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TEAM TCRPEDO BLASTS NAZI
Broken in half by force of the explosion, the German
qubmarine, U-977, rises out of the water before plung
ing to the bottom of the ocean after being torpedoed at
sea by a U. S. submarine, during “routine sinking” un
der the trip-parte agreement.
oreign Ministers
onfah On Trieste
NEW YORK, Nov. 15 —(AP)
The Big Four foreign minis
ors, faceq with an American
jarning that the prestige of the
Inited Nations is at stake in tae
uture of Trieste, resorted to a
mall informa] meeting today in
n extraovdinary ‘effort to break
e Trieste deadloeks - 4. & ¢
Secretary of State Byrnes' Md{ |
iscolleagues that the proposed
ee territory of Trieste must be
overned by a rep-esentative of
he United Nations ' Security
ounci] with strong police pow
rs. Soviet Foreign Minister Mol=
tov held out for limiting these
wers and giving increased au
hority to a council of govern
ent responsible to an elective
ssembly.
Contending that Molotov’s pro=
sal would fail so protect mi
ority rights in the territory in-=
abited by both Italians and
lavs, Byrnes declared, according
o diplomats present:
Empty Hands
The rights of minorities would
ot be sufficiently guaranteed by
governor with “empty hands”
nd they must be guaranteed be
ause in their proteetion the
restige of the United Nations is
t stake, :
British Foreign Secretary Be
in and Deputy French Foreign
linister Couv De ' Murville were
ined up with Byrnes and against
lolotov on %ie issue.
Byrnes said tha% Ybefore the
1g Four finally decideq to dis
gree they should make at least
ne more attempt to get togeth-
I. He suggested a small infor
al meeting in which they would
ave fleir regular council cham
er and meet this afternoon, in
committee room with enly two
r three aides each instead of
he usual ten apiece.
Itast’niaht's discussion was de
}:‘flbed as demonstrating that
€ last great obstacle’to agree
'ent on Trieste is the question
' Who should really direct the
olice,
.“ hile Molotov : favored: leav
'® In the hands of the governor
me powers to deal with an
nieri:muvl\v ."ne argued for mak
@,'““ police mainly responsible
oo council of government,
o 0 I furn would be respon
i€ 10 the elected assembly.
-;1_!1;55 AND VICINITY
“_iu:lr_and slightly warmer
mild rtly cloudy and
!_“g‘mm,m: Fair and slight
cop] et today; not quite so
m"ig:t‘}h S:atttered light frost
’ Satur
cloudy ang mildflay’ partly
. TEMPERATURE
Pommalßete 0
_‘_}'(.;’l“ S A
Norm; cnadinds it
o e 5
Incho. 1 RAINFALL
Total . 25t 24 Houws & [ =BO
hr{i]f.f"‘“‘ Now. 1 .. . 88
Avers, Since Noved it eius B
Tota] ::Q"INO\'. rainfall ~ 2.61
B ince January 1 ..,.44.99
[ =5 Since January 1.. 1.56
\*—'——
JEnALESTINE LEAFLET
ArabLS:}LEM, Nov. 15 —(AP)
against 0 JeWs were warned
oday . USINg Palestine =
vy 10 leaflets paste’&"fih%”
"alls ang lamp posts here.
l A .
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NEW TORPEDO TESTED ON U-BOAT
The U. S. Navy submarine Atule, right, in ,top photo, comes in close to the cap
tured German submarine, U-997, before firing a new lethal torpedo. In the bottom
photo, the U-boat goes up in smoke ‘and spray as the torpedo strikes. The test was
made off the Provincetown, Massachuset:_s-,‘ coast. ‘ T
Shot An Arrow Into
The Air; It Came
To Rest On His Head
VINCENNES, Ind., Nov.
15 — (AP) —“I shot an
arrow into the air, it fell to
earth I do know here”
paraphrased Pete Stewart.
Siewa i, treated at a hos
pital for a scalp wound
explained that he had bor
rowed wis son’s bow and
arrow and shot a shaft up
ward. It fell straight down.
Hoyt Pitner Dies
By T. W. REED
Thursday afternoon at hal{-
past ‘three o'clock Hoyt A. Pitner
passed away at his home in
Royston, Ga. He had been quite
ill for a long time and his death
was not unexpected.
Mr. Pitner was sixty two years
of age and was a native of Athens.
He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. A. Pitner, whc for many years
were -among the best known citi
zens here. His father -for many
yars held the responsible posi~
tion of Treasurer of Clarke
county.
My. Pitner in his younger days
was a popular and progressive
citizen here, engaged in the cot
ton business. Several years since
h. moved to Royston, continuing
his business there in dealing in
cotton. In Royston he made many
loyal ad devoted friends who
deeply mourn his passing.
He is survived by his wife, who
prior to her marriage was Miss
Joneil Baker, and by his two
sons, James and Joe Gray Pit
ner, of Royston. His brother, Wal
ter C. Pitner, of Athens, also sur
vices him. 3
Mr. Pitner was a deacon in
the Royston Presbyterian church.
The funeral services were held
this afternoon. conducted bv the
pastor of the Presbyterian church
and the internment was in Roy
ston. : ?
Full Associated Press Service Athens, Ga., Friday, November 15, 1946,
US. Offers Plan To Appease Assailants
On Veto As Charges Of Dictatorship Fly
Bilbo Challenge Pendered:
Republican Tax Stashing Program Hits
Opposition FromGOP, Democratic Ranks
WASHINGTON, Nov. 156—(AP)
—Congressional Republicans
swung an axe at taxes today but
ran into opposition from theit own
and Democratic ranks to any re
venue slashes not paired with even
deeper cuts in spending. ,
Members of the House Repub
lican Steering Committee laid be-.
fore Senate colleagues a quickly
assembled program to take a 20
percent slice off individual income
taxes. Changes in business levies
would await detailed study. |
Acting while the senators most
ly talked—among other things
about how to block Democratic
Senator Theodore G. Bilbo of
Mississippi from taking his seat—-l
the House group went down the
line for: |
BRITISH FOREIGN POLICY ROW
SET FOR SHOWDOWN ON MONDAY
U. S. Relations Under Fire In Heated
Debate Set For Parliamentary Hearing
| LONDON, Nov. *ls—(AF)—"
'demand for an immediate change
in British Foreign Policy, which
has caused a critical cleavage in
the ranks of the Ruling Labor
lParty, will come before the Housc’
of Commons Monday for debate,!
]speaker Douglas Clifton Brown
ruled today.
[ Cabinet sources left no doubt
that they intend to fight the pro
posal by more than 50 laborite
rebels for restated British foreign
policy so as to avoid what they
termed an “inevitable conflict”‘
between the Soviet Union and the
United States. i
The cabinet would receive aj
thumbering vote of confidence, if
the issue comes to a showdown
vote, |
Bevin Chasers |
The so-called “Bevin Chasers,"l
sponsors of an amendment to the
King’s parliament-opening speech!
from the throne demanding that|
Britain’s foreign polic\ be tiedl
neither to that of Russia or thel
United States, have already an
nounced they do not intend to
press for a vote, however.
Laborite Tom Driberg, ope of
the sponsors of the amendment,
capped a free-hitting argument in |
‘the House last night with a hotly
worded attack on Britain’s closel
ties with the United States and a|
demand that Britain beeome more}
friendly with Russia. \
‘ He maintained that America
was inflamed with “war fever”
and asserted that Britons never
would follow Foreign Secretary
Frnest Bevin “to war. now or in
five year time, against Soviet
‘}Russia in partnership with the
barbaric thugs of Detroit or the
narrow imperialists of Washington
or Wall Street.” A
More Civilly
Brendan W'n«
1. An eight-year tenure for
future Presidents.
9. “Constructive” labor legis
lation.
3. An end to war powers.
4. Relief from soap, oils and
| food shortages and,
{ 5. “Substantial savings” in
, governments costs.
! The House members supported
their 20 per cent tax cut proposal
| with a formal assertion that it
| could be achieved “while at the
Isame time the current budget can
'be balanced and payment begun
| on the National debt.”
| ° Chairman Robert A. Taft of
" Ohio said he agreed that it could
I be done and that the Federa! bud
| get could be pared to $30,000,000,~
1000 next year—sll,ooo,ooo,ooo
policy, interrupted Driberg with
the comment that “several hun
dreds of thousands of young
(Continued on Page Four.)
Tear-Gas Is Used To
Disperse Columbians
ATLANTA, Nos. 15—(AP)—
A tear-gas bombing which mo
mentarily dispersed a meeting of
the Columbians, self-siyled anti
negro and anti-Jewish political
party, brought heated assertions
from its leaders that “they’ll ne
ver crush us.”
The bomb shattered a painted
over window of the second floor |
meeting hall last night, spewingi
the irritating gas into the room |
and sending the participants scur- |
rying down a stairway to the|
street, their eyes red and stream
ing.
No one was injured although
many women and children were
in the audience. |
Columbian President Emory,
Burke, who was speaking when |
the bomb was thrown, immediate- l
ly blamed “Communists” for the |
incident which he seid showed
the opposition “can’t fight us in
the open like men—only like
cowards.”
City policemen on duty at the
hall said they rushed to the back
alleyway: immediately after the|
bombing but saw no one. Burke
said the officer in charge promis
ed an investigation.
The Columbian president had
deveted most of his hour-long*
talk prior to the bombing to,an‘
attack on Editor Ralph McGill of
the Atlanta Constitution who
wrote in his editoria] page col
umn mfiaflgfi?be had b“;'
St .
ESTABLISHED 1832,
less than this year’s budget.
Present Level
But Senator-elect John Sherman:
Cooper of Kentucky told a reporter
he thinks taxes must be maintain
ed at their present level to give
the treasury a chance of making
payments on the debt.
Senator Allen Ellender (D-La.)
volunteered that he and other
Scoutherners of like views will give
enthusiastic support to any “rea
sonable” Republican move to bring
the government’s expenses down.
The Senate committee agreed
with the House group that the
congressional reorganization plan
must go through as the 79th Con
gress approved it, with fewer
committees but higher pay and
pensions for the lawmakers.
The Senators reportedly decided
informally, to attempt to bar Bilbo
at the door when he presents him
self for a new term.
Bilbo, a filibusterer of proved
ability, has been named in com
plaints lodged with the Senate
Campaign Investigating Com
mittee for his reputed urging of
Mississippians to prevent negroes
from voting. The Senate War In
vestigating Committee also has
been inquiring into his relations
with a group of war contractors. ‘
At his Poplarville, Miss., home,
Bilbo’s secretary quoted him as
saying “I have done no wrong, and
I have nothing to say.”
Republican members of the War
Investigating Committee huddled
with Senator Arthur Vandenberg
(R-Mich,), to talk cl)ver the ques
tion of co nal investigations
Three-Cornered Race Develops In
Second Ward As Entries Are Closed
Friends Of F. H.
Williams Pay
Fee As Candidate
A three-cornered race for City
Council developed in the Second
Ward today as friends of ¥. H.
Williams, Athens. businessman,
qualified him as a candidate.
Harry Stevens, representing
the friends of Mr. Williams, who
paid his entrance fee, qualified
the candidate with the ' Clarke
County Democratic Executive
Committee. Mr. Stevens is a mem
ber of the Ward Committee.of
the Veterans Political Organiza
tion.
Hayden Drewry, also a busi
nessman, veteran of World War
11, and owner of Burman Printing
Company, entered the race yes
terday. Councilman Joe Shepherd
had previously qualified as a
candidate.
Mr. Williams , a veteran eof
World War 1, is manager of the
Athens Poster Advertising Com
pany, is a prominent member of
’the American Legion gnd is one
‘of the Ward committeemen for
the Veterans Politica] Organiza
tion.
Issues Statement
Mr. Stevens said he had been
autiorized to make the follow
ing statement:
NéM-, Williams stated he has
for some time been contemplat
ing running for office and the
pressure of friends made him
decide to announce. He states he
is interested in making the
schoo] system of Athens a model
lsystem of the State of Georgia;
in extending the water and sew
erage in those parts of the City
where it does not now exist; he
advocates paving as many streets
as possible. .
| «Mr. Williams favors improv
[ing the efficiency of* the City
iGovernment, improving the effi
ciency of tae Fire angd Police De
partments and give them suffi
cient pe-sonnel to carry on the
work. He says Athens should
have a more economical govern
ment and with proper business
lpractices. these improvements
can be made without any addi
}tona! taxes. i
“Mr. Williams is a member of
the First Raptist Church and the
American Tegion and his friends
feel he will be elected.
' Candidates for the five Wards
lin the November 27, Primary
are as follows.
First Ward: Councilman Bnb
' mdt\v‘nd: Councilman Joe
! G, Hayden Drewry and
25 Planes Continue
To Probe Canyons
For Missing Airliner
BURBANK, Calif., . Nov.
15 —(AP) — Twenty-five
planes gassed up today to
renew a metaodical, canyon
by canyon search of the rug
ged San Gabriel mountains
for a Western Air Lines
_ plane cavrying 11 persons
which vanished early Wed
nesday.
The ship, inbound {from
Salt ‘Lake City and Las
Vegas, Nev., with eigat pas
sengers and a crew of three,
was only a few minutes air
time away from Lockheed
Air Terminal here when it
last reported. The storm pre
vented effective search Wed
nesday.-
MAY SPLIT NATION:
BENFRALISSIMO CHIANG CPENS
CHINESE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
NANKING, Nov. 15.—-(AP)—Chiang Kai-Shek called
the National Assembly into session today as the boycot
ting Communist delegation, hinting that China’s peace
hopes were sunk, packed its bags to leave Nanking.
The departing Communist leader, General Chou En-lai,
said darkly that the government’s “unilateral decision” to
go ahead with the Assembly would send civil warfare
blazing higher than ever. :
While the Communists and the |
Democratic League stuck to a ‘
decision not to -send delegates, |
the Generalissimo stood bfore the |
assembly and hailed it as the be- i'
ginning of consitutional govern- !
ment for China. |
The day of politeal tutelage
in China, he said, was now over. |
The assembly adjourned until
Saturday, #wn thg first prepara-.
tory sessi %n"*b%"helc(.p it
F. H. Williams. |
Third Ward: W. A. Mathis, en- |
dorsed by the VPO and Merritt
B. Pound.
Fourth Ward: Councilman John |
Y. Coffee. endorsed by the VPO. |
Fifth Ward: J. W. Firor, en- |
dorsed by the VPO end Groverl
C. Dean. ‘
Councilmen R. T. Dottery, did!
not offer for re-election in the
Fifth Ward, and Councilman W. R.!
Bedgood did not seek re-election
in the Third. /
Five members of the ten-man
Council are elected every two
years to serve two-year terms. The
Mayvor is elected to a two-year
term. Mayor Bob McWhorter was
elected in 1945 and so there is no
race for Mavor this year. |
Interest in the races in the
various Wards has been rapidly
mounting the past few weeks and
with the City having its peak re-|
(Continued on Page Three). |
TWA Strike Ends; Shipping Truce Seen
By The Associated Press
The nation’s first major walkout
of commercial fliers, which start
ed last Oct. 21 by about 1,000
Trans World Airline pilots in a
dispute over wages, ended today,
and there was hope of early setile~
ment of the shipping tieup on the
West Coast. |
But the threat of a shudown of
the country’s soft coal mines by
a work stoppage of 400,000 AFL
United Miners next week con
tinued as government officials
awaited word from John L. Lewis
as to whether he intended to end
his government contract on Nov.'
20.
The TWA strike, which made|
idle nearly 15,000 non-flying em
ployes and grounded 115 aircraftl
along most of the company’s 28,-
000 miles of route on thres con
tinents, ended with an agreement
to submit the dispute over pay and
working rules to arbitration.
The company said it planned to
resume operations fomorrow, with
transcontinental flights starting
from both coasts, but it will he
at least two weeks before fuill
schedules will be maintained. l
The agreement signed in Wash
ington by Paul E. Richter, TWA
executive wvice president, and
David L. Behncke, president of
the AFL pilots Unjon, calls for a
three-man panel to decidé the dis-|
puted points, including rates of)
pay for pilots and co-pilots, the?
question of flight time limitations
for pilots in the International Ser
vice, and whether there should be
a new bidding procedure for rins.
Original demands by the pilots
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copy, 5¢
American Plan Claims Veto May Be
Abolished Later But Essential Now
LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Nov. 15.—(AP) —United Na
tions delegates awaited today details of a United States
plan aimed at appeasing oppoonents of the veto and nip
ping a revolt by small nations who have beén hurling
charges of ‘“dictatorship’” at the big powers.
Scheduled to open the Big Five defense is Senator Tom
Connally (D.-Texas), who is expected to tell the U. N.
Political and Security Committee that eventually the veto
may be wiped' off the world peace organization’s char
ter but that for the present it must remain.
It was not immediately clear
what the government proposed to
dc next. The conveation, made
up mainly of Kuomintang (gov=-
ernment) party delegates, is
charged with the task of drafting
a new constitution.
Chiang delayed opening the as
sembly four days ago ir one last
c¢tffort to bring the Commuanists
}and the league~—the two other
r‘mm‘cm parties—-into the comven
tion.
. This effort was pressed through
long and wearying niht sessions
without success. Thhe Communists
insisted that first the government
n,ust return vast streches of Com
munist territory seized since last
January.
Wang Ping-Nan, Communist
spokesman who is No. 2 man on
the deleation, warned ‘hat if the
assembly met “there will be no
more negotiations.”
Apparently, Chou realized
Chiang meant to plow straight
ahcad, because he toid the Asso
(Continued on »rage Five.)
Army-Notre Dame
Movies Being
Shown At Palace
Highlights of #ae Army-Notre
Dame football game, played last
Saturday in the jam-packed
Yankee Stadium ,in New York
are being shown at the Palace
Theate~ today through Tuesday.
The game, pitting the two out
standing teams in the entire
country, ended in a scoreless tie
and the pictures at the Palace
show the outstanding plays of
the battle.
ranged as high as $15,500 a yeer
compared with the company’s esti
mate of $12,000 a year for top paid
| pilots at present.
' Maritime Tie-Up
l In the West Coast shipping
| strike, settlement of the dispute
| involving CIO Longeshoremen,
lone of three - unibns, was an
lnounced. However, a job barrier
in ending the 46-day old strike
lwas insistence by shipowners on
Franklin County
Gouple Killed
By Shotoun Blast
ROYSTON, GA. Nov. 15—
(AP)—A man and woman, both
middle aged and members
of prominent families -in - this
section were found shot .to
death on a secluded road
near here today, and Sergeant
H. C. Langston of the State High
way Patrol said a negro man ‘ar
rested in the case had been taken
to Atlanta for safekeeping.
Sergeant Langston said the ne
gro was turned over to Sate Pa
tro'men by Sheriff Carey Carter
of nearby Hart County when mob
violence was 'threatened. .
The negro was taken to Ful
tower in Atlanta where the
HOM]C
Authoritive souraes saia Lon
'ally would assert that the United
| Nations Assembly has -“no busi=-
ness tampering with the Serurity
Council rules, However ,he was
expected to suggest that the Se
fcurity Council. itself rework
its rules with the aim of elimi
nating the “foggy air” about the
application of the veto.
The British were expected to
{ lend thir voice to the U..S. plea
| The first round of debate over
! the veto power brought a warn
ling from Argentina yesterday
| that the little nations could exer=-
| cise a veto of their own by walk
| ing 'out of the assembly.
| Cuba and the Philippines made
| the “dictatorship” charge against
| the five major powers holding the
veto right in the Security Council
‘on all vital decisions.
| Veto Revolt
i Seven uations rose in revoit
| GRALLLL Wle VeW Wk @ eision
| charged session of tue 01-nauon
| comnuttee. FPoland, the erghth’
| country to speak, was the only
{uuc W defend the veto in the
lupuuug round.
! Argentina, uirough ker spokes
| tan, Dr. Jose Arce, blunly told
| the commitiee tat {he Security
| &Qull(lu*r!‘glu which Austrge said
| Russia had used the veto 10U times
| —las “violated ahd foigotten the
| Charter”,
| While warning that the small
' nations could walk sut of the as~
, seinbly, Arce also sugested that
|these nations in the assembly
j could refuse to elect non-perma
nent membdys of the Security
| Council, three of which must be
! chosen at this session for terms
:starung Jan. 1, Such a course
| fould prevent a a quorum.
| Other developments in eommit=
| tee sessions were:
| Relief Program
The United tSates , although
against a proposed $400,000,000
U. N. relief program sponsored
by UNRRA Director-General
FH. La Guardia said it was wil=
ling to consuit other governments
! informally on voluntary relief ef
forts outside the International
, organization.
| The headquarters committee
i voted 39 to 2 to limit its search
| for a permanent peace Capital
site to the New York, Philadel
| phia, San Francisco und Boston
| areas.
i The United States and others
lannounced opposition to Seuth
1 ~ (Continued On Page Five )
settlement of the CIO-AFL juris=
dictional dispute which has tied uo
the port of Coos Bay, Ore, and
assurance against a reoccurence.
Another strike, which halted the
sugar industry in the Hawaiian
Islands and involved CIO Inter
national Longshoremen’s: and
Warehousemen’s Union appeared
near settlement with announce
ment from Honolulu that the
Hawaiian Sugar Planters Associa
tion had signed an agreement
granting a $10,500,000 more yearly
to emnloyes.
The agreement must be ratified
by the ILWU and by 33 planta
'tions. Ratification would send 25,-
000 strikers, already idle 75 days,
back to their jobs.
Soft Coal
In the soft coal dispute, there
was no immediate indieation that
!Lewis was ready to formwally ad
vise the government of intention
to terminate the contract on Nov.
20. There was some hope that
Lewis might agree to a short ex
tension of the preésent agreement
made between the union and gov
ernment after federal seizure cf
the mines last spring. Such action
by the UMW chief would allow
for further negotiations.
In the movie strike in Holly
wood, marked by new acts of
violence this week, rewards total
ling $30.500 were offered for
arrest and convjction of perpetra=-
tors of the bombing of non-strik
ing sh;dio workers. Gov. Egl‘wvg:
ren of California called
lence “murderous” and offered the