Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Georgia Youth
J':“.,‘ 4 2 il
,_ch For
obbery InN. Y.
¥ NEW YORK, Aug., 19 —(AP)
scar Gardner, 24, formerly of
Gritfin, Ga., charged with rob-
JEry in connection with a strect
woldup yesterday in which a
mpanion was hilied by police,
Was laelg in $5,000 bail for a
hearing Friday when arraigned
‘loday before Magistrate James
A, Branehfield in Felony Court.
E Gardnesls companion, Joesph
orriere, 18, was killed during
'8 chase after they allegedly
tried to rob Herrert Campbell,
52, of Bridgeport, Conn.
‘». In Memory
b (Colored)
" In sad but loving wmemory of
our dear daughter, Annie Dore
tha Leaster, who departed this
life and went to live with Jesus
one year ago today, August 19,
1945,
[ One year has passed since that
sad day; when the one I loved
passed away, the call was short,
the shock severe;
Morning came and like a tired
child, our darling closed her nyesl
in sleep; and while our hearts
were grieving you stole away
and crossed the river deep. Her
work here was finished, and
there -begun. We know she will
greet us at the setting sun. There
is an empty place in our heart
and home. That will always be
left alone, Doretha, we miss you
more and more each day, we shed
our tears from aching hearts.
Only God knows how we miss
you at the end of one long year,
oh Doretha, what would we give
to hear your voice and see your
happy face. Your happy fa_ce
meant so much to me, your smil
ing ways and pleasant face are
pleasant to recall. She had a
kindly word for each and died
10%ed by all who knew her.
Parents— k
Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Young. ¢
And Mr. James W, Gresham.
FUNERAL NOTICE
. - (COLORED)
WHITE, MRS. EUGENIA.—Died
Sunday morning at her resi~
dence in Crawford, Ga. She is
survived by the following rel
atives: Mrs. Susie Luckie and
¢ Mrs. Stella Ragsdale, Mans
! field, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Cic
ero Luckie, Mr. and Mrs, Hen
| ry Ragsdale, Mr. and Mrs.
' William Lane, Mansfield, Ohio;
I Mr. and Mrs. Milton Colquitt,
' Atlanta, Ga.; Mr. Eugene Col
© quitt, Crawiord, Ga.; Mrs. H.
' M. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Clar
! ence Ellington, Athens, Ga. The
funeral of Mrs. Eugenia White
i wil be conducted Tuesday,
I August 20, 1946, at 3:00 o’clock
| from the St. Jéhn A. M. E.
church, Crawford, Ga. The
' Rev. Clarington will officiate.
4+ Interment in the church. ceme
/| tery. McWhorter Funeral Home
in charge.
‘g{:”, 8 WASTE FATS CAN HELP |
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These German women are laughing fit to kill—at none other than Charlie Chaplin burlesqueing |
their once-beloved Adolf Hitler, The Chaplin film, “The Great Dictator,” was recently sprung by |
surprise on an audience of some 400 Berliners, who thought they were going to see “Kitty Foyle.” {
__Experiment was conducted by the informetion control division of American Military Government, {
> ii 19 j ON YOUR
WGAU oo |340 UNDML .
Affiliated With the Columbis Broadcasting System
MONDAY NIGHT
6:oo—The Mystery of The Week
(CBS)
6:ls—Jack Smith Show (CBS).
6:30—80b Hawk Show (CBS)
7:oo—lnner Sanctum (CBS)
7:3o—Fighting Senator (CBS).
7:556—8i1l Henry — News (CBS)
B:oo—Kiss and Make Up (CBS)
B:3o—Jack Kirkwood Show,
(CBS) ;
9:oo—Screen Guf]d Players
(CBS)
9:3o—Dance Time. :
10:00-—News and News Analysis
—CBS.
10:16-~You and The Atom (CBS)
10:30—Dancing in the Dark.
11:00—News—(CBS)
11:16—Dancing In The Dark.
11:30—CBS Dance Orchestra,
(CBS)
12:00—-CBS News. :
12:05—Sign Off,
- TUESDAY MOGPNING
7:00—Good Morning Circle.
7:4s—Morning Meditations,
B:oo—News—CßS.
8:15—~Good Morning Circle,
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:oo—Morning Melodies.
9:ls—Radio Revival Hour,
9:30-—Romance of Evelyn Win
“Right in Der Fuehrer's Face!
ters—CßS. i
9:4s—Salute to Musie,
10:00—Arthur Godfrey & Gang
(CBS) .
16:30—Rhythm on Parade.
10:45—Rosemary—CBS.
11:00—Kate Smith Speaks-—CBS.
11:15—Gems of Melody.
11:30—Romance of Helen Trent—
CBS. _
11:45—Our Gal Sunday—CßS,
12:00—Big Sister (CBS).
TUESDAY AT ERNOON
12:15—Ma Perkins—CßS, ;
12:30—Songs by George 'Byron,
12:45—Road of Life (CBS).
I:oo—Farm Flashes.
I:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
I:3o—Sing Along Club—CßS.
2:oo—Take. It Easy - Time.
2:26—According to the Record.
2:3o—Voice of the Army.
2:4s—Musical Snapshots.
3:oo—House Party (CBS).
3:IS—~CBS News. :
3:3o—Get Acquainted Hour, -
4:00—1340 Platter Party.
5:00--Veterans Adminstration
Program. .
s:ls—W. C. T. U. Program.
s:3o—Lum 'n Abner.
s:4s—Robert Trout ard the
: News ’Till Now—CBS.
THE BANNER-IERALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA,
Three Hollywood
Stars Off By
Two Months Trip
BURBANK, CALIF.. Aug. 19
—(AP)—Film Actor Tyrone Pow
r, former Marine pilot lifted his
twin-engined plane of the Lock
lheed Air Terminal’s “unway to
day on a projected two month
unofficial good will tour of Cen
tral and South America.
l In the party of five also was
{ Actor Cesar Romero: John Jef-~
;fries likewise an ex-Marine flier,
is copilot and navigator, and two
studio representatives' also are
making the trip. :
[ They-plan to fly down the West
Coast of South Africa to Chile,
then acrossthé ~ Amdes to Argen
{tina and back along the Eastern
| Coast. g
TENANT MOVING
It has been a general practice
for approximately 50 percent of
the tenant farmers in Georgia so
move each year, according to the
Extension Service economists.
This practice has beeh costly to
tenants and landlords alike.
FARM VALUES
Gegrgia’s agricultural busi
nesses in 1940 represented an in
vestment of more than $600,000,-
000, of which about 80 percent
was in farm land and buildings.
14 percent in livestock and six
percent in farm machidery and
implements. e £
STRAWBERRY SUCCESS
Many strawberry fields have
failed in Georgia because of poor
stands resulting from plants not
properly set or the lack of humus
in the soil to hold moisture, say
State, Extension Service horticul~
turists. :
PLANTING PLANS
It is just as sensible to plan
the yard and plantings around a
farm home as it is to have a plan
for building a house or a pattern
for making a dress, landscape
specialists of the State Extension
Service point out. :
Musk, a fixative, ,is the most
important single material used
in perfumery.
Socialist Flags ««
Torn, Burned
In Philadelphia
PHILADELPHIA, Aug, 19—
(AP) — An unidentified man
about 50 years old, who shouted
he was a veteran of the First
World War, today disrupted a
picket line protesting increased
prices and, while a small crowd
watched, otre up two Red flags
held by the marchers, members
of a Socialist organization.
The pickets had been marching
for a half hour when 4 bystander
dashed up tc Robert Bone 922
and grabbed his flag. Foot Traf--
sic Patrolman Captain Francis P.
Luckman quoted Bene as saying
he offered no resistance as the
man taere up the flag. ]
The man seized a second flag
from Bone and then built a fire
with the remnants of both.
The pickets, who said they
were members of the Interna
tional Socialist League, carried
placards and distributed pam
phlets which condemned the new
OPA law. 4
The flags, Bone said, were not
Russian but . were emblems of
the league. .
The pickets voluntarily dis
banded when, Luckman arrived.
The man w!) tore up the flags
had then disappeared:
The bitumious coal - indusiry
mined 576,000,000 tons of coal in
1945,
xAt STERCHI BROS.cnemmemmmemmenromemmeer s i e
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we| WAS aative *ine C\V“as rent® .
'B\ 5 opreset s 10883 00 Toner® ; :
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Yugoslav Troops |
FiredOnU.S. -
Soldiers, Charge
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19— (AP)
—The United sQtates Charged
publicly today that on July 12
Yugoslav troops illegally entered
the Allied zone around Trieste and
fired “withoui provocation” upon
American forces ilnvestigating
their presence.
The American view of the clash
was made known with the re
lease by the State Department of
a note delivered to the Yyggoslav
Foreign Oifice lasp Thursday.
The note emphatically rejected
“the distortion of evidence” al--
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legged in Yugoslavia’s earlier
complaint about tiie incident.
At the same time, the State
Department made a three months
old rejection of Yugoslav com
plaints about American and Brit
ish administration of the Allied
zone.
- A State Department official
said in this connection that “we
have known for a iong timg that
the Yugoslavs have been doing
what they can to discredit the Al
lied administration of Venezia
Giulia and we fear that they have
been basing their case not on ac
tual facts but on ciaims suitable
to their- propaganda.”
The Department for the time
being, at least, had no comment
on the latest reported incident
involving the disappearance of
an American airplane over Yu-
JACKSON’'S GROCERY
MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1944,
goslav territory lying between
Austria and Italy, ;
HIGH-QUALITY COTTON
Extension Service workers
warn that farmers who are . ecare
ful to pick cotton clean and dry
will obtain the highest grade
when their crops are ginned
When it is necessary to pick cot.-
ton wet it 'can be ‘dried in the
field by spreading in thin layers
.on sheets.
An Australian wedge-tail eu-~
gle once was repfisrted with a
wing spread of 11 feet. |
; CHOOSE BY NAME
~ The name St. Joseph‘quu;--
% antees quality, speed,’econ
\d omy in asglrm. Always
ask for St. Joseph Aspinin
Phone 696