doubt.
l “Paging Mr. Flynn”
Film stars receive all kinds of
mail. Here's one ex-2nd Lt. Frank
N. Kautzmann, jr., es Mansfield,
Ohio, wrote to Errol Flynn:
“When 1 was younger, you were
my favorite movie hero. I can still
see you fighting your way out of
Pmpossible situations. The last
| picture I saw you in before I left
for overseas was ‘Northern Pur
lsuit.‘
“On Christmas Day, 1944, while
lon a bombing mission over Ger
many, my plane was shot down.
We all parachuted out of the
plane. As I landed very roughly
lin the Alps, I struck my head,
land became unconscious for a
'short time. Upon coming to, I saw
a complete circle of Nazi boots
around me. I looked up into the
muzzles of German machine guns
and pistols. Believe it or not, my
first thought was the following:
‘T'd like to see Erroll Flynn get
out of this one.” ”
The John Dall-Jane Withers
long-distance romance is warm
ing. He calls nightly from Chicago
(where he is starring in “The
|Hasty Heart.,” . . . Alfred Van-
derbilt and bride are seeing the
town as guests of the Oscar Le
vants. . . . Loretta Young plans
to tour South America after “The
Perfect Marriage.” Lana Turner
is on her way there and Irene
Dunne has similar plans. Those
lucky Latins.
Pecans need plenty plant food
for profitable preduction, ac
cording to the Agricultural Ex
{ension Service.
SKIN IRRITATIONS OF
> EXTERNAL CAUSE
Eczema, acne pimples, simple n‘fiworm.
tetter, salt rheum, butnpa (blackheads),
and ugly broken-out skin. Millions re
lieve itching, burning and soreness of
these miseries with thissim Sle hometreat
ment. Black and White Ointment goes
to work at once. Aids healing, works the
antiseptic way. 25 gem success. 10c,
25¢, 50c sizes. Purchase price refunded
if you're not satisfied. Use only as di
rected. Vital in cleansin%i‘: good soap.
Enjoy Black and White Skin Soap daily
Income Tax Returns Prepared
W. B. NEWBERRY
+ _Georgian Hotel
Audits — Systems — Tax Service
Please Call After 6:00 P. M.
Jersey Cattle Club
Names Winners,
Selects Officers ,
Cows belonging to the Happy
Valley Farms of Rogsville, Ga.,
were awarded the Woodland
Brook and Col. T. L. Huston tro.
phies at a meeting of the Geor
gia Jersey Cattle Cliib held ve
cently in the dairy building on
the University campus. ~
t Biltmore Poetess Dcsign won
the Woodland Broolk irophy witha
a production of 13,023 pounds
of milk and 625 pounds of
butter fat in 305 days, F. W.
Bennett, head of the University
Dairy, stated. The record exceel
ed the minimum reguirement of
merit for the club, Bennett said.
Design Dictator AMyra took the
Col. T. L. Huston trophy with a
prcduction of 17,55 C pounds of
milk: and 890 pounds of butter
fat in 1945, Bennett revealed, ad
ding %aat this was the highest
record for all breeds in the state
during the year.
The Happy Valley Farms are
owned by J. L. Hutckeson, jr., of
Chattanooga. C. F. Russell is herd
manager.
At the meeting, Hutcheson was
re-elected club pres'dent: C. ¥
Russell of Rossville, was named
first vice-prisident; C. A. Ward,
of Afaens second vice-president|
and Frank F. Fitech, re-elected
secretary. '
Nearly 50 per cent more steel
was used for building U. S. mer
chant vessels during ‘the war
years than went into’ combat
ships of the U. S. Navy.
-
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Swing your partner... Have a Coke
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Boys and girls together make fun a sureire bet. And you can always [s \ Fo '
count on one friend of all of them being on hand—ice-cold Coca-Cola. C@: o o
In the lingo of youth, Have a Coke is the greeting that says You're jearirticy NI, R
one of the crowd. It’s a standing invitation to have a good time and ECAPTH G e
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enjoy the friendly pause. FhitE
Sy f 2ok i b Coke =Coca-Cola
FERERE Coca-Cola” and its abbreviation
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY ‘4 I “Coke™ are ‘the registered trade
‘ . ;‘\saé‘; marks which distinguish the prod-
T T -Co! mpany
ATHENS COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY PTR T
By GENE HANDSAKER
HOLLYWQOD ~— I never did
quite figure out why George
Brent changes to the marrying
kind of lover in the last few sec
onds of “My Reputation,” but
that’s probably a petty criticism.
It’s an excellent movie.
Barbara Stanwyck, as a grief
crushed widow who becomes quite
merry, does some high-powered
weeping (one scene) and Kissing
(in five scenes, Warner Brothers
studio claims, ‘she is kissed 22
times for a new record. Person
ally,-I didn’t keep track).
Widowhood finds Jessica Drum
mond (Miss Stanwyck) in fash
ionable suburbans security but
facing the necessity, for the first
time in her 33 years, of making
her own decisions.
Her domineering, long-widowed
mother (Lucile Watson) demands
that she, too, wear black; Jessica
refuses. ‘When a wolfish family
friend forcibly kisses her, Jessica
flees, hysterieal, to ‘her friend
Ginna (Eve Arden).
@ % *
On gkis she meets handsome
| 8 For
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Maj. Scott Landis (Brent). Their
romance flourishes and friends
gossip. Jessica defies them. Her
sons (Scotty Beckett and Bobby
Cooper) go to her mother, con
vinced Jessica no longer reveres
their father. |
Tons of ice ,were crushed into
snow on the studio lot for winter
sequences at Jessica’s field-stone
home. Elm trees sprouted leaves
in the warmth of arc lizhts so
that each morning a man had to
pluck the crop of buds.
. - *
“Portrait of Maria,” a Mexican
film distributed by MGM, is the
ltragedy of an outcast Indian girl
(Dolores Del Rio) and her lover.
Sometimes as vaguely unreal as
a fairy tale, it is handicapped by
the distracting necessity of dub
‘bed-in English speech that doesn’t
match Spanish lin movements.
~ The broad-hipped peasant hero
ine and her lover (Pedro Armen
‘dariz) plan to marry when = her
pig grows up and bears a litter
profitable enough to buy her a
wedding dress. A villainous vil
lage boss shoots the pig.
Dolores falls ill of malaria, and
§ i T N RO Lo BT Taorvmy
Two simple sieps ~
. *
to an amazing NEW ViTaury
... better looks!
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THESE TWO STEPS may help you. So if you are subject to poor
digestion or suspect deficient red-blood as the cause of your
trouble, yet have no organic complication or focal infection,
SSS Tonic may be just what you need. It is especially designed
(1) to promote the flow of VITAL DIGESTIVE JUICES in the
stomach and (2) to build-up BLOOD STRENGTH when defi
cient. These are two important results. Thus you get fresh
vitality...pep...do your work better...become g 2
animated .. . more attractive! SSB Tonic has helped i
millions . ..you can start today...at drug stores ({Nea
in 10 and 20 oz. sizes. ©8.8.8. Co. \raall .
A
BUILD STURDY HEALTH ond keep OTALWART - STEADY - STRONG ei ‘j
S°Q S T'@ Mgc helps build S 5
NP AT o rPs B | ‘ STURDY HEALTH
Tax Books open January 1 for 1946 State and “
County returns and close April 1, 1946. The law &
M requires the filing of returns for automobiles B
R and all personalty and real property. Your co- |
[l operation in filing returns within the period pro- §
gl vided by law will be appreciated.
‘ W. M. BRYANT, Tax Receiver, [§
‘ Clarke County, Georgia. [
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1046, -
B 7 Le > .8
—Brings FAST relief that
« LASTS FOR HOURS in
BUIIGHS fl‘fl!!t,
At the first sign of a chest cold
rub Musterole on the chest, throat
and back. Musterole immediate/
starts right in to relieve cough
sore throat and tight muscula
soreness. It actually helps break
up painful local congestion.
Musterole afferg all the adua
tages of a warming, stimulatin
mustard plaster yet is so much
easier to apply. No fuss. No mu
Just rub it on for prompi relief
In 3 strengths. All drugstores.
Pedro steals quinine. Jailed, he
sees th villagers stoning Dolores,
They think mistakenly that s
has posed for a nude painting.
© 1946 The C-C Co..
MUSTEROLE