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sUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 1946.
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'°"l'R ( KE W 1/(
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0 \.!.AIIs Here!
-—-jx Save 20% to 50%
- g /,{( on Fuel Bills!
See Us for Details.
J. L. CREWS
FURNITURE CO.
8 g 361 E. Clayton
S e Phone 1103
HOLIDAY HOTSPOT
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Labor Day should be a holiday for the homemaker as well as for the
family, and it certainly will be if the dinner includes Hot Dogs and
Baked Beans smothered in your favorite sauce. Easy to prepare in the
porcelain enameled baking pan, the Bean and Hot Dog combo will be
a fine party treat for the folks. Prepared in the faster-heating porce
lain enameled baking pan, the beans will be a golden brown and the
hot dogs will be tender and juicy when you take the pan out of the oven.
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These three famous ringers don’t tamper with horses—only ‘with
"‘ srseshoes. Left to right, Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, President
Harry S. Truman and Jimmy Risk, champion, in horseshoe pitch
ing match on White House lawn.
SIDE GLANCES
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COPR. 1246 BY' NEA SERVICE, INC. T, M. REG. U. 5. PAT. OFF. s"4
et ee e S—— A ———————
You'd betterthave a taik with George—he hasn’t saved
- penny this gammer! 'm afraid when he was i .h:’pzm
he got 1o thinking in terms of thousands of yen!
Read The Banner-Herald Want Ads.
—By Galbraith
.
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Vargas Still |
o s
Brazil's Man .
0f The People
DIO DE JANEIRO—DBraziI, land
of many political paradoxes, is
witnessing on, of the strangest in
its history—the return to public
life of Getulio Vargas.
Vargas was deposed by a mili
tary coup last October after serv
ing as president 15 years, the last
eight of which he governed with
sweeping dictatorial powers.
His “New State,” which he cre
ated in 1937 abolished the con
gress, established special courts
and gave him a constitution with
authority equal to that of any Eu
ropean dictator.
The midnigit- revolg against
him last October 2, led by some
of the same military leaders who
brought him to -power by revo
luticn in 1930 retired him to his
farm in southern Brazil.
While he sat on his farm veran
da sipping mate (tea made from
herbs), his former War Minister,
General Eurico Gaspar Dutra,
was elected president and Vargas
became senator.
Two states—Sao Paulo and his
native Rio Grande do Sul—sent.
him to the senate with a heavy
vote. The congress awarded him
the Rio Grande seat because that
state gave him more votes.
When_ he returned -to Rio, so
many thousands crowded the air
port shooting fireworks and
shouting a welcome, that he had
to elude the erowd in a jeep.
The day he went to congress to
take his seat police had to keep
onder among the Jjthrongs that
packed the streets and the gal
leries. He took his oath quietly
and sat down.
As he returned to his seat, Ota
vio Mangaberia, leader of the Na
tional Democratic Union—a coali
tion formed last year to fight the
Vargas regime—arose and pro
posed a resolution giving thanks
to the armed forces for their ac
tion on October 29.
The motion passed 135 to 131.
Other parlimentary attacks fol
lowed.
The subject of these discourses
meanwhile calmly went about his
business, always followed by
hundreds everywhere. Whenever
a crowd forms downtown, some-~
one remarks, “It must be Getu
lie.”
BASEBALL'S BIG SIX
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A Leading Batsmen
(Three Leaders in Each League)
AB. H, Pct.
Musial, Cardinals .. 430 161 .382
Hopp, Braves .. .. 314 115 .366
Walker, Dodgers .. 406 147 .362
Vernon, Senators ..432 152 .3dl
Williams, Red Sox . 396 135 .341
Pesky, Red Sox ... 473 158 .334
HOUSING AT OXFORD
. OXFORD, England— (AP) —
./Accommodation for students
coming into residence at Oxford
next October is so scarce that
Worcester College and Ruskin
.College bid for tenancy of a
council-owned house. The council
awarded it to Worcester.
The musk ox has the tail of a
' sheep, kidneys of a goat, spleen
‘ of a donkey, bones of an ox, ribs
' of a bison, hoofs of a caribou.
There are 27 national parks in
continental United Statse, Alaska
and Hawaii.
A combine has been developed
which digs, sacks and loads po
tatoes.
Rutgers and Princeton played
the first inter-coliegiate football
in 1869.
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
MALGOM. — The. relatives and
friends of little ‘Miss Geneva
Malcom, Mr. and Mrs. David
Malcom, Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose
Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. Obie
Moon, Mr. Edward, Misses
Ruth 1., Christine, Pauline, Mr.
Marion, and Miss Leonia Rog
ers, all of Statham, Ga.; Mr.
Luvenia Boyd and Mrs. Bertha
Shelnut of Bradenton, Fla,;
Mrs. Love O. Walls, Monroe,
Ga.: Mr. George Malcom and
Mrs. Carrie Bailey of Good
Hope, Ga., are invited to attend
the funeral of Miss Geneva
Malcom, Sunday afternoon,
August 18, 1946, at two (2:00)
o’clock ,from the Barber Creek
Baptist church, Statham, Ga.
_ Rev. Verdis Adkinson will offi
ciate. Interment Barber Creek
cemetery. Mack and Payne
Funeral Home.
POPE.—The relatives and friends
of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Pope, Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Pope, Mr. and
Mrs. D. P. Pope, Miss Anpie
Mae, Mr. D. C., Masters Rotr;rrt,
James, and Allen, ir., and lit-‘
tle Miss Mary Lou Pope, all ofi
Athens, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Campbell, Watkinsville,
Ga.: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Campbell, Statham, Ga.;, Mr.
and Mrs. Arch Brightwell, Ar
noldsville, Ga.; Miss Lizzie
Mitchell, Cincinnati, Ohio; Mr.
Walter Brightwell, Pittsburgh,
Pa.: Miss Nettie Brightwell, Mr.
and Mrs. Wesley Jenkins, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Pope,
Atlanta, Ga.; Mr. Charlie Pope,
Whitehall. Ga.; Mr. William
Mitchell, Winterville, Ga.; Mrs.
Lula Johnson, Whitehall, Ga.,
are invited to attend the fun-!
eral of Mrs. Mary Pope, Tues
day, August 20, 1946, at three
o’clock p. m., from the St. Paul
Baptist church, Arnoldsville,!
Ga. The Rev. L. B. Stephens
will officiate, Interment Veal
cemetery. Mfig‘{a and Pa Fii=
‘. THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
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Dressed in conventional style of a century ago}member of the
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Regency Cricket Club makes a hit on Brunswick Lawns, Hove,
England.- Cricket Club of Hambledon., (Hants), where game was
born, played challenge match against'the Regency Club, Brighton,
for traditional stake of a barrel of beer. Bats and wickets of
100 years ago were used.
Japanese Women ,
Get Surpius Navy
Gandy, Nuts, Flour
YOKOSUKA-—The U. S. Navy
and the Shinsei women'’s society of
Yokosuka are combining forces to
battle food shortages. The Navy is
supplying surplus and surveyed
foods and the women are ration
ing it to the townspeople.
¢ Candy, nuts, -flour and edible
waste foods“which the Navy re
jected for its own use are being
trucked by the Navy to stores al
ready acquired by the women.
The president of the Shinsei so
ciety early last month approached
Navy base commander Capt. B. W.
‘Decker of Washington D. C., with
a proposal for education in democ
racy of the society’s 12,000 wom
‘en members. Decker agreed to
i their plan and sent six truck loads
of rejected Navy food which the
women distributed satisfactorily.
' The cooperation has one notice
able effect — membership in the
Shinsei society has leaped to
40,000.
Aaron Burr and Alexander
Hamilton fought their famous
duel near Weehawken, N. J.
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Asbestoline is another superior, new product
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Pho;le 202 3 Athens, Ga.
CHURCH HOLDS
INDIA STATES
FOR PORTUGAL
~ LISBON — AP.— The Roman
Catholic church is a tie binding
Portuguese India to the homeland
at a time when British India is on
the threshold of independence.
Portugal has had Indian colo
nies since 1510. Today the state
of Portuguese India takes in the
coastal territories of Goa and
Damago and the island of Diu, al
together 1,537 square miles up
and down the western or Arabian
Sea coast from Bombay, with a
population of about 601,000. It is
largely Catholic.
“The maintenance of the state
of Portuguese India, as hitherto,
as a source of religious and spir
itual contact with the western
world, may be desired and to ev
erybody’s advantage,’ said D.
Jose Viera Alvernaz, Portuguese
bishop: of Cochin, British - India,
stopping in Lisbon on the way to
visit two brothers in San Lean
-Bro, Calif.
During the period 1919-1932,
{he Coast &uard, then a part of
ihe Treasury Department, c¢n
|forced prohibition.
BERLIN DEALS
ARE SLOWIN
REAL ESTATE
- BERLIN—A.P.—Nobody wants
to buy ruins. inquiry among Berlin
real estate dealers reveals.
This fact somewhat surprised
real estate brokers, who at first
blush thought investors might want
to acquire ruins cheaply, ear them
‘down and rear new str *
Investors however, reasoned dif
ferently. Firt of all. they don’t
know what is to be the position
iof mortgages on property now
standing in ruins. Next, there is
}the question of whether real es
tate valuations will undergo a
change in view of the unprece
dented situation created by mass
destruction of entire city sections
through bomb and artillery ac
tion. X
Take downtown Berlin, for in
stance. Real estate before the war
naturally commanded top prices.
But can the center of the rcity,
which “has had it” ever be Tre
built? If so, will it again become
the commercial center or will it,
as some city planners have it, be
turned into a series of settlement
projects? The wuncertainty abont
the future of the city is put
’ting a curb on speculative buying
or purchase for investment.
l On the other hand, anybody who
LET YOUR LIVING ROOM REFLECT 6000 TASTEL
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For the discriminating home maker . . .
select from our large collection of living &
room suites. Every suite can be easily com
» plimented with proper odd pieces. up
e e T Tttt et T Si, ]
BT got 0 T g IRT . e TIDAOY M 45900 R ”)"””M - .
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EASY TERMS CONVENIENTLY ARRANGED
Northeast Georgia’s Largest Furniture Store
has a roof over his house is anxious
to hold onto his property. Hence,
although countless would-be pur
chasers of homes are registered
with real estate agents, properties
are being offered for sale only by
people who need cash badly or by
heirs who have no use for the real
estate. B
Vacant lots, like ruins, are not
wanted. One main reason is the
dearth of building materials out
side of bricks. Bricks are as plen
tiful as the sands on the sea.
The Constabie
Debunks Famed
Fiction Sleuth '™
BRIGHTON, England.—(AP)—
The plodding British cop-on-the
beat who has been the butt of
detective story writers since the
days of Sherlock Holmes—wants
no more of it.
He’s tired of being depicted as
the lackwit who stumbles over
clues while Lord Peter Wimsey
or some other talented amateur
solves the mystery and collars
the culprit between tea and din
ner.
He has chosen this jubilee year
of the Chief Constables’ Associa
‘tion {o open an exhibition show
ing that the “bobby” is no slouch
himself in bloodstains, finger
prints and high-power detection
PAGE FIVE
generally. :
It’s a sort of Black Museum,
full of actual murder weapons,
truncheons, tipstaves, handcuffs,
gruesome . photographs, grade-A
certified clues — and records of
one conviction after another.
“It. shoulu be of enormous in
terest to the public who seem to
delight in reading about the
crime and criminals,” said Home
Secretary Chuter Ede, ih opening
the exhibition.
“Those who profess to make a
special study of crime,” he add=-
ed, “mainly detective tsorye writ
ers, are apt with great consist=-
ency to fall -into major errors
when they come to describe how
the police actually do their work.
“I hope that some of them will
come to this exhibition and learn
what to avoid.” ok
Dr. Fambrough’s Last
Rites On Thursday
Dr. Fambrough of Bostwick
died in an Atlanta hospital
last Thursday. Funeral services
were held at the Baptist Church
in Bostwick Saturday afternoon,
attended by several hundred sor
rowing friends. Dr. Fambrough
was a nafive of Oconee County,
a physician of renown and an
outstanding church man. He was
74 years of age. He is survived by
!his wiie and three daughiers.
l The swan has more than three
times as many neck vertebrae as
| the giraffe, |