Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Boyle Finds Even
Can Be “Fixed”
By Hal Boyle
NEW YORK, — (AP) — The
young man sat slowly sipping a
Martini while Tar, his scottie,
seratched himself boredly at the
base of the barroom stool.
A tall young blonde girl came
through the door, tugging a re
luctant wire-haired terrier by his
leash. She glanced swiftly over at
~the young man, then sat at a table
nearby that gave him the bene
fit of her profile.
A Martini,” she told the wait
ress.
The young man, studying her in
the mirror, began to loose interest
in his drink. He wondered what
he could do to meet her.
Suddenly the girl's wire-haired
jrm—isn opve g welp of surprise and
pollided with the scottie. In a sec
pnd the two dogs tangled in a black
and white whirling blur of fur
and fangs.
g Rkt wailed the girl.
“you’ll be killed!”
She wrung her hands. The young
man jerked back the scottie and
tied him to one end of the bar.
When he came back, the girl
was lent over the trembling ter-
rier.
“Are you hurt, Spooky?” she
said. “Tell me, are you hurt?”
The young man’s hands brushed
the girl’s fingers as he knelt to
examine Spooky.
“Not a scratch,” he said, and
then exclaimed solicitously: “Oh,
your stocking. It's torn.”
She said that was nothing and
he said, well, if she didn’t have
a drink with him he would think
she was really mad. at him. So
they ordered a drink, and she said,
«I'm Madge,’ and he said, “T'm
Stephen,” and,she came right back,
“well, that makes us even-
Stephen.”
““¥¥e liked the way she laughed
and said:
Going Places
~ uLet's go someplace, How about
the Rococo Club?”
“71] have to take Spooky home
first,” she said, and Steve said,
“That's okay, but bring back the
leash. I'll wear it anytime you're
on the other end.”
“you're cufe,” she said.
«Meetcha here in half an hour,”
he said, “I got to give Tar his
vitamin biscuits and put him to
bed.” ;
They went out together and the
partender murmured to himself in
the mirror. r
“Nuts! nuts! nuts! Dogs and
women—they take away all the
business.”
They parted at the door. Madge
pulled Spooky up the street and
around thé corner, and there was
no nonsense on the way.
She dragged the whining ter
rier up three flights of stairs and
entered a small apartment. An
older woman sat polishing her
nails on the studio couch.
“Well?"” she said, looking up.
“1t worked, Leona,” laughed
Madge. “Thanks for lending me
your dog. The name is Stephen
and he looks good up close. I'm
meeting him in half an hour. Got
to run now. Tell you about it
later.”
As Madge went back out the
door, she said:
“Spooky is probably mad at me.
I had to kick him headon into that
scottie to get him to do his part
in the show. I'll pay him off to
morrow with a pound of ham
burger.”
Moral: Bven dogfights can be
fixed. 9
MOVING SANDS
Kill Devil Hill, the dune at
Kittyhawk, N. C., on which a
150-foot monument was erected
in 1932 in honor of the Wright
brothers, was found to have
shifted 400 feet since the Wrights
first flew their plane over it 29
years before,
Sectional awards in the nat
jonal 4-H meat animal project
have been doubled this year.
NOTICE! ‘
Make an appointment fori‘
your permanent wave at
Gallant-Belk Beauty Shop.
Draw your lucky number
out of a box — you receive
any price permanent FREE
if you draw the winning
number! ;
You may be the lucky one.
Make an appointment today.
Call
Gallant-Belk Beauty Shop
Phone 2746
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RATION CARD MURDERS
OVERWHEIM GERMANY
BY IRENE SIMON
AP Newsfeatures .
BERLIN.—(AP)-—-Fiics at the
central police station reveal sto
ries of thefts, assaults, kidnap
ings, and murder—all committed
for the sake of another ration
card.
" Last month, for example, a 50-
year-old city relief recipient mur
deréd a housewife for her ration
card, six children were kidhaped
in order to get their valuable
children’s ration cards and a
young wife was fatally, stabbed
by a husband in an argument
over a slab of bacon.
“Hunger and greed is swiftly
killing off the last remaining
decency in the hearts of we Ger
mans,” said a municipal official.
“All scruple seems gone. For an
extra slice of bread one steals, for
an extra pound of - butter one
commits assault, ‘for an extra ra
tion card one murders.” v
“We in the city administration
are helpless to cure the situation
because of the city-wide corrup
tion in official circles. The daily
papers are full of stories of food
thievery and fraud committed by
city officials.”
Thoughtful Berliners say that
the danger today is not the ideo
* THE DOCTOR SAYS *
Late Summer and Fall Hay Fever
BY WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D.
Written for NEA Service
Although air-borne pollen is
the commonest cause of hay
fever, any pollen can produce a
reaction if present in sufficient
concentration. Ragweed pollen is
chiefly responsible for the hay
fever which starts’'in August and
ends with the frost.
Main symptoms of hay fever
occur in the eye, palate, nose and
throat. Itching, congestion, light
irritation of the eyes and sneezing
are the chief complaints although
in a cértain percentage of patients
asthma is also present.
Relief of hay fever symptons
can be obtained by going to a part
of a country free from the offend
ing pollen. Even this may not
bring complete freedom, if the
wind is blowing from the direc
tion of a heavy pollen territory.
‘A sea voyage is the only way of
completely escaping flying ‘pollen.
Last year many patients who
had experienced trouble with late
summer and fall pollen started
their desensitization treatments‘
after the frost. Although it is
possible to get some relief by be-!
ginning now, chances for success
are greater if the injections' are
administered over a longer period.
If proper skin tests are made and
if injections are given on schedule
in progressively larger doses, from
80 to 85 per cent of hay fever vic
tims will be free of all difficulty
during their hay fever season.
DRUGS OFFER RELIEF -
Stay-At-Homes who failed to
take théir injections during the
past year may obtain relief of
symptoms in 85 per cent of cases,
by taking either benadryl or pyri
benzamine. Benadryl should be
used with care because it nfay
also cause sleepiness and stupor.
Housewives with hay fever can
avoid many symptoms by staying
indoors and keeping their win
dows shut and doors closed part
of eacih day during the height of
their "season. Dusting should be
avoided as dust may irritate the
nose and throat and make an at
tack worse. A trip to a movie, if
the theater washes and filters the
air which goes through its air con
ditioning apparatus, is a simple
way of escaping pollen.
~ QUESTION: My 14-year-old boy
has started to smoke. What can I
do to make him stop? Will it
\harm him?
2| i
N L o By
RO
e T A
. ' This is 'only
e one of our spe
cialties. Others in
mi(| . clude:—
| + Buttenholing
= | « Button Covering
I » Custom-madeßelts
I * Picoting and
| Pinking
- Your SEWING CENTER
can save you fifl](‘, money,
and - patience by making
: your sewing easier.
5 SINGER
il SEWING MACRINE 0
fl 121 East Clayton Street
| Phone 3071
logical gap between eastern and
western minded Germans, but the
gap “between peoples and fami
lies of food envy,” as one daily
paper phrased it.
“Our courts today are swamp
{ed with divorce suits based on
arguments due to the most prim
itive self-preservation reasons,”
a leading lawyer declared.
“The husband asks why his
wife gives him so little to eat?
{ Does she eat more while he is out
}wm'king? He begins to lock the
{ food away at night. They quarrel
I'hitterly, Soon they're in my court
for a divorce,” one judge ex
plained.
“Wives report their husbands
accuse them of not distributing
the family food fairly. Husbands
! call their wives ‘stupid fools’ be
,cause they do not supplement the
regular rations with black market
‘food. In one case a father Kkilled
his two children when they sur
prised him rifling the cupboard
for some potatoes mother had
locked away for Sunday.”
Meanest of all food-crazy Ber
liners, say the police, is the man
who steals ration cards from
housewives while they queue up
hours for food.
ANSWER: Smoking at 14 is a
lsign of poor social adjustment. A
lmun whom the boy admires can
talk to him and get him to stop, if
,you can't.
MOVIE PROGRAMS
FOR THE WEEK
’PALACE—-
Wed.Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Home
‘stretch," starring Cornel Wilde,
Maureen O'Hara. Screen, Snap
lslzot. News.
GEORGIA—
Wed.~Thurs. -, “The Macom
ber Affair,” starring Gregory
Peck, Joan Bennett. Jamaica. In
Country Life. News. |
l Fri. - Sat. — ¢“Blondie’s Big
Moment,” starring Penny Single~
ton, Arthur Lake. Storm Warning.l
Blondes Away. News.
STRAND—
Wed. — “Secret of the Whist
ler,” starring Richarq Dix; Leslie
Brooks. Tired Feet. Coliege Clim
bers.
Thurs. — “That - Way With
| Women,” starring Dane Clark,
[Martha Vickers, Sydney Green
{street. Community Sing. Best in
Show,
l ¥ri.-Sat. — “Pioneer Justice,”
Istarring Al Laßue, Fuzzy St
John. Training for Trouble. Son
of Zorro No. 9.
RITZ—
Wed. - Thurs. — “Cloak ana
! Dagger,” starring Gary Cooper,
| Lilli Palmer. Cockatoos for Two.
| Pri.-Sat. — “Texas Trail,” star
|ring William Boyd, Russell Hay
'c!en. HaLfß Wit's Holiday. Jungle
re—‘r‘N., 0.8
Sat. 16 (Only)—Ray Whitley
|and ‘His Revue — ON STAGE.
Truman Sends
Delegates To
Pan American Meet
' (Continued From Fage One)
Mr. Truman himself will fly to
the Brazilian Capital later this
month or early in September to
address one of the final sessions
of the conference, called to write
a formal military defense treaty
for this hemisphere.
Due to open Friday, the confer
ence will be the first meeting of
the foreign minisiers of the Amei=
ican Republics since 1942 when
they gathered to . declare their
unity in the war against the Axis.
The foundation for the Rio as
semblage was laid two years ago
at Mexico City. At that time the
Act of Chapultepec was draited to
meet the problems of war’ and
peace facing the nations of the
new world. ; ’
President Caldwell
Approves Plans Ror
Archaeology Division
(Continued From #Page One)
Charles C. Cellier, R. R. Otis,
Ralph McGill, C. E. Gregory and
Jack Tarver all of Atlanta; Mill
wee Owens of Augusta; Mrs. Mar
garet Davis Cate of Sea Island,
and Dr. Matthew W. Stirling of
the Smithsonian Institute.
QUEENLY BOOK COLLECTOR
Queen ?izabeth was an enthusi
astic book® collector. She had her
picture engraved on both covers
of all her books, and actual jewels
were used to decorate her crown
in the pic¢tures. 7 wen
~ TUE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA ~
.
Moultrie Preacher:
Accused Of Assault
MOULTRIE, ,Ga., Aug. 13—
(AP)— A Baptist preacher ac
cused of attempting to assault a
12-year-old choir gir] who con
sulted him about missionary
work declared from his jail cell
last night, “I am not guilty in
any way.”
Sheriff T. V. Beard said the
girl’s father swore out a warrant
cnarging the Rev. J. C. Embree,
pastor of the Baptist Church in
Doerun, Ga.,, with “attempted
assault.”
' Shortly after Embree was
placed in the Doerun City jail,
Beard said a “right excited”
crowd of about 25 men assem
bled outside and the clergyman
was moved to the Colquitt Coun
ty jail here,.
Interviewed by a Moultrie re
porter, Embree said “I took a
girl in my car to talk missionary
work and the only time 1
touched her was when I exam
ined an unusual ring on one.of
her fingers.”
Hughes Flys Home;
Subcommittce Must
Decide Next Action
(Continued ¥From FPagze¢ One)
Meyer’s unexplained absence
last Saturday after an earlier
committee subpoena for him ex
pired was one of the reasons Fer-
guson cited for ordering a post
ponement in the two week old
investigation into Hughes $40,-
000,000 worth of wartime air
plane contracts.
Meyer originaily filew here
from Paris to testify about his
party-throwing activities in be
half of Hughes. ,
Meye- was reported to have
been in New York yesterday
With Hughes back in Holly
woor, Brewster vacationing in
Maine and most. subcommittee
members turning their attention
to other matters there was little
left her to keep the controversy
alive. But Brewsler saiq at Port
land last night: that “we’ve just
begun the fight.” #
Both - Ferguson and Pszpper
ag-eed that even if the subecom
mittes wanted to, it would be un
able to draft any forma’ findings
cn the “you’re another” feud.
Heavy Freighter
Reported Sinking
After Fog Crash
(Continued From rage
by the Alaska Steamship Com
pany on the Alaska-Seattlé run,
was inbound from Alaska.
Two Coast Guard cutters and a
salvage tug were dispatched o
the scene, about three and one
half miles off Race Rocks, at the
southern tip of Vancouver Igand
in' the often treacherous Straits
of Juan De Fuca.
An SOS call from the Fenn
Victory, operated by the Ameri
can-Hawaiian Steamship Com
pany, said the Diamond Knot re
quired immediate assistance but
gave no indication of the extent
of her own plight. The Fenn Vie
tory normally carries a crew of
560.
* The Diamond Knot was launch
ed at the harbor here on Septem
ber 8, 1944, by the Consolidated
Steel Corporation as the first in
its series of long-range cargo
ships.
[ Her wartime mission was to
carrry Army and Navy supplies
into the Pacific area. She and her
sister ships were desifnated
AV-I's with a length of 326 feet,
50-foot beam, and 18-foot draft.
“Ark,” which means a box or
chest, is used in the English Biblg
to translate two different He
brew words: the vessel Noah
embarked upon, and the coffin in
which Joseph’s body was preserv
ed.
ITCH
ITCHING OF ECZEMA
£ Are you tormented with itching
of eczema, psoriasis, rashes, ath
letes foot, eruptions, rectal itch
ing, rough hands .or face or other
skin troubles? For quick relief
and good results use Victory
Ointment. Develornad for the boys
in the services, now offered to
the folks back home. White,
greaseless, antiseptic, cooling,
pain relieving, vanishing. Does
not irritate. Safe for babies or
children. Money back guarantee.
A war development; not a sub
stitute. Get VICTORY OINT
MENT-—the finest—today. Jars or
tubes. Sold in Athens by Crow’s
Diug Store.
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Depariure of Trains
Aihens, Georgia |
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East— |
3:35 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
9:28 p. m.—Air Conditioned. \
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:10 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South aad
West— 3
6:00 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:25 a. m.—(Local). |
8:35 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrive Athens (Daliy) 12:35 p. In.
Leave Athens (Daily) 4:15 p. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
From Lula and Commerce
Arrive 9:00 a. m.
East and West
Leave Athens 9:00 a. m,
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains
Train 51 arrives Athens 8:00 a.m
Train 52 leaves Athens 2:10 . @
A&ID Board Office
Continues Operation
ontinues 0
Until Sept. Closing
ATLANTA, Aug. 13—(AP)—
The Agricultural and Industrial,
Development Board’s Capitol of
fice, discontinued Monday amid
a storm of political controversy,
probably will continue to func
tion through ‘the present {fiscal
quarter ending Sept. 30.
Ivan Allen, sr., chairman of
the Board’s Reorganization
Committee, said today it was his
opinion that the Capitol office,
described by Talmadge forces as
a pubicity bureau, would -con
tinue until its al]lotted funds ran
out next month.
Although a new A & ID Board
discontinued its adjunct at a
meeting this week, it failed to
name a definite date or provide
for the disposition of office
equipment and files.
No Notification
State Auditor B. E. Thrasher,
jr., said he had not been noti
fied officially of the disposition
of the capitol office and would,
therefore, have to approve its
budget allotments until a -defi
nite closing date had been seiet
ted.
Basil ‘Stockbridge, Director of
the Capitol office which main
tains statistical information and
provides research assistance for
state officials, also declared it
was his wunderstanding that he
had until October 1 to liquidate,
but admitted that he had not re
ceived official notice.
The Capitol office maintains
records and files dating back
four and one-haif years, some oi
them the only copies in exist
ence. It was generally under
stood, however, that these re
cords and other office equipment
would be transferred to the main
A & ID Board.
Board Chairman Blanton Fort
son of Athens told office assist
ants yesterday that the Board
committed “an oversight’ in not
designating a. closing date or
methods of disposing of equip
ment and records.
{Fortson mentioned, however,
that the five-man Reorganization
Committee had been directed to
set up a new program, select
personnel and outline pro
cedures. ¢
; .
B. F. Goodrich Co.
Agrees o Bargain
With Clo Workers
AKRON, O©,, Aug. 13—(AP)—
The B. F. Goodrich Co., under
thréat” of a strike scheduled to
start tomorrow, agreed today to
bargain on a company-wide ba
sis with the CIO-United Rubber
workers.
There was no immediate an
nouncement from the Union,
which had said 21,000 members
would walk out in Goodrich’s
seven plants across the nation
unless the concern began com
pany-wide bargaining.
' The walkout would have affec
ited plants in Akron, Los An
| geles, Cadillac, Mich,, Tusca
'loosa, Ala., Miami, Okla., Oaks,
'Pa., and Clarksville, Tenn.
Workers in the Tuscaloosa
plant walked out Monday fol
lowing authorization from the
concern’s Ncal union.
The URWA International Pol
icy Committee last mgnth agreed
to reopen wage negotiations, but
set no specific amount to be
scught.
The Goodrich walkout under
original plans was to have start
ed at the Oaks plant tomorrow
and extended to all plants by
next Tuesday.
Veterans' Training
_ ATLANTA, Aug 13—(AP)—
The Federal Government has
granted $329,999 to the Georgia
Veterans Educatignal' Council
for admijnistration of on-the-job
training, Director F. A. Sams
said-today:
Sams said the sum from the
Veterans Administration would
be supplemented this year by
$125,536 from the State to pay
63 coordinators and 27 clerical
assistants and other administra
tive expenses.
- Sams declared that approxi
mately 26,000 veterans in Geor
gia were taking on-the-job
training courses in. 17,000 busi
ness house and industrial estab
lishments. Another 7,500 are
taking on-the-farm training, he
said.
The Veterans Educational
Council approves business houses
for on-the-job training and in
spects and supervises the vet
erans apprenticeship system in
the state.
WHIPPED FOR WORKING
A civic law in Tenganan, Dutch
East Indies, forbids men to work
in the village under penalty of
being publicly thrashed by wo
men.,
HARDY DISH
In addition to ancient eggs and
birds’ nest soup, the Chinese are
pariicularly fond of dogs’ flesh,
marmalade made rom roses, pre
served oysters, ducks' gizzerds,
and canned earthworms.
Georgia 4-H club girls who are
taking part in the national 4-H
girls’ record project will learn all
phases of homemaking through
club projects.
Nigeria has 30 .airports and
‘more than 3,000 miles of motor
road. 2 BoUiERG
A Man Who Did Something About It
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When ilie heat wave became toc much for W L. Morriselie, a
wholesale florist manager of Memphis, Tenn., he just re tired to a
cold storage vault to finish his dictation amid banks of flowers His
secretary, Virginia Hamilton, found it more convenient to wear
her fur coat, hat and galoshes for protection against the falling
“dry ice” snow her boss created to cool off.
Use Of Hague Court |
Opposed By Egypt
(Contlnued Fruin Page One)
be seated. |
Indonesian Affair
The Indonesian affair was put
off until tomorrow at 3 p. m.
(EDT), when Sjahrir is expected
to take his seat. Th\e council also
must decide on a second request
from the Philippines to . be. heard
on the Indonesian fighting and an
Australian motion for the council
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IN WHITE, BROWN AND WHITE A
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to create a commission to report
!directly to the Security Council
on the situation in Indonesia. .
l Herschel V. "Johnson, United
1 States deputy delegate, told the
!council that his government favor
ed hearing the Indonesians, but
would take no stand now on
recognition of the Indonesian Re
public. He said the Indonesians
forst be heard as a matter of
“#simple justice.”
_ ..v wouncii 15 slated to hear more
on the Balkans case omorrow
| morning at 10:30 a. m. (EDT).
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1947,
Governor Predicts
"Great Future” |
Oil
il, Gas Products
ATLANTA, Aug. 13—(AP N
A “great future” for Georgia ip
petroleum ' production and e
fining was predicted by Govery
or M. E. Thompson yesterday as
he reappointed’ J. A Pope of
Alamo to a six-year term on the
State Oil and Gas Commission,
Thompson repirted that mg
jor oil concerns have spent more
than 81,500,000 in drilling 31 test
wells and another million do)-
lars for Geological surveys al
though no commdkcial oil or gag
has been produced in Georgia.
He added that landowners in
86 counties were receiving S9O(-
000 a year for renting potential
oil fields and that nearly $4,000-
000 has been paid out for oi
property rents in Georgia since
193¢. :
The other members of the
State Oil Commission are direc
tor C. W. Deming, George M.
Bazemore of Waycross and Paul
H. Ploeger, sr., of Darien.
Deming said four wells had
been drilled this ‘year and that
;four more probably would be
| drilled later.
FASTER THAN TRAIN
A racing pigeon and an express
train left Dover for London at the
same time, and the piegon arrived
120 minutes ahead of the train, al
though the latter traveled at a
!speed of 60 miles per hour.
§2 BIGESTIVE TRACT
And Stop Dosing Your Stomach
With Soda and Alkalizers
Don’t expect to get real relief from headache,
sour stomach, gas and bad breath by taking
soda and other alkalizers if the true cause of
your trouble ig constipation.
In thiy case, your real trouble is not in the
stonach at all. But in the intestinal tract
where 809, of your food is digested. And when
the lower part gets blocked food may fail to
digest properly.
%Vhat you want for real relief is some
thing tu““unblock” your lower intestinal tract,
Something to elean it out effectively—help
Nature get back on her feet.
Get Carter’s Pills right now. Take as di
rected. They gently and effectively “unblock”
yvour digestive tract. This permits all 5 of
Nature’s own di%,estive juices to mix better
with vour feod. You get genuine relief from
indigestion so you can fee! really good again.
Buy Carter’s Pills today. “Unblock™ your
intestinal tract for real relief from indigestion,