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* Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
* A. F. Pledger, Holiy Heighis Chapel.
j DAILY MEDITATIONS
; And Jesus answering said unto them, They
*‘that are whole need not a physician, but they
: that are sick, I came not to call the righteous
* but sinners to repentance. Apostle St. Luke
: 31:32.
' DAILY MEDITATIONS
* He that overcometh the same shall be clothed
.in white raiment, and I will not blot out his
~ name out of the book of life, but I will confess
< his name before my Father and before his
,fangles. Revelation 3:5. :
- R.F.C. Shake-Up
By PETER EDSON
: NEA Washington Correspondent
. WASHINGTON—President Truman’s nomination;
of two new directors for the Reconstruction Fi
nance Corporation may at first glance look .as it
the “world’s biggest bank” was getting a goingJi
over. The two new directors proposed are George‘
Allen, the highly controversial character fromj
fiississippi, who has been a White House intimate‘
since Truman moved in there, and Col. Henry T.I»
&xdman, Detroit, banker recently discharged from
tge Army. ’
{Allen, if confirmed, will succeed Sam J. Hus-g
:&r‘xds, South Carolina banker who has been with
? C for 13 years. Bodman will succeed Charles
J. Fisher, jr., Detroit banker and member of the
Fisher Brothers body clan. (
iThe three directors remaining will be 73-year
o!:l Charles B. Henderson, ex=Senator from Nevada, !
chairman; Henry A. Mulligan of West Virginia, who‘
h{ns been treasurer of RFC since Herbert Hoover
created it in 1932; and young Harvey Gunderson
of South Dakota, a Republican who has also been
wg[th RFC 13 years. .o ! : |
f these aren’t well known to the public, they
aould be. These five men wield {remendous power
th public money. Chase National of New York,
add A. P. Gianini’s Bank of America are now run
-Idne neck and neck for the honor of being the big
2gst private U. S. banks. Fach has assets of about
five billion dollars. RFC, with assets of eleven
Lillion, is bigger than both put together. !
“These men- are alg“"_‘named for two-year terms. |
All the ferms expired Jan. 21, but directors may
s;é—v -'tw~-mppointments or successors !
ate %\ rmed <D ‘the Senate. Husband and Fisher |
beth wgvfiet out. Contrary to some rumors.z
tk‘ey wfipunsed That left the way open for |
the President to mominate two new directors. 5
Husbands is to remain a few months as consul- |
i{ant. His assignment during the war was as Presi-f
dént of the Défense Plant Corporation, which built }
eight billion dollars worth of new factories. With |
‘rgst of these war plants now surplus and up for |
sade, it would have been highly desirable to have |
Kixsbands remain in office. Both the President and
Réconversion Director John W. Snyder tried toi
g& him to stay. He is quitting simply because he
: hgs worked for 13 years at a government salary;
and, with his .children growing up, he thinks it
aßout time he looked around for a job that would |
make him a little money. ‘
I‘é:]is understood retiring RFC director Charles J.li
er, ir., recommended Colonel Bodman as his
s_\iccessor._Bodman is the son of Henry Edward
‘B:sdman, Detroit lawyer and vice president of !
Peease Moiors The son served during the war;
as an assistant to Lieut.-Gen. Levin H. Campbell, !
jr;, chief of ordnance. Before entering the Army, |
Céionel Bodman was vice president of the Na-}
tienal Bank of Detroit. He is a graduate of Prince- !
toh and 40 years old.
Whatever ¢lse has been or can be said about
Mississippi-born George Allen as a prospective di
rector for Uncle Sam’s biggest bank in the world,
itémnnot be said he lacks business connections or
rience. :
~ He was a WPA administrator during the depres- :
'siE. Then he got into the hotel business and went
: g'irom there 1o become vice president and di- '
: rof Home Insurance, Penn.-Mutual Life, Re-l
mic Steel and_ Victor Emanuel’s Aviation Cor- |
baration of America. i
~ Allen first got his foot in the RFC door as a di
ge?or of its subsidiary War Damage Corporation. '
Some of his business connections aren't too happy |
‘about his appointment to an RFC directorship.%
-What Congress does with the appeintment remains
to be seen. Being a Democrat, he’ll probably be con- |
New Intelligence Agency
Whether or not this country’s armed forces are
placed under a unified command, there is promise
that the heads of those armed forces wiil, in the
near future, have a unified foreign = intelligence
agency at their disposal.
President Truman’s creation of a National Intel
ligence Authority should correct a long-standing
weakness in our foreign service. In the past our
collection and correlation of foreign diplomatic,
military and economic information has been ad
mittedly haphazard. It has been gathered on a soft
of spare-time basis and passed along without very
much scientific evaluation :
~ This may or may not have been done ihrough
a delicate disiclination to offend our neighbors
by “spying” on them. But it is rather certain that
the major powers, iriendiy and unfriendly, have
felt no such delicacy toward us, and have had a
much better idea of our doings than we have had
of theirs.
Now we have an agency which, if it works out
as well in practice as it looks in print, will be a
clearing house of information for the State, War
and Navy Departments, from which it gets its funds
and to whose secretaries it will be responsible,
i This setup is contrary to some of the recom
‘mendations of Maj.-Gen. William J. Donovan, who
headed the wartime Office of Strategic Services
and who suggested the new agency. General Dono
van preferred that the agency be responsible to;
Congress for its finances and its findings. The final
organization within the Cabinet may well be an!
improvement. There may bé less demoeracy in
such an arrangement. But probably there also willl
be less chance of the agency becoming a political
football. !
The Presidential directive outlining the agency’s
functions puts the accent on national security. How
much this will involve cloak-and-dagger methods
remains tosbe seen—though doubtless not by the
public. However, it certainly will involve some
secrecy. And that secrecy can be maintained better
and employed more effectively within the confines
of the three Cabinet posts than it could by passing
through Congress.
It may seem odd that this organization is being
set up at the same time our representatives are
meeting with other world delegations in London
to effectuate closer co-operation among nations
and to shift the emphasis of international politics
from absolute sovereignty to collective security.
But the coincidence, if odd, is also realistic.
~America’s leading place in the effort to unite the
nations for peace cannot be denied, or our good
faith questioned. At the same time, we live in a
world of hard-headed, not-too-squeamish nations.
With all of America’s hope and trust in interna
tional unity, with all our striving to make that
unity a reality, we must face the fact that it is not
yet time to abandon military vigilance. Thai time
will come. But meanwhile we should put our vigi
lance on a par with that of other’great powers.
A major factor in that vigilance is foreign in
telligence. Pearl Harbor taught us that.” And per
haps the most valuable lesson to be learned from
the present Pearl Harbor investigation is the great
|part that inadequate foreign information, badly
{‘handled, played in contributing to a full-scale mili
| tary disaster.
} b .
' Wrong Symbol Is Best
| Now someone discovers that there is no such
thing as the United Nations Organization. The San
’Francisco Charter says just “United Nations.” No
{one seems to know who tacked on the generally{
laccepted Organization. But there is a.slight effort
'afoot to change the designation from UNO to UN.
We confess an allergy to the current and inevi
| table alphabetical designation of practically every
!thing. But if we must choose, we’ll take UNO in
| preference to UN. Certainly the Spanish word for
one is a more appropriate symbol ior the United
!‘:\'ations‘ goal than the Anglo-Saxon prefix of ne
| gation. Yiia
l An American loan to Great Britain will help to
{stabilize the world’s economy and open up certain
| trade advantages to the United States, particularly
|in the British Empire, that we've never had be
;fwre.-—Rep. John J. Sparkman of Alabama.
, e s i
| Tdo not think the inflationary trend will go as
I high as in World War I, but there will be a grad
inm‘ increase in prices.—Dr. Harold H. Moulton,
{ president, Brookings Institute.
iR e 1
¥ Great states as well as small states must come to
{ view their power as a sacred trust to be exercised
Inot for selfish purposes, but for the good of all
imnples,-—Se('retary of State James F. Byrnes.
| It is more true today than ever before that civili
| zation is a race between education and catastrophe.
;It is also a race between the right kind of educa
’iilm and the wrong kind.—Gov. Thomas E. Dewey
lof New York.
' The strongest living thing in proportion to its
| size is the beetle. A man proportionately strong
i could lift 70 tons.
E There are business offices devoted exclusively
;to the business of promoting and managing con
itests. -
! et s
{ During the ten years preceding. World War 11,
the population of India increased slightly more
{than 50,000,000 despite a death rate three times
j!ha'. of the United States. '
1 s st
, UNRRA has provided corn from the Dominican
{ Republic for Yugoslavia; Peruvian beans ior the
! Czechs; Uruguayan cheese for the Poles.
Professional contest enterers say that the best
time to get into a contest is during the first week
because competition is not as great at that time. .
The Constitution of the United States originally
Ic':ons'iste-d of a preamble and seven Articles; it has
'since been added to by amendments.
i The ' third amendment to the Constitution pro
j vides that no soldier in time of peace can be quar
itered’ in any house without the consent of the
jowner. X
{
: This year’s rice crop in the Philippines is only
*6O per cent of normal. : E
| The porcupine is equipped, even before birth,
- with guills half an inch long. -
. THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
What's Happened to Us, Anyway?
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WHEEL
W i —
BY SAM WOODS
O. B. Mcßae arranged the Ro
tary program with E. L. Secrest
introaucing ihe spcaker Raboi
Harry Essrig, forme: Army Ma
jor and Chaplin. Rabbi Essrig
subject was “Back tc our Private
World.” :
In his talk Rabbi Essrig made
us acquainted in the religious
programs arranged lor our sol
diers wuo belonged to many
religions. Ministe:s, Priests, and
Rabbis worked together as a unit.
Now with these men mustered
out, back home, in private life,
how we people must meet the
situation wag the theme of the
talk. Rabbi Essrig was here at
tending Religion-in-iife Week
sessions.
Football will be reviewed at
next Wednesday’s !uncheon and
part of tae program will be
movies showing the Oil Bowl
game, in’ which Georgia won
over Tulsa.
Josh WMolder, Scout Executive
announces that on next Sunday
afternoon from 2 to 4 o’clock,
‘Boy Scouts will visit the homes
in Athens, collecting old clothes.
They ask %at these bundles be
placed on the front steps for
collection. -
Two sick members of Rotary
are much improved, 1. F. Fick
%tt is at St. Mary’s ilospital; and
r. R.-M. Goss is 2also improv
ing. :
Wins Lessons
Southeastern ~ Air Lines, to
promote flying offeréd 16 les
sons to a member of the club
with six or more uuplying for
the offer. The names were plac
in a hat and drawn by Club Pi
anist Mrs. Fred J. Bell. C. A.
Trussell was the winner.
Guests Wednesday were W. A.
Mathis wita Jimmy Aikin; E. N.
Anthony, Watkinsville, with the
writer: Abe Brooks with Lee
Morris; John Grahem with B. E.
Bloodworth, jr.; Rev. R. C. Sin
gleton with Rev. D. B. Nicholson;
Albert Hardy, jr; Commerce,
with Dean John E. Drewcy; C.
W. Heery with Tom Elder; W.
N. Danner with H. H. Driftmire:
L. W. Eberhardt with L. I. Skin
ner, Commande- V. V. Betting
with Claude Chance; Bobb Dunn
with P. L. Huggins: Rev. P. C.
Howle with. O. B. Mcßae; Hugh
Smith, Atlanta, with Milton
Leathers. Club guests were G. J
Higgins, David Evans, E. L. Se
crest and Jno. W. Mellon.
Two Reramin’ MNatarians were
D. D. Quillian, Senera, S. C, and
S. C. Obensham of Christian
burg, Va.
The Bible is printed in more
than 1,608 languages.
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Creomulsion relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in
flamed bronchial mucous mem=-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
& bottle of Creomulsion with the un
derstanding you must like the way it
guickly allays the cough or you are
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
(f?”u/ld@] " They Cried
By DOROTHY STALEY
THE STORY: Arrogantly beau
tiful Phillipa - Wiilson, Fletch’sl
wife, announces to the ga.theredi
Willson clan that she has sent i
her small twin sons away so that
they will not have to march inl
the town’s Independence Day pa
rade. This is an annual affair,
sponsored by the Willson familyi
who own the Willson mills. Phil
lipa’s gesture is one of defia.nce.
toward her in-laws. Nana, family|
governess of many years' stand-‘
img, overhears old Mr. Willson |
asking his secretary, Dru Ellis, |
if she thinks he could buy Phil-l
!lipa off.
}v ‘ ]
Thoere was a deep silence for a|
’moment and then Dru’s voice, |
Isounding thick and heavy, “No, I}
'don’t believe you could.” |
“Well, why not?” Mr. Wilson|
is very fond of Dru Ellis, butl
when he is worried, he lashes out |
at her irritabiy. Dru understands|
that. She told me once about!
three years ago, “I'm just the]
backstop.” When I looked puzzled, |
she laughed and said, “Hasn’t |
anyone ever taken you to a base—l
bail game?” Dru and I went the
next Saturday afterncon and
when Fletch found we were going, |
he came along too. They showed |
me the backstop and made me
stand up and stretch after the.
|seventh inning and drink soda
| and Fletch laughed more that aft- |
| ernoon than nie had for a long,
time. ‘
] Now Dru was answering Mr.
Willson patiently and slowly as
she does when he is irritated,
“She likes being in the Willson
family.” : ’
“Likes being in the lamily!l
Didn’t you hear her at breakfast?‘
{1 could pay her to stay way from
| Fletch and the boys. Ten thous
tand dollars a year ought to in- |
| terest her”. |
Dru said, “ She wouldn’t take it
She likes being ‘young Mrs. Will
son’ She likes coming into the
mills and being superior to the
girls who worked with her there.
She likes calling Miss Newhall
and saying ‘This is Mrs. Willson.
Mrs. Fletcher Wilson. Will you
please get my husband for me’?”
Dru sounded exactly like Phil
lipa when she said that. “Or she
likes to call me and say ‘Dru
sila, my maid is leaving. Will
you please put an ad in for an
other?’ There is a lot of satisfac
tion in that for Phillipa. I sup
pose because the girls didn't like
her when she worked in the office.
‘She was too superior to have any
friends among them, and yet she
resented their not following her.
She was ambitious. She would
liked to have had my job. I wish
I had let her have it.” Dru gave
a bitter little laugh.
Mr. Willson fairly shouted, “I
wish to God you had, too, and you
had married Fletch”. I heard the
screen door on the French win
dows slam and I could see Mr.
‘Willson tramping angrily toward
)the woods path that leads over to
the farm.
Mr Willson so rarely loses
his tempper that I started after
him in amazement, and conse
quently I was not immediately
aware of the sobbing in the other
room When I realized what it
was, I folded my mending and
went in Dru had her head down
on her typewriter. I just put my
hand on her hair and waited
and after a while she looked up
and whispered brokenly. “I wish
to God I had too, Nana.”
I didn’t know what to say, so I
just stroked her hair and after a
bit I said, “I didn't know, Dru.
I didn't know.,” 3
Copyright, 1946, NEA Service, Inc.
She laughed bitterly, *“That
makes us even, Nana. I didn’t
know either—until it was too late.
She was what I thought Fletch
wanted. And I thought she would‘
make him happy.” A sob got
mixed up with her words and that
point, but she swallowed it. “And
that was what I wanted—Fleich
to be happy. I didn’t know that
she didn’t care about him—only
the name and the money. And
now she has both and she isn't
even sport enough to work for
them”. We neither of us said any
thing for few miutes and then
Dru said, “He never laughs any
‘more. He’s hearsick .about the
boys. She—she’s’ “making = them
everything Fletch —the Willsons
wouldn’t want.” She turned to
ward me. “I hate her, Nana. I
hate her for what she is doing to
Fletch. I didn’t mind her taking
‘him from me, but I hate her for
what she is doing to him and thc
}boys. I could kill her, Nana.”
| She turned and beat the type
‘writer with her clenched hands.
“I could Kkill her!”
i All I could say was “Hush,
child. Husb:‘. ;
' I left her there in the library
and went back to my mending,
but when the typewriter stopped
:'clicking agein I got up and went
to the doorway to see what was
'wrong. *“lt's . only Fletch,” 1
though, which only goes to prove
.T\ Our GREAT BIG
3\st b 3 21\ | 1946 CATALOG
&;s’»' \ & Rt . | \FOR SPRING AND SUMMER
\“Q‘: = & ; .«"é-' < ‘"L" :a;—- ‘2 ?‘WJ
\\’;:'gf_‘.:'{t) % 1%“ z %"{; o " ~5;:'1252 f‘ 3 _.;;}, 2 vi\ :
ld \ | ke R\
.t %’x P " A :
\):f:;", : 4§ T -;v’__ B ; \\
SEAL N\ b e o
ViSele <
Vel s eI e
Vel N s
vl e
EAw DR AOO B WAOSy o seeses .-IE: - ‘—"é
19 FAWUKEDY WITH /7 sVle-dvee eleried
YOU'LL BE THRILLED WITH THE WIDE
VARIETY OF WANTED ARTICLES . ..
Sears new Catalog for Spring and Summer 1946 is just bulging with
articles you have had to go without during the war years. In addition,
it offers many new post-war items with improvements that put them way
out in front. Yes, you'll be thrilled with the great variety of articles all
guaranteed by Sears and priced at Sears famous savings. See this
value-packed catalog at your Order Office. ‘
Bears R €
ears t Coohieck arnd \o.
OR D ER OrrEl L
pHONE 2700 A 265 COLLEGE AVE.
how idle thoughts can be. He was
saying, “You won’t have to go to
the mill, Dyu. I got the mail.”
He stopped spzaking and cupped
his hands under her chin and
turned her face up to the light.
He said, “Why, Dru, you’ve been
crying.” Then I know before he
ithuught, he added, “Don’t ery,
ldurling I eon't stand it if you're
unhappy.” : ‘
I shut my eyes and then opened
them quickly. Fletch was still
standing with his hands under
Drus small rounded c¢hin; she
was sitting quite still looking up
at him. I thought, “Jemma, you
00l Whny didn't you see thig?”
Fletch bent his nead and kissed
Dru gently on her forehead where
)me tawny hair swept back from
the brow. Then he swung on his
heel .anl left the room:
I thought, “Well This is cer=
tainly the morning for abrupt
exits.” First one and then an
other was charging off. But then
1 realized why Fletch had left so
suddenly Nothing had ben said
between these two. Nothing would
be. They were completely, fully
aware of each other, without
words between them to tell each
other of the wonder of it. And
that was how it would be unless
some day Phillipa’ gretw tired of
the game she was playing.
(To Be Continued) -
Exiension Agenis
To Attend One
Day Pouliry Meels
County agricultural and home
demonstration agents from
througheut the State will parti
cipate in in a series of 12 one
day poultry thaining sciooks dur
ing February, the Georgia Agri
cultural Extension Service an.
nounceq today.
These poullry schools are for
county Extension Service agents
only. Arthur Gannen and H. W,
Bennett, poultrymen and R. J.
Ridaardson, poultry marketing
specialist, wil] lecture and pre
sent demonstrations on various
phases of poultry werk and will
lead the discussion groupsg at the
schools. .
“Developing sound programs
for the management c¢f the farm
size poultry flock will be stress
ed at the meetings,” the poultry
specialists disclosed. “Special in
struction on poultry problemg in
Georgia and adapting poultry re
commendationg to conditions in
this State will be given at the
training meetings.”
- Two cne-day {raining schools
will be helg in each of the six
Extension Service districts. The
first school wili be held Wednes
day, Feb. 6, at Americus.
Schedule for the other eleven
meetings, to be held during Feb
ruary, is Feb. 7, Albany; Feb. 8,
Tifton; Feb. 13, Savannah; Feb
14, Blackshear; Feb. 15; . East
man; Feb. 19, Athens; Feb. 20,
Warrenton; Feb. 21, Gainesville;
Feb. 26, Calhoun; Feb. 28, Mari
etta, and Feb. 28, Newnan.
DEBATE SCHEDULED
Whether or not to establish
student government at The Uni
versity of Georgia will be argued
by members of the varsity and
junior debate teams inr tae Uni
versity Chapel, Feb. 5.
Varsity debater ¥rank Cheat
ham, Savannah, and junior de
bate: Kirk McAlpin, Savannah,
will argue the affirmative, while
Jeff Newbern, Valdosta, varsity,
and Pamela Valentine, Jackson
.ville, Fla., junior, will argue the
negative.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 194¢
Social Hygiene Day
Extension Expert
“Eradication of ‘sicial disease’
will .do as muda for the family
for human happiness and for ¢},
future of this State and Nation
as the solution of any of our
cther great health problen.
Miss Martha McAlpine, child q...
velopment and family Jife spe
cialist of the Agricultural w.
tension Service pointed out today
Miss McAlpine urged Georgi,
tiome demonstraticn club memn.
' bers and other rural women i,
observe “National Social Hygiene
|Da\y” on February 6 and to stre.
lthis work at their clup meetinp.
during the month. “I will {a)e.
brains, money, courage and pa
tience to eradicate there ‘sociy
diseases’ completely but the re.
ward of such a victory will pe
well worth the price,” she siig
“Mie State Department of
Health reported more than 12,00
caseg of deadly syphil's and near.
'ly as many casés of crippling
gonorrhea in Georgia last yeay »
| the Extension Service speciali.
disclosed. “Both of these ‘socis
diseases’ could be stamped oy
through public health work ang
tarough better horre fraining and
| sex education.”
Stressing social hygiene
throughout this month and th.
rest of. the year wily put this vi
tal problem before the people of
the State and the Nation, tae
specialist declaed.. This will help
them materially in safeguarding
their community against increas
eg in these ‘social discase’ and to
eliminate the, presence of thege
diseases.
“Eradicating ‘social diseases’
will help Georgians to build bet
ter healta, better homes, better
communities anq a Letter world”
Misg Alpine asseried.
Home demonstration cluh
members and others interested
in the- ‘social disease’ problem
may secure information about the
observance of National Social
Hygiene Day and cther material
from county home demonstration
agents, 4
STEEL PRODUCERS
Previous to the war Japan
ranked sixth among steelmaking
nations of the world. Five largest
stedl producing countries, in re
spective order, weré; the United
States, Germany, Russia, Great
Britain and France.
There are more than 55 bibli
cal proper names in Shakes.
peare’s first folio edition.
~>,‘| SR \ S \ ¥, 3
J‘;fi Bk 4 ;'7 e A S
. € Wing eatures Sypdirate AN Righis Pesecved
: &
always rely on this great rub for
c““fi“sdtuegi.s
- It Must Be Good!
All thru the years—at the first sign f
a cold—the Quintuplets’ chests, throats
and backs are immediately rubbed with
Musterole. .
Musterole instantly. starts to relieve
eoughs, sore throat and muscle soreness
of colds. It actually helps break up
painful local congestion. Makes breath
ing easier. Great for grown-ups, too!
In 3 strengths.
e eyl