Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
Two Officers
Appointed To
Cfi; Commission
Officers Thomas McGahee and
Emory Sanders, of the Athens
Police Force have served their
six Imonths’ probationary period
on the force and are now mem
bers ‘of the Athens Civil Services
Commission, reports Chief-of
police Clarence O. Roberts.
Officers McGahee and Sanders
have = both compiled excellent
records during their probation
ary period, and were elected Aas
members of the Commission in
Friday afternoon’s meeting ‘of
the Tommissioners. |
It is customary for all officers
USED GARS AND TRUCKS
i
RENEWED AND CUARANTEED
Used Cars Are Very Much Like The People
Who Have Owned Them — Therefore We
Have All Kind—Good-Average And Bad -
Priced Accordingly - Each A Sound Value.
'W I
'4B FORD CLUB COUPE—Music, Heat, Seat Covers,
Light Grey—Practically New .... .... $2,245
'47 FORD TUDOR SEDAN — Radio, Heater, Back
up Light. Light Gray. Low Mileage . ... $1,995
'46 BUICK ROADMASTER Sedan — Radio, Fresh
Air Heater, Seat Covers, New Paint Job $1,995
‘46 FORD FORDOR Sedan — Radio, Heater, W hite
Sidewall Tires. Original maroon finish. Spotless
ngide andiolt ... e X s S Seeii sB TR
'46 FORD TUDOR Sedan—Radio, Heater, Seat Cov
ers, five new tires. Green paint job. Like 'New.
| $1,745
'46 FORD COUPE — Radio, Heater, Seat Covers,
Spotlight, Straight Exhaust ...... .... $1,745
'42 OLDSMOBILE FORDOR Sedan—6 Cylinder Hy
dromatic. Clean upholstery. Original blue
BN s e s v S
’42 PLYMOUTH FORDOR Sedan — Radio, Heater,
Seat Covers. Renewed Engine. Maroon paint job.
Polr REW BPOR 4., . vovi i vs v i a vess BIE9O
'4O STUDEBAKER CHAMPION Tudor Sedan—
Clean inside and out. Excellent tires. Radio and
B . e
39 MERCURY CLUB COUPE—BIIack, Sealed Beam
Rioht Bl . (~ ... . e AR
'39 CHEVROLET TUDOR Sedan — Good radio and
heater. 1942 Engine. Seat Covers and Foglignts.
, $795
38 FORD TUDOR Sedan—Standard—Sealed beam
headlights ,good tires .... .vov. vov. a... $575
41 FORD FORDOR Scdan — Heater, Radio, Seat
Covers. New blue paint job. Mechanically
SR e R $1,095
41 FORD CLUB COUPE-—Radio, Heater, Seat Cov
ers, Light Green. Excellent mechanically $1,095
41 PLYMOUTH COUPE — Radio, Heater, Seat
Dovel ... e e i s
40 PLYMOUTF{ TUDOR Sedan—Dark blue, good
. rubber, cle.an inside and out .. .... .... SB9B
40 CHEVRO'LET FORDOR Sedan—Special Deluxe.
Radio a'nd Seat COVEIS .. .iu. vses «++. $935
- SERVICEABLE CHEA.P CARS
NOTHING FANICY
34 Plymouth Deluxe Tudor—Cliean . ... ..:. $295
36 Plymeuth Coupe . ... $295
B 8 Chevrolet Fardor .. ... i .is . oot viss 108
RPN 00l @ .. s e e
BT Ford “B 0 THAOE ... «.fos oovs o issienes S2OB
TRUCKS WITH LOTS OF PROFITABLE
MILES IN THEM
47 Ford 134” 11,-Ton—-l.ow Mileage ..... $1,495
'46 Ford '.-Ton Pickup~-Radio, Heater, Spotlight,
Seat Covers. Canopy over back. Exceptionally
B R i S R
'46 Ford Sedan Delivery —New grey paint job. Good
N v s Rl NN
R Tord VocTon Prelary ... il sV e $1,295
’44 Ford I'4-Ton stake—Good Rubber. Above the
average throughosat ..... .... .... .... $995
’39 Ford 1-Ton Pane] —Two new tires. AllL good $575
’42 Ford Sedan Del jvery—New paint job. Black $995
¥ Chevrolet 114 "Ton Stake ..... ...q ... $175
LM C. 15 ToaStake .. ....0... 4 ... 900
FAIR TRADES — EASY TERMS
ON CAR 5, TRUCKS AND REPAIR JOBS
!F¢ ,r Demonstration Phone
M. L. (Mark), Carithers—Dan Dupree—Jack Avery
m
C. A, Trussell Motor Co
Established 1918
LISTEN TO THE NEWS — WRFC — 12:15
on the force to serve such a pro
bationary period before being
elected to the Commission.
et
TRY THIS FOR SIZE
EL PASO, Tex--(AP)—J. E,
Sims, Lower Rio Grande valley
farmer, grew a 12 1-2-pound
muskmelon. “Just the large eco
nomy size,” said Sims, but he
conceded it was the biggest of
its kind he’s ever seen. It took
four months to grow from the
time the seed was planted. Was
Sims surprised at the melon’s
..o Nosuree—just good soil and
a well-fertilized melon patch, he'
said,
Of the states in the United
States, Nevada has the smallest
number of persons per theater
seat-—5H.6,
State Politicians Do
Would You Spend
B§lo To Make $1?
Atlanta Aug. 7—(AP)—Would
you spend $lO on a chance to make
$1?
You wouldn't, but Georgia poli
ticians do. |
The boys who know politics best
estimate at least half a million dol
lars is being poured, altogether, in
to the battle for governor between
Herman Talmadge and Gov. M. E,
Thompson.
The salary at stake is $12,000 for
two years—a total of $24,000.
Skipping the argument of who's
spending most—that might be like
two peas talking in a pod—{figure
the total outlay is divided equally.
Over ten times the prospective
salary is spent for the winner; for
the loser just as much is spent for
nothing.
How do they spend $500,000?
One campaign headquarters
chieftain, after a fast-moving day,
mopped his brow and sighed in an
off moment, “wnew, it's a big
business.”
That’s the way they operate it;
just like a big business.
Hotel Suites
~Both sides move into suites of
rooms in hotels and office build
ings; they set up a staff of 30, 40
or 50 virtually full-time workers
—a dozen or more executives of
top-flight political talent, a score
or more clerical workers, and
agents out in the field to keep
things rolling in every county.
Mail goes in and out by the
truckloads. One check showed
about 10,000 letters a week flow
ing from Governor Thompson's
15-room headquarters. A Talmadge
| Athenian’s Car, Missing 3
‘Months. Found In SOWEGA
The up-to-date ‘stolen car”
records filed in the Athens Police
Department are being credited
today as being the main factor in
the recovery of a stolen car and
the arrest of the theif, more than
150 mies from the location of
the theft,
| “Mr., and Mrs. . O. Chandler
of Athens have their car back,
not too much the worse for wear,
wau wie oincers of the Athens
Folice Department the County
Department, and the Georgia Bu
reau of Investigation have ' one
more case on their lists of ‘“solv
ed crimes.”
Mr. Chandler reported to local
police in early May that his car
had been stolen from its parking
place at the corner of Washing
ton and Lumpfin streets. Not a
trace of the car was found in
lAivYeny], however, and Mr.
Chandler was Wi\%ut his auto
mobile for about:fhiree months.
- Last week Chief Roberts re
Y
Lef's
Keep Him!
eep Him!
AR v.»:~,v-:1:-:i:-:A._ S 3 s
-« 1
o e
Qi‘*’*?‘\
§%§; L
o o R
o | ;g 'J
Jake B. Joel
"
Representalive
He knows the work
ings of the legisla
ture. Experienced,
able, and hard work
ing.
His record justifies
your vote.
s
Election
Sept. 8
.
' Friends Of
i
- Jakeß. Joel
YHE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
‘spokesman estimated 10,000 replies
to personal letters and said the
bover-ull total would be much high-
L X,
| Then there's radio time and
newspaper advertising. Governor
'Thompson averages about 100 sta
tion-hours a week, probably a rec
ord. At a conservative estimate of
| SIOO per hour, that's SIO,OOO every
| week to send the former school
teacher’s voice over the air waves.
l A single rally—Thompson’s reg
lular Monday night show—is
jcarried a:together by 49 stations.
‘ Talmadge has fewer stations, but
they include the most powerful in
the state. .
‘ Weekly Ads
y Thompson is running an ad
' vertisement in every weekly paper
lin Georgia—2oo of them-—every
'week. Talmadge hits a little over
' half the weeklies at this point, but
he’s expected to step it up, To
gether, they probably will spend
$2,000 a week in small-town pa
pers alone.
Stump-speaking tours by the
cancdidates themselves are expen
sive; they are accompanied by
close personal associates, adding
to the cost; and then advance
| agents handle last-minute details,
set up loud-speakers, posters and
lother advertising.
It’s a multi-phased operation to
integrate the campaign and keep
it working smoothly. Much of the
|hardworking talent at the top of
the show had to abandon sub
(stantial salaries from other pur
suits to enter the campaign.
ceived a call from G. B. 1. Agent
“Woody” Wilson in Toccoa, who
wanted to know if there were any
missing Chevrolet cars from Ath
ens. It took Chief Roberts only a
moment to inspect the “stolen
car” files and report to Officer
Wilson that there was such a car
missing from Athens, and he gave
the identifying features of the au
tomobile.
Wilson had been holding a man
in Toccoa on another charge, but
after some questioning, the man
had agreed to take Wilson to the
second-hand dealer in Camilla,
Ga., where he had sold his car,
admittedly stolen. The dealer in
Camilla located the car in ques
tion and it was soon identified as
the stolen vehicle. The numbers
had been filed off the motor, and
it had a new paint job, but it was
.undoubtedl,v the same car,
‘County Officer Bill McKinnon
and Officer Walter McKinnon,
jl., of the Athens Police Force
accompanied Mrs. Chandler to
identfy the car and to serve a
warrant on the tneif. Everett
Unbehant, white youth, is being
held on charges of larceny for
the theft. g b
STUDIES HARD FACTS
ON PAVEMENT
MANILA — (AP) — Leonardo
Manas is tired of living on a dus
| ty street. Looking about Manila
! and noticing which streets were
being paved and which were not,
|he got an idea. He has offered
any cabinet member of Dbureau
chief of the government one of
bis apartments. Lights, water,
rent will be on Manas,
. Already he reports, amid a'
‘flood of applications from lesseri‘
lights, a few from people who
{ “may be productive of asphaltl
‘for our street.” 3. y
! A NAKED THEFT
: SOUTH BEND, England—(AP)
| _The lone nude study in the in
ternational exhibition of the
South Shields FPnotographic So-!
ciety ettracted attention. She's
been stolen, the society reported
to police. Five years ago another
nude studv was stolen from the
group’s exhibition. : (
* The national parks of Canada
had their beginning in 1885 when
10 square miles around the hot
mineral springs at Banff, Alberta,
were reserved for public use.
During flight the intense mus
cular activity produce much heat
in a bird’s body. ,
In the middle of the 19th cen
tury the passenger pigeon out
numbered any other kind of bird
on the North American conti
nent. ’
DINE OUT
. In Air Conditioned
| Comfort
‘ £
| @‘9‘7
- AP
'Y J.:] ‘ ]
8 -
Our Good Food
Insures You
Complete Satisfaction
' Regular Meals
Snacks
' BAMBOO ROOM
| Southern Mutuai Buiiding
CORRECTION
A L. Mayes, recently involved
in a traffic accident on Lumpkin
street, steted yesterday that the
account of the accident erred.
Mr. Mayes said that he was not
making a vest turn as the story
quoted the Police Accident Report
as stating, but that he was at a
stend-still, waiting for traffic to
move forward. As he was waiting
Mr. Mayes said the brakes on an
auto approeching from the rear
failed to ha'd. The driver of the
car attempted to- pass Mr. Mayes
in an effort to avoid a collision
with his vehicle.
The passing car avoided Mr.
Maves car but ecrashed ' into an
ALLEY OOP
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oncoming auto, and the two col
liding vehicles ‘wére driven into
Mr, Mayes auto, Mr. Mayes cons
cluded,
The Banher-Hera'd is glad to
make this correcticn in justice
Mr. Mayes.
PAKISTAN COLONEL TO
ATTEND U. S. ARMY SCHOOL
KARACHI—(AP) — Parkistan
Army officials have announced
that Col. Altaf Qadir has been
assigned to attend the U. S. Ar
my Command and General Staff
College at Leavenworth, Kas.
They say a vacancy in the school
has been allotted to the Pakis
tan army,
Always Eager to Help
Woman Driver, Too
ENGLISH IS PHILIPPINE'S
WORKING LANGUAGE ‘
MANILA—(AP) — This is the
country where the President, El
pidio Quirino, makes his speeches
in English and has to have them
translated into the local dialects,
unless he is in his native north
ern Luzon. ;
Luis Tarue, leader of the Huk
balahap peasant army and a
congressman, makes his most ef
fective speeches in his native
Tagalog, the language of central
Luzon. But he writes his speech
outlines in English. This, he says,
is because he thinks better in
English, having been educated in
that language. |
Words
Uncouth
Sheriff Knows
MM? IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK G i e ¥
LIKE MY CUE, AS THE SHOW eAN 2 e, |
FOLKS SAYY N 6 e | ]
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Can It Be True?
No Luck
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Swell Start
BUNDAY. AUGUST 8, 1948,
BY MICHAEL O’MALLEY and RAPH LANE
PETREL MAKES LONG
AIR TRIP
PERTH, Australia . — (AP). —
Robert Beattie, a railway worker,
went fishing here and hooked 2
bird—a giant petrel. A band on
its leg showed it had been re
leased by British scientists at
Signy Island in the South Ork
neys.
Local scientists calculated that
if it flew over the South Pole it
flew 5,000 miles.- And if it took
a route:via Kerguelen Island it
flew twice that distance. The
petrel ended its travels in the
South Perth zoo.
"y v. To HAML'N
~By FRED HAPMAMN
—By EDGAR MARTIN
BY AL VERMEER
—By MERRILL BLOSSE?