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PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Make a joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye
lands. Serve the Lord with gladness, come be
fore his presence with singing. Psalm 100: 1-2.
- —Margie Silvey, Park View, City. _
~—Tiave you Tavoritc Bibic verse? Mail (o
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel.
LR
Leader of the Coalition
By PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON—Nothing in recent times has
stirred up the political animals so much as New
Jersey: G. O. P. Congressman Fred A. Hartley's
“coalition” of Republicans and Democrats to amend
OPA price control legislation. Democrats who side
with him are known as “Hartley Democrats,” and
the label is a potential kiss of death. He has been
called a wrecker of the Democratic party. One
long-distance political dopester went so far as to
say this coalition would make Hartley the most
powerful man in Congress—yea, even more potent
than Speaker Sam Rayburn himself.
All this excitement has left Congressman Hartley
a little baffled. He never meant nothin’ like that.
Hartley is a blue-eyed, reddish-haired man of
average size and unimposing appearance—meaning
that he doesn’t look like congressmen look in the
movies. He was born on Washington’s birthday
at Harrison, N. J., 43 years ago. He has been in
Congress 18 years, having been first elected when
he was a mere boy of 25, after four years in Kearny
politics. His district has been gerrymandered
around so that it is now a crazyquilt that takes in
such diverse elements as parts of Newark, Demo
cratic Boss Frank Hague’s house, and some of the
swankier precincts up towards Montclair. When a
guy can get elected nine times in a row from such
a hodge-podge as that, he has to know his politics.
ACCUSED OF BEING LOBBYISTS' TOOL
Hartley has been accused of being “in thevl
pocket” of the National Retail Dry Goods Associa=
tion lobbyists, Lew Hahn, Ben Namm of Brooklyn
and W. T. Seidel of the W. T. Grant chain stores'
—all right up near ithe iop of the list of OPA ene
mies. Hartley admits he first met all these men‘
and a lot of otherr OPA opponents when they first:
came to Washington to testify before Virginia Judge|
Howard Smith's special “Committee to Investigate
Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their!
‘Authority.” Hartley was ranking Republican on
the Smith committee and a lot of the ideas he
espouses now in his coalition are carryovers from
the Smith committee efforts to limit OPA powers.
+ Hartley has made a good thing out of his oppo
sition to OPA, speaking at Chambers of Commerce,
where he lays OPA out and his audiences lap it
up. Yet Hartley says he is opposed to the National
Association of Manufacturers’ idea of killing off
OPA altogether and immediately.
Early in the war, Hartley got excited about the
gas shortage on the east coast. He formed a little
coalition then and he had Republicans and Demo
‘erats from Maine to Virginia beating the drums to
get the east more gas. They got action, too, but
!)obody thought there was anything sinister about
a coalition then.
“COALITION” IS AN UGLY WORD l
When OPA extension came up again this year,
Hartley got to talking with some of his old cronies.'i
All of them seemed to be getting similar mail from
home, to the effect that something ought to be
done about OPA. Hartley sent out invitations to
an informal meeting to talk things over. He says!
he invited 177 congressmen from both parties.
About 80 showed up.
- Coalition, says Hartley, suddenly became an ugly
word. 5
.. Trouble started when the names of some of the
Demaocrats got out. Shooting from home and from
Democratic hot-shots in Washington got so heated
that a number of the Democrats ran for cover:
?finhy, however, has gone right ahead. He says
;llghasa drafting committee at work and by the
end of the week it will have some amendments to
report. All effort to draft a new OPA bill has been
abandoned. '
' The things they will.try to kill off are OPA regu
lations on pre-ticketing, in-line pricing, and M. A.
P.—the Maximum Average Price Plan. The things
they will try to add on are court review of OPA
orders, and provision for a specific plan to remove
'OPA controls.
- “Camel’s hair,” used in making brushes, comes
Arom a species of puirrel. *
¥ i tioniis
It is possible to read a newspaper in the light
‘produced by the lantern fly of Costa Rico.
Health of Athenians
In Economic Terms
Thomas L. St. John,” an Athens boy now with
the State Department of 'Public Health, spoke to
the Rotary c¢lub the other day on public health.
He told what the Athens' and Clarke County De
partment of Health has ‘been doing for the last
twenty years, citing figures to show how certain
types of disense have decreaséed and how deaths
have been reduced by preventive measures.
Mr. St. John discusséd the milk %control program
put inte operation ®here ‘a‘bout twenty years ago,
how it has resulted in giving Athens a milk sup
ply that is safe. We remember the fight over the
measures that were adopted then to control the
milk supply, safeguard it for young and old Ath
enians. The fight has been forgotten by most of
the public. But we still have the laws and other
safeguards won by it to protect our milk supply.
Sometimes it is necessary to have a fight to make
progress. It is regrettable, but sometimes it is
necessary. And *then years afterward when people
are still benefitting because certain officials, or
certaip citizens, had the stamina to stand up and
fight, very féew are mindful that it took a hot fight
to make progress, to provide public’ benefits.
It is not unlikely the Health Department in
Athens and Clarke \county may have to engage in
skirmishes or fights in the future. If so*we hope
they stand by their guns, because we know that
in the long run the community will be benefitted.
Mr. St. John was not merely dishing out propa
ganda when he-recited the growtih oi ihe Athens-
Clarke County “Health - Department. We can re
member when the Health Department of the City
was tucked away in one little room on the second
floor of the Athens City Hall and the County
Health Department occupied a room:in the, court
house. There was not even the pretense of a labo
ratory, the basis of an adequate health program.
Since the consolidation of ‘the City and County
Health services under one Board facilities have
been extended; we have made' long strides for
ward. No one would, of course, - maintain that
there is not still much to do to make Athens an
ideal community from the standpoint of health
protection. For one thing Mr. St. John said that
the Department needs larger quarters. We think so,
too. The expanded services of the Department re
quire more space, more facilities. In our opinion
it will be worth money to Athens 'and Clarke
county people to adequately support their Health
Department. Good health to an individual is worth
money to him. Good health to a community is
worth money to the community. If a Health De
partment can’ cut down ‘sickness and death as
Health Departments, including our ‘'own, have done,
are they not worth the financial support necessary
to make them effective?
Postponement at The
Crossroads
Those who are inferring, from President Tru
man’s postponement of “Operation Crossroads,” that
the Rikini atomic bomb tests were designed to
frighten Russia are crediting this government with
more cynicism, bad faith and belligerent posturing
thap the much-criticized Russians have yet shown.
Not only is the inference unflattering to us, but
also somewhat illogical. Since Russia is not a naval
power, any muscle-flexihg 'display of atomic
bombing would probably have been made on a land
objective if the purpose was to frighten the Soviet
Union into goed behavior.
It seems perfectly sensible that “Operation
Crossroads™ was planned for the announced pur
pose of measuring a power which we have already
used against the -equipment of one branch of our
national defense which has never felt that power.*
It also seems sensible and important that con
gressmen should " have the opportunity of seeing
at first hand the destructive power of atomic
weapons against haval vessels before voting on ap
propriations for our future Navy. The Bikini ex
periment will be costly, but it might have the ef
fect of saving the American people a considerably
darger sum if its results should have a drastic of
’fect on naval design and construction.
. Quite possibly the Russians and the vest of the
world were more impressed by the destruction of
two cities by two bombs, than they will be by the
atomic bomb's effect upon warships. Nevertheless,
it would seem that this country should proceed
with the Bikini test at the new date, if only to
banish the notion that the test was planned as a
threat, and withdrawn with the improvement of
international relations.
MacArthur's directives are usually accepted by the
Japianese government with an outward show of
submission, but they are carried out either weakly
or mnot at all.—S. Plyshevsky, Soviet Army news
paper Red Star writer.
Russia has a right to any form of government
which it sanctions. It has the right to adopt its
own system without interference or intervention
of any foreign nation. These rights do not extend
beyond her' boundaries.—Sen. Tom Connally (D)
of Texas. b, .
T am greatly concerned over the proposed reso
lution recommending abaridomjnent by this country
of the atomic bomb. Not the atomic bomb but war
needs t 0 be outlawed.—Dr. Arthur M. Compton,
chancellor ‘Washington U. of St. Louis.
Army control of the ' manufacture of actual
(atom) bombs may be appropriate but there is
grave danger that Army controi of scieniific re
search will lead to national scientific suicide.—
Prof, Henry De Wolf Smyth of Princeton U,
It i§ impossible’ to expect a defense against the
atomio bomb. It is a saturation weapon. One single
bomb dropping on a fair-sized city completely
'paralyzes all possible defensive methods that may
be used against others which might be launched
against that city.—Dr. Harold C. Urey, atom bomb
scientist.
If we must seek means of correcting thé vicious
educational systems which fed the Nipponese and
Nazi fury, we would better not ignore the anoma
lies and absurdities of our own.—Dr. Everett Case,
president Colgate U. .
The United States is the richest and most im
portant country in the world and what we do in
the next few years determines what the world will
do in the next 50.—Rep. Chase ‘Going Woodhouse
(D) of Connecticut. i
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
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| v : Copyright Macrae-Smith-Co. \
M Hazel Heldergofl' _ Distributed by NEA SERVICE, ING
| ———————————————————————————
XX
Toward tae last of January,
iColin brougd: home a puppy
for Ann — a white wier-hair
with blond spots and a circle of
black arvound one eye. Ann was
enchanted, and promptly named
him Lord Peter Wimsey, over
Colin’s protest.
“But don’t vou see the resem
blance, Colin? He lookg just like
him.” .
“Lsm really not muca of an
autaority oh Lord Pete’s looks.”
“You like him, dop’t you?”
Ann said accusingly.
“Sayers writes top-notch mys
teries, but I can’t Juite work
myself up to the exalted’ passion
you have for her hero. Besides,
Ann-—you can’t call a dog Lord
Peter Wimsey. How are you go
ing to call him for supper, for
instance? ‘Heve, Lord Peter Wim
sey. here, Lord Peter Wimsey—'"
Ann hadn’t thougat sos ithat,
“We'll call him Whiffles for
short,” she decided. :
Presently they added a small
black Ritten named Spooks to
their house hold. Cilin didn’t
taink much of that name, either,
but when Ann demanded, “How
would you like it if I called
them Blackie and Fido?” Colin
hugged her and admitted that he
wouldn’t like it at all.
One day in f¥ebruary, Ann
looked up from a catalogue in
the morning mail and said,
“There’s a new Lord Peter bouk
coming out today-—l'm driving
io Seattie for it.”
“You couldn’t arrange about
that here, could you?"” Colin sug
gested.
“Not possibly - she said. “You
know the circulating ilbrary nev
er gets books less than six
months old—and besides, I want
to buy it.”
“Okay, darling. I think you're
quite mad, but I love you any
way. No one in the world but
you would make a trip like that
to buy a detective story! The
more ] consider * your literary
tastes, the lesg flattered T am at
being your favorite author.”
She didn't get tae = book, at
that. It wasn’t out jet, despite
the publication date announced
in the catalogue. Ann ordered a
copy to be sent her to Port
Drake. and then wandered
around rather at loose ends—it
seemed slightly ridiculous to
make that long drive, and re
turn empty-handed.
Sae was delighted when she
encountered Connie and Bet
sey in a department store. Bet
sey stuck out her feet for Ann’s
approval, and saig proudly, “I've
got new shoes.”
“And very good-looking ones
they are, lamb.” Ann nodded.
“Come out for lunch with us?”
Connie asked. “I hope you'll
drive us—l had trouhle with the
ear and left it in a garage for
Davey to pick up.”
“Why not lunca with me
here?” ;
“Well"—Connie said doubtful
ly—“ Betsey’s table-manners are
not the best. in the world.
though she almost never gets
ford in her hair anv more—"
Thev luncaed in the tea-room,
and Betsey behaved like a little
lady. Afterward, Tonnie offered
ta drive as far as {heir house.
hnd save Ann that much driving.
N Rfigge,fiiuugr ‘am
i ACHES-PAINS
Easler To Apply Than
Mustard Plaster!
| JusT Rus ON
N T m
so Betsey stood on tpe seat be
tween tem, and sang softly as
they went along.
“You're an awfully good moth
er, Connie,” Ann aid.
Connie shrugged. “Just aver
age:”’ sue said.
When they put Beisey to bed,
the two girls settled down 1n
the living room, and Connie said,
“T’ll have a- cigaret with you be
fore I start to work. Ii a gracious
providence would just see fit to
send me sufficien! time to do
everything I want to--"
“Don’t you ever’ get bored,
Connie?” Ann asked.
““Bored? No, of ccurse. not—l
haven’t time to be bored. Why,
Arn—you aren’t bored, are you?”’
“A little.” Ann . sighed, and
reacaed for another cigaret. “It
sometimes seems tc me that thers
ought to be something more to
fe-.” :
~ “What else is there?” Connie
inquired sensibly. “Mine’s full
enough. To overflowing, I might
add. Ann—" She broke off, ey
ing her apraisingly.
“Wiaat?”
“Why don’t you have a baby"”
“T don’t know. ! sort of shy
off from the idea. It's so uncom
fortable, anq you get so ugly,
and I'm not at all sure Colin
would still love me if T we e
ugly. 'm sort of a big girl
alongside Colin, just normally.”’
Connie snorted, and reached
for her knitting., “Well pevhans
you may have noticed that Da-~
vey still retaing some slight af
fection fo* me, in spite of naving
seen me through tnat—-"
“That’s different,’ Ann said
quickly, and immedately felt
rather silly. It was a stupid re
mark. X
“Well it was just a suggestion
Far be it from me to try to run
your life. But you chould re
member, Ann—Colin’s nearly
forty, and—well, it’'s just faint
ly possible that he would like
to be able to look forward tc
some day: having -grandchild
ren—"
“Gracious, you're making an
cestors out of us, &nd I'm soO
young, too!” Ann laugaed. She
got up and put on her coat, then
leaned over Connie tc kiss her.
“Bye, darlin'—you’'re awfully
good for me, you know.” :
“Goodby:; Ann. Tt’s been nice
having a little time with you. Re
member, angel, you've got. the
makings ofi an awiully satisfy
ing life, you know.” s
(To Be Continued)
YOU ALWAYS WIN
on quality and quantity when you buy
Moroline, petroleum jelly. Large jar 10c.
For minor burns, bruises, scratches,
chafes, chapped lips, hands. Get Moroline.
P ——
Tax Books open January 1 for 1946 State and
County returns and close April 1, 1946. The law
requires the filing of returns for automobiles,
and all personalty and real property. Your co
operation ir filing returns within the period pro
vided by law will be appreciated.
W. M. BRYANT, Tax Receciver,
Clarke County, Georgia.
AR LR
SQUEAKS
From gi‘%g%;%
The “75
- ROTARY WHEEL
by SAM WOODS
' Thomas St. John, son of Mr.
and Mr's. D. B. St. John and a for
mer Athenian, was the main
speaker at the regular weekly
luncheon meeting of the Rotary
Club Wednesday, appearing on a
program arranged by Dean John
E. Drewry. ' ¢
The talk by Mr. St. John was
most interesting, but since it has
?xeen fully covered in a Banner
erald news story, we will pass
on to other topics.
Four néw members were, in
ducted into the club, being pre
sented by Dean Drewry in behalf
of President P. L. Huggins. The
four are Moon Corker, former
member out of service, who was
reinstated. Mr. Corker is division
manager for Lucas & Jenkins
Theaters; J. Phil Campbell, jr.,
farmer and dairying; E."C. Ham
mond, division sales manager for
the Georgia Power Company; and
Edmund Hoffman, assistant pro
fessor of Poultry Husbandry at
the University. Wives of these
members were guests of the club
Wednesday and also at the in-
struction night meeting which
was presided over by B. M. Grier.
Others taking part in the meet
ing, talking on various phases of
the organization, included Abit
Nix, Dean Drewry, President Hug
gins and Dean Paul Chapman.
Due to crowded hotel conditions
the Atlanta Rotary Club calls to
attention of Athens members that
the State Conference is to be held
at the Biltmore Hotel in that city
May 5, 6 and ‘7, and urges that
hotel registrations be made at
once. This notice was given by
Dr. J. C. Wilkinson.
Guests Wednesday were Ray
Mcßae, U. S. Navy, with his
father, O. B. Mcßae; Dr. Charles
Joel, Navy, with his father,
Charles Joel, sr.; Chaplain Paul
Early, Army, with D. B. Nichol
son; Dr. Karl Shedd with Claude
Chance; Fred' Johnson with Dr.
W. W. Brown; Dr. Victor Tuero of
Peru, with Nelson Hitchcock; H.
M. Newell, Chicago, with Dr. Mil
ton Jarnagin, and Alex Nunn, edi
tor of The Progressive Farmer,
with R. L. VanSant. A Roamin’
Rotarian was T. M. Seawell of
Carrollton.
Cooperative marketing work
continued to develop during the
war, according to the Extension
Service.
Memorial Service To Be Held Sunday
At Colberi Bapfist Church For Trio
0f Colbert Men Who Died In Service'
5 By HOPE CHILDS i
COLBERT, Ga., March 29 —
Three Colbert young men who
lost their lives in military action
during the war will be honored
Sunday, March 31, at a memorial
service at the Colbert Baptist
church.,
Talmadge HawKkins Power, ARM
1-¢, USNR, son of Mrs. J. C. Bar~
nette, Raymond W. Eberhart, 2nd
Lt., AAF, son of Mr. and Mrs. T.
G. Eberhart, and Harold Edwin
Arrendale, 2nd Lt., AAF, son of
Mrs. H. J. Arrendale, are" the
boys for whom the’'service will be
held.
The Reverend A. E. Logan will
conduct the service at '3 p. m.
Sunday and the Madison county
American Legion Post will pro
vide an honor. escort. Several
friends of the‘deceased young men
have returned to Colbert from the
armed services and will assist
American Legion members.
. . Radteman 2-C
Talmadge Power entered the
Navy in 1939, and was sgraduated
from the Norfolk, Va. training
school as-Radioman 2-¢ the fol
lowing year.. Two days after the
Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor,
Radioman Power was sent to that
Hawaiian base where he was ‘as
signed to a PBY-5 Navy patrol
plane. In June, 1942, he was sent
to the Aleutian Islands for three
months service with a bomb
group. While there, he received
a citation for his activities. o
His next assignment was to at
tend the gunnery school at Pearl
Harbor where he became a mem
ber of a B-24 Liberator bomber
crew. Chosen from his squadron
as one of the best of its radiomen,
he went to the southwest Pacific
in 1943 and was based on Guadal
canal. On March's, 1943, he left
Guadalcanal to bomb shipping at
the Japanese base, Kahali, on
Bougainville Island. His plane
failed to return to its base after
the raid, and Radioman Power
was listed as missing. He was de
clared dead -on December 10, 1945.
Survivors of Radioman Power’s
squadron ~ erected a memorial
marker to their lost shipmates in
1943 on Espiritu Santos overlook
ing the Segund Channel in the
New Hebrides.
i Radiomagp Power, 23 at the time
'lof his death, attended Colbert
'High Schooel and the Athens Busi
ness College before entering the
[Navy. He is survived =by his
'mother, Mrs. J. C. Barnette, a sis
[ter, Mrs. W. F. Carter, Jonesboro,
‘and a brother, Curtis Power, Col
bert.
| Co-pilot on B-24 ‘
' Lt. Eberhart entered the service
in 1943, and received his wings
at Moody Field in April, 1944. He
was killed off the coast of Yugo-~
slavia January 20, 1945, after four
maonths of flying co-pilot,on a B
-24 Liberator bomber.. He was in
possession of two Air Medals, an
Oak Leaf Cluster, Goad Conduct
and Sharpshooter Medals. He re
ceived also two citations from the
War Department for achievement
in the line of duty. :
Lt. Eberhart was 22 at the time
of his death. He was a graduate
of Colbert High school and is sur
vived by his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. T, G. Eberhart, four sisters,
Mrs. Horace Benton, Miss Nellie
Ruth Eberhart, Mrs. Hoyt Han
son, Athens, and Mrs. Richard
Porterfield, Comer. His two broth
ers are C. W. Eberhart and Noel
Eberhart of Colbert.
Mustang Pilot
Lt. Arrendale volunteered for
service in the Army Air Corps in
December, 1942. He was grad
uated from the Army flying school
at Moultrie and went overseas in
December, 1944 He was a Mustang
pilot with the famous 357th Fight
er Group, and received the Air
Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters
and a Presidential Citation.
Upon the defeat of the German
forces, Lt. Arrendale with 23
missions to his credif, was moved
with his group to Germany to be
come a part of the Ninth Tactical
Air Force \in the Army of Octu
pation. ‘
While trav.eling from his base
in Germany, October 30, 1945, to
the Riviera for a holiday, Lt. Ar
rendale was Kkilled when the
transport on which he was a pas
senger crashed against a mountain
side in the northern Italian Alps.
i.‘t. Arrendale was a graduate of
Colbert High school and had ac-
> o Americds 1y
fiz% F' Ve@ R
You can also get this cereal in Kellogg’s TY—6 dif
”O ferent cereals,glt) tgenerous pac::{agucs: ?n :ri:Rhlaidz carton!
FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1946
quired twg years of college credit
at the University of georgia be
fore joining the Air'¥Forces. He
is survived by his mother, Mys
Howard J. Arrendale; four sisters,
Mrs. Emmett I. Lyon? Mrs. Joh,
T» Pittard, Mrs." JOHE. Brooks,
Cumming, and Mrs.' Johin E. Ford,
Corpus Christi. Texad viiis broth
er is Joel L. Arrendale of Cg).
bert. srts
Berries Frozen
Withouf Sugar
Are Satisfaciory
Strawberries’ and' "' “raspberries
can be frozen withctt sugar with
“entirely satistactory®'results,
Mrs. Ruth T, Broach,’food pres
ervation specialist of tae Agri
cultu~al Extension' 'Service, de
clared today. i B 9
“Georgia homemskers and
farmers are anticipating a crop
of strawberries with/@ minimum
of sugar ‘to preserve ithem,” she
continued. “Recent experiments
have shown that s far as texture
and vitamin C content are con
cerned, strawberries amg rasber
ries can be frozen with good re
sulls without using sugar.”
While tae flayor -may not
equal that of the-product frozen
with sugar, there mayhe more su
-gar .available when the berries
are prepared for wuse,and some
can be spinkled .on_.them then,
Broach pointed out. %Ly allowing
tae sweetened fruit so stang a
short time before "sérving, the
sugar will blend _Wl,t,lg it almost
as well as if addedl Lefore frecz
mg" g S .
Inquiries received i 1945 con
cening the saving of"_ the straw
berry crop when sug’a,r supplius
were short led to this ¢xperimen
tal work by Dr. F4HK A. Lee of
the New York Staté Experimen:
Station, Mrs. Broacfi‘jgé)inted out.
“Select firm ripe’ berrieg for
freezing anq wasn, ‘cap and sliée
into pieces about’ one-fourth
inch thick,” Mrs.” Broach advis
ed. “A strawberry pi¥ee may be
made by mashing ‘the * berries it
they are to be used icr ice cream
or frezen desserts.” i .
It ig estimated that'more than
two. million persons sare direct
ly dependent on the»iforests and
fores{ products foris#iaeir iveli
hood. tzg
Farmers who raise most of
their living at home waave a
great deal more - maney with
which to buy the comforts agd
nleasures of life, according to
the Extension eSrvicg,
B C ile h
from common colds
Creomulsion relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
Eerm laden phlegm, and aid nature
o soothe and heal raw, tender, in
flamed bronchial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with. the un
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough:or you are
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
PONTIAC
PACKARD
WHITE
TRUCKS
COLLEGE MTR. (0.