Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
& ?J‘ 5
' Governor Arnall is reported by The Atlanta Constitution as
saying he made E. D. Rivers National Committeeman. That was
“in 1944, after Rivers heiped make Arnall Governor, and four
years after Rivers went out of office as Governor. Rivers held
S@mo- public office between the timse he retired ac Gavernar and
the time Arnall says he made him National Committeeman.
When did he become “unworthy”?
i""--f-lf Rivers is “uanworthy of public office” now, as Arnall claims,
‘was he not “unworthy «of public office” when Arnall made him
“National Committeeman?
-._‘ll’ Rivers was “unweorthy” when Arnall made him National
‘Gommitteeman, why did Arnall make Rivers National Commit
teeman? Arnail knew Rivers’ record then (1944), as well as he
was it now.
}’4!*
If Rivers is “unworthy of public offige” now, why did Arnall,
according to the Atlania papers, publicly declare last year
(1945) that Rivers was Georgia's “first modern” Governor?
. When did “Good Government” Arnall decide Rivers is “un
worthy of public office”? Was it last January when, as Rivers
charges, Ex-Governoxj Jim Cox of Ohio ordered Arnall to betray
his friends and suppert Carmichael? (Adv.)
e&z MEN AND |
FOMEN IN SERVICE 1
(Continiet hrom pige one.)
& |
indva, has ‘completed his termi
nakileave and has been relieved
of gactive duty. .He served 23
years in the Navy, during which
time .be had duty ou eveuy type
o‘(",\tessel afloat excepting the
aigplane carrier. Former Lieu
téaent Patton and his family ex- ’
veet to make their home in |
Pi i T e :
‘ —
- WANT — ADS 1
MADA M MARGY
2 Luck — Love — Success
o —Happiness — Americ:ml
x Palmist. Readings Are
[SP@ Private and Strictly Con-
Y fidential. STRANG E
S B POWER. Private Waiting
w ' Rooms for White and
A B Colored. All Readings
B Private and Confidential.
Heours: 9:00 A. M. to 10:00 P. M.,
Dally and Sunday. I will give you
never-failing advice on all mat
ters of life, such as love, court
ship, marriage, business, specula
tions and transactions’ of all
kinds. I never fail to re-unite the
separated; cause speedy and hap-
Py marriages; overcome enemies,
rivals, lovers’ quarrels, evil hab
its, stumbling blocks and bad
luck of all kinds. Located in
Home Trailer — Take Braberville
City Bus to end of line on Dan
jelsville Road. Look for name or
m Athens, Georgia.
R .t Y C
WS
“ ® Banish unsightly and desractive dusl.
@ Preserve the vifal sheet mefal surfaces
‘ of your car or fruck.
® We are equipped so meel your every
5 requirement experily and promptly.
~UNIVERSITY CHEVROLET CO.
DURWARD WATSON,
5 President,
' TROUTMAN WILSON HENRY DAVIS
” . Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer
¥ Hancock at Pulaski Phone 1856
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Atlantic Company— Breweries in Atlanta, Charlolte, Chatianooga, Notfolk, Orlando e
Ataens. it
HENRY PATL
GETS PROMOTION
Henry L. Paul has now com
rleted his course at the U. S.
Naval School Co psman Hospi
ialy San Diego, California 7 infish
ing as an honor student. He is
now H. A. First Class ang is
connected with thz staff at the
U. S. Naval Hospital, Corona,
California.
Henry is the son ot Mr. anCd
Mrs. O. C. Paul on Ruth Drive.
WILLIAM H. SHY
OUT OF NAVY
Yoeman Third Class William
H. Shyv has been honorably dis
caarged at the U. S. Naval Sep
aration Center, U. S. Naval Air
Siation, Jacksonville, Florida,
and has returned ts his home
Fere in Athens. at 898 Lumpkin
street.
BIRD INVASIONS
Cherbourg peninsula has been
an invasion point for birds for
centuries. . Autumn migration
flighfs from Englang head across
tne channel into France, then to
Snain and across to Africa.
HEAVY CONUMER
A Dbattleship uscs about 1,-
800,000 feet of electrical cable
and as much as 400,600,000 feet
¢i finely-woven galvanized steel
wire to protect these cables.
George Washington breakfas
ted on three smal!l Indian hoe
cakes and thrge cups of tea.
i
‘D. ]. Weddell Succeeds
. C. D. Chandler As
Forum Class President
(Continuca Ixom page one.)
Group No. 4
N. P. Franklin, captain; Harry
Bailey, co-captain; G. A. Booth,
H. G. Cooper, J. K. Davis, sr., L.
IW. El)e}i(hart, J. W. Fanning, H.
‘P. Franklin, ‘George Head, W. 1.
Hopkins, Claude Little, W. J. Mal
com, L. H. Messer, H. M. Morris,
'Tom McMullan, Alberi Saye,
Harry Speering, Guy Smith, T. E.
Stubbs, L. P. Suddath, C. O. Tur
ner, George Upchurch and Sam
Wingfield.
| Group No. 5
J. Sam Taylor, captain; J. Har
ris Mitchell, co-captain; John C,
Adams, J. B. Allen, A. G. Bass,
George Burpee, John Coile, V. J.
Glover, J. F. Hadaway, E. O. Harri
son, C. W. Jackson, Warren Lanier,
Archie Langley, Grover C. Moon,
S. C. Moon, W. K. McGarity, W. T.
Ray, H. B. Ritchie, J. A. Smith,
George Tucker, Marion Wade and
Bill Wier.
Group No. 6 ;
| H. M. Rylee, captain; A. B.!
Cook, co-captain; O. C. Aderhold,l
Dan Arnold, Roy Bailey, Alberti
Burpee, Roy P. Bush, W. R.
Byrum, W. C. Carter, John Y.[
Coffee, Hayden Drewry, H. B.
Hammond, A. F. Haygoot, J. H. |
Hubert, jr., H. W.. Long, sr., H. H'
Mann, A J. Pert, R. C. Ray, O. M.
Spears, J. A. Stevens, W. T. Wade |
and Sam E. Woods.
Group No. 7
A. O. Duncan, captain; W. L.
Fdwards, co-captain; Preston‘
Almand, C, B. Bostwick, Dougi
Chaplan, Howard Cook, Claude |
Crymes, T, K. .Crgwford, D. V.|
Fortson, Larry Kendrick, F. B.
Leathers, Cecil Maddox, G. V. Mc-
Carson, J. E. Patman, Judge
Rutherford, Ralph Saye, W. C.|
Thompson, M. E. Tucker, J. E.
Wiatt, Joe Wickliffe, J. C. Wilkin
son and F. H. Williams.
Group No. 8
J\ B. Frye, jr., captain; O. L.j
Conner, co-captain; W. R. Bed—i
good, sr., H. W, Bennett, J. D. 801-l
ton, J. H. Booth, J. P. Carter, W.
R. Cooper, W. H. Duncan, G. H!
Firor, L. E. Harper, Clyde Harper, |
Fred Healan, M. S. Hodgson, W.
C. Noell, W. L. Pledger, J. D.|
Salter, L. I. Skinner, W. T. Sum
merford, P. L. Thompson, Ralph
Tolbert and A. B. Welsh.
Group No. 9
l O. W. Russom, captain; H. T.
Cornelison, co-captain; U. C. Bent
ley, W. H. Benson, C. D. Chandler,
Glenn Dillard, H. C. Doolittle, M.
D. Dunlap, W. C, Hartman, O. I.
Hays, J. H. Huber{, sr., Lamar
Lewis, sr., A. G. Maicom, F. H.
Mendenhall, D. H. Meyer, J. B.
McNab, Abit Nix, R. S. Patillo,
L. L. Whitley, D. J. Weddell, J. B.
| Williams and A. M. Wilson.
Group No. 10
O. W. Haygood, captain: Wade
Cooper, co-captain; J. L. Adams,
iD. S. Acree, W. O, Belton, Lee
lßradberry, Max T. Brown, W. J.
Conolly, G. O. Hancock, H. L.
I Hendon, sr., H. E. Holsapple, F. C.
|Honea, sr., Howard McCants, F. E.
McHugh, J. H, Nunnally, J. L.
Pendley, J. B. Tanner, O. W. Tay
lor, W. L. Taylor, C. D. Tolbert,
|Walker Word, A. W. Wier, sr.
MOVIc PROGRAMS
FOR THE WEEK
PALACE— e
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.—“Do You
Love Me,” starring Maureen O’'Ha
ra, Dick Haymes, Harry James.
News. Bored of Education and
Tenderfoot Trail.
GERGIA—
Wed.-Thur.—“The Virginian”
Barbara Britton, Joel McCrea.
News.
Fri. -Sat.—“Murder In Music
Hall” Vera Hruba Ralston, Wil
liam Marshall. “Trial of Mr.
Wolf”. News.
STRAND—
Thurs. — “Cornered”, Dick
Powell, Mecheline Cheirel. Kids
in a shoe. *
t Fri.-Sat. — “Alias Billy The
Kid”—Sunset Carson. Alum &
Eve. Phantom Rider No. 4.
RITZ— G
Wed-Thurs—“Song Of Arizona
Twin husbands, Lost City of the
Jungle No. 2.
—Roy Rogers. Beauties. Unusual
Occupations, Brones & Brands.
Fri.-Sat.—“Trai] To Vengence”
—XKirby Brant, Fuzzy Knight,
The ineadowlark is the official
bird of seven slates—Kansas,
Mentana, Nevada, North Dakota,
'Orqucn. South Dakota and Wy-
THE BANNER-AFERALD, ATHENS, CEORGIA,
Gromyko Wields Veto
Powers In Cogncil’s
Longest Debate
(Lonutuea rvmn Tage Une)
promise resolution, Evatt and
Cadogan yesterday offered their
own committee majority proposal
to keep the Spanish issue inde
ifinitely in the council “without
prejudice to the rights of the
General Assembly.” .
The British~Australian resolu
’tion was approved by a majority
‘vote of 9 to 2, with Russia and
[Poland against it. President
|Castillo Najera declared it was
{adopted.
Promptly Disputed
l This was promptly disputed by
|Gromyko, who coniended that the
resolution involved “substantive”
matters which were subject to his
veto. Najera held that the gqffestion
!was procedural, and thus did not
‘require the seven affirmative votes
including all those of the Big Five
[holding the veto power, and then
iasked the council to vote on his
ruling.
' Russia and France voted against
it, with Poland abstaining, and
Najera declared the veto had been
invoked.
Russia had used the veto only
twice before, in London last win
ter on the Levantine question and
here last week to defeat a twice
watered-down subcommittee pro
posal to pass the Spanish case
along to the General Assembly.
Arnall Declares
He Made Rivers
National Committeeman
(Continuce Prum Page Une,
Speaking @ Milledegeville, |
Lyons, Vidalin, Swainsboro andi
Sopertony Rivers asserted that |
Talmadge and Carmichael
biocked completion of his pro-'
gram during ‘ais former admin
istration.
Rivers also asserted taat “Jim‘
Cox (publidher James «Cox of
The Atlanta Journal), whol
maintains a palatial winter home
in Miami is telling Carmichael '
what to do—and that s all Car- |
michael would do if by some
niiracie \: got elected. But you
needn’t worry, Carmicaael will|
not be elected. I've already
written him off.”
| Denies Runover Plans i
~ C. Maynard Smith, Carmich- |
cal's campaign manager, said
}that “we are preparing for a
runaway, but not a runover” in
the election. Smith said that
“only last night Mr. Carmichael
told a whooping audience in
| Tiomaston the truth about this
race and that is that Ed Rivers
i hopelessly out of the running.
The truth about ‘he other can
| didate is thai he will be a very
poor second.”
(Note: Mr. Smith, had refer
ence to a story in The Atlanta
Copstitution by M. L. St. John,
chief political writer for that
newspapers That “observers” be
lieve with “three strong candi
dotes” it will be difficult to get
the nomination without a run
cver primary. Mr. St John said
all ‘of tae ecandidates, Carmich
ael, Talmadge, and Rivers are
“quietly” planning for a runover
primary and that Cprmichael
and Rivers supporters both say
Talmadge would be in the run
over).
Speaking at Swainsboro, Car
micheel promised that if elect
ed he would throw the full
tforce of his administration be
ind a program te put electrici
tz in every farm house in Geor
gla in the next four years.
G <
Russia’s Two-Way
Trieste Treaty Rejected
(Conwwas o Page Ore)
status approved by the four Big
Powers. The autonomous district
would have a house of represen
tatives elected by universal suf
frage and a governor appointed by
the Yugoslavs. The western
frontier of the district would be
along the Soviet-described bound
ary, with minor corrections in
favor of the Italians. g
As an alternative, Molotov sug
gested that Trieste be made+ an
antonomous district under the
Joint Sovereignty of Yugoslavia
and Italy, with a House of repre
sentatives and two governors, one
of whom would be an Italian and
the other a Ywugoslav. This plan
he described ag “an extreme con
cession.”
} U. S. Secretary of State James
F. Byrnes, who was the first to
ireply, declared the first Russian
plan would not work because the
population of Trieste was pre
dominantly Italian and that the
second would be equally unwork
able because it would leave a
feeling of uncertainty in the dis
ttrict as to who actually was in
charge.
|
iDatg Of A-Bomb
'Test Depends On
‘Weather Forecast
~ (Continued rrvm i'sge Ome)
!American coast. They invariably
move twoard the Phillipines and
then northward, where they dis
sipate in the Aleutians.
At the start they are not the
murderous winds that make these
storms to be feared. If the atom
bomb were to start a typhoon, it
would in no way endanger the
200 ships and thousands of men
involved in the atomic test.
EXONERATED
Goldenrod was accused false-
I¥ of causing hay fever because
it bloomed at the height of the
hav fever season, and now roses
have been exoneratéd as the
cause of rose fever.
o R BRI R
ROOM FOR RELIGION
There are 10,000 villages in the
United States without churches
30,000 without resident pastors
and 30,400,000 children under 12
who are receiving no religious
instruction, ¢
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VICKI CHESBRO: Brightens black with color accents.
Color - Spiced Black Play Clothes
Make Rich Foil for Tanned Skin
.Black play duds make good
dirt ' dodgers, are figurc-trim
ming, and leave nothing to be
desired as a foil for a richly
tanned skin. but they need to be
sparked with color or a girl wear
ing black among brightly clad
beachcombers is apt to look like
a little streak of gloom.
If you wear black, you can
successfully banish that gloomy
aspect with one stroke of color,
Bright play shoes will relieve
somberness. So wil] a flamboyant
'beach bag or a band of color
hitched around your waist.
| If complexion tones need relief
from black, wrap your head with
lcolor or cradle your hair with it.
]Vicki Chesbro, chic Palm Beach
imodel, launched a fashion trick
'this winter—which is still going
‘strong—of lighting up her hair
(with a snood net studded with
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straw flowers, each centered with
a fiery cluster of sequins.
Foot Protectors
Keep Shoes Neat
BY ALICA HART
NEA Staff Writer
Wearing foot protectors—
stockings minus legs—when you
dispense with 'aosiery is a sum
mer must for good grooming.
These cotton, rayon or nylon
fool coverings make feet feel
better by keeping soles from
contact with clammy shoe lin
ings, The protectors shield shoes
fiom pevspiration and dirt which
bare feet bring in, an important
consideration when you remem
ber how necessary it is to safe
guard hard-to-get footwear.
You wouldn’t think any wo
man would go into a shoe store
~. CLOSING NOTICE
e ke )
.3 FROM :
- FINDLEY DRY CLEANERS
® 0
As has been our custom we will close Wednes
day afternoon, july 3rd, and remain ciosed until
Monday, July Bth, in celebration of Independ
ence Day.
THE COOPERATION OF THE PUBLIC
WILL BE GRATEFULLY APPRECIATED
end thrust a bared foot upon a
s:ool to be fitted, would you?
Yel shoe salesmen say that there
are women who o. Rightly, of
course, a salesman can refusg to
fit. a customer who shows so lit
tle consideration for the niceties
of good grooming and for the
store’s merchandise. But when
. has to refuse, he’s put on a
spot, and there’s ilo need—now
that pedal coverings are more
available—for a woman to bring
embarrassment upon either the
salesman or herseif.
LIKED OWLS
In England, it fermerly was
the custom for farme»s to build
owl Jwindows in their barns,
the .barn owl being much in fa
vor because of its mousing abil
ity.
The Muzeum of' Natural Histo
rv in New York contains 53
vieces of movable metal printing
iype which were made in Korea
in 1406,
THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1946,
FIRST NON-STOP OVER
ATLANTIC
John Aicock and A. W. Brown
riade the first non-stop airplane
tlight over the Aflantic. They
landed in Cliften, Ireland, in
1919, after . a: flight from New
foundland. :
-—_“’.P—-
BELATED ACT
The Lacev Act. passed in 1900,
rmade it illegal to bring English
sparrows into the United States,
iust a half-century after the
damage had been done.
'‘LARGEST IN ARKANSAS
Little Rock, with a pepulation
of 88,039, is the largest city in
Arkansas. Metropolitan Little
Rock claims a population of
126,724,
MAKES LONG FLIGHTS
The Arctic tern flies 11,000
rriles to spend just 11 weeks at
its nesting grounds in the Arc
tic, then flies 11,000 miles back
to tlie Antartic.