Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948,
¢ales Tax Proposal
Rages Within State
ATLANTA, Nov. 12—(AP) —
e sales tax controversy xt')%ged
i and wide over Georgia today.
“Few members of the General
Assembly made known thei. stand
.nd wide differences; of opinion
" hearcd as to its chances of pas
“oe by the 1949 legislature.
Mihe sales tax specter was re
vived when President H. L. Win
ate of the Georgia Farm Bureau
federation flatly advocated pas
sage of such a measure — plus the
Jbolition of ad valorem taxes.
That action came a couple of
javs ago at a Farm Bureau con
yention 1n Macon. 4% Py
l On the one handg iegisiative
leaders said “it TSNS ‘got a
chance,” but othersgs ommented
that “if the schools put on enough
pressure, they will get %‘f
* A sales tax is one gested
nethod of obtaining an addition
-2l $30,000,000 in state funds to
improve Georgia schgol%;gpd col
leges. g 0
“The minimum educ?;% foun
dation program will cal “for addi
tional revenue, but I dogmot feel it
is the responsibility oi, the school
people to name the type or source
to be used,” said Dr. M.sD. Collins,
state superintendent of schools.
George Googe of the American
\ision Meet, New To South,
To Be Held In Atlanta Soon
ATLANTA, Ga., Nov., 12 — A
new kind of meeting for the South,
the Southeastern Induitxii?l Vision
congress, will be held November
14 through 16 in Atlanta under
the sponsorship of thes Georgia
Ontometric Association y\:_;nco-op
eration with the Engineering Ex
tension Division, Georgia Insti
iute of Technology. i 1
Industrialists and vision special
ists from six Southeastern States
are expected to attend the Con
gress, which will be. held, on the
Georgia Tech campus. They will
hear a series of comprehensive
lectures which will show in con
rete manner how companies may
increase production from' five to
25 per cent by a scientifie vision
program in which employees’ eye
sight is checked, improved and
made to fit the job better..
With the rapid industrialization
of the South, attention:is being
directed, more and moxe," toward
s . - A .
scientific progress m};aigcrea?fimg
production, improving ' quality,
cutting down acciaggfips”poiled
work, and labor turnower. Indus
trial Vision is provfiz‘fil% 1 impor~
tant means toward ‘this® end, in
VETERANS GET REFUND
ON FAULTY GI HOMES - -
ATLANTA, Nov. ' 12<(AP) —
Georgia veterans are padding
their pockets with $122,066 to
compensate for overcharges, for
sagging floors and ‘eracked ceil
ings in their postwar homes.
Attorney General Eugene Cook,
in a report to the 1949 Georgia
Legislature, today cited 1,100
complaints from- Gl’s on houses
built since 1945. )
He said builders or . sellers al-
ready have paid $21,011 to 243
Georgia veterans to compensate
for faults. Voluntary settlements
now in progress will bring refunds
totaling $101,055 to 225 other vet
erans, Cook reported. -
The Attorney General has been
investigating veterans’ housing
since a resolution by the 1947
General Assembly directed him
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
CAPTAIN WILLWAL’I‘ER
SAPP (SAPHLOE), — The
friends anad relatives of Cap
tain - William Qfimf Sapp
(Saphloe), Mrs. K‘%;;L. Sapp,
Athens, Ga.; Miss # ,'_"":UVings‘
ton Sapp, New Haven, Conn.;
ir. and Mrs, Albert Dye, El
berton, Ga.; Mr., and Mrs. Ers
kine Wilcox, D&;roit, Mich.;
Mr. and Mrs. H tfi(m Sapp
and family, Detr i§ ich.; Mr.
and Mrs. J, T. Sgpf:, Asheville,
N C; Mr. and - Mrs. Richard
Livingston, Athers; <Ga.; * and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnell Warwick,
Fort ierceP, Fla.,tare invited
to attend the fu fiinfi'of Cap
tain ~ William %alt‘er Sapp
(SBaphloe), Sunday, Navember
14, 1948, at 3:30 p. m.'from the
residence, 540 West Hancock
avenue, with the Rev. J. C.
Gresham officiating. Intermeqt
Gospel Pilgrim cemetery. Mack
and Payne Funeral Home.
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Federation of Labor said the sales
tax would be fought bitterly by
labor. Rather, he said, higher in
come taxes should be assessed to
finance the educational expansion.
The president of the Georgia
Mercantile Association — H. P.
Allen—said his group opposes the
sales tax. But, he added “if it is
submitted to the people so they
can vote to tax, or not tax, them
selves — then everybody should
willingly abide by the result.”
“The people of Georgia should
understand clearly,” said Allen,
“that a sales tax would be paid
by each person each time he or
she made a purchase of any kind,
A sales tax would increase the
price of everything the house
wives and others buy.”
Incoming Governor Herman
Talmadeg said, “no comment.” He
pointed to his platform which
failed to mention specifically any
new taxes. Talmadge said repeat
edly during his campaign that any
new revenue measure should be
subject to a referendum by the
people.
The 1947 House nassed a three
per cent sales tax, with exemp
tions for food, fertilizer, medicine,
tobacco, liquor and other items.
But the measure was killed by the
State Senate.
hundreds of companies in Ameri
ca.
Opening day, Sunday, Novem
ber 14, will present Dr. Joseph
Tiffin, industrial psychologist,
Purdue University, and G. Luther
Weibel, personnel director, Mag
net Mills, Inc., Clinton, Tenn.
Others who will appear on the
three-day program include Dr.
Carl F. Shepard, director of re~
search, Northern Illinois College
of Optometry, Chicago, I 11.; E. W.
Howard, assistant personnel direc
tor, Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills,
Atlanta; R. S. Payne, assistant to
the president, Alabama Textile
Products Corp., Andalusia, Ala.;
Professors C. B. Foos and William
N. Cox Jr., Georgia Tech; Charles
T. McNary, personnel director,
Blue Bell, Inc., Greenshoro, N. C.;
and Sam Kendrick, president,
Southern Public Relations Insti
tute, Atlanta.
The Congress is being present
ed, in co-operation with Georgia
Tech, as a part of the public ser
vicep rogram of the Georgia Op
tometric Association. Dr. Fraser
B. Rayburn, Savannah, is presi
dent of the State group.
to probe ‘“alleged conspiracies and
fraudulent transactions.”
He told the incoming Legisla
ture that the federal government,
not the state, is the best source of
relief for veterans who think they
are victims of fraud.
Georgia laws, in fact are so
favorable to builders that veter
ans may hurt their case by pro
ceeding in state courts, Cook cau
tioned. He said federal laws are
strict and the Federal Housing
Expediter has established a large
legal staff to aid complaining vet
erans.
Cook suggested that Gl's take
their cast to one of the 17 Hous
ing Expediter’s offices in Georgia.
Mrs. Payne Only
Slightly Hurt
In Auto Accident
Mrs. Johnny Payne, Wilkinson
street, was carried to Saint Mary’s
Hospital following an automobile
accident late yesterday afternoon,
but was released shortly after her
injuries were deemed slight.
An ambulance attendant gave
the following information; Mrs.
Payne was thrown out of a car
driven by Mrs. Exelle Moorehead,
Athens, near Thomas Textile
plant at Whitehall. He said he be
lieved the car was turning a curve
when the door came open.
Civic Music Group
Membership Drive
Deadline Set Sat.
, Tomorrow night marks the
ciosing of the membership drive
lof the Athens Civic Music Group.
David Michael, president, said
definitely no memberships will
be accepted after Saturday.
He said no tickets to individ
ual concerts will be sold.
All workers are requested to
make a report on their progress
as soon as possible.
. Adult membership dues are
$6.00 and student dues are $3.00.
Dues can be paid at the Civic
Music headquarters in the Cham
ber of Commerce offices or to a
worker.
HowTo Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the trouble
to help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes. Tell your druggist
to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion
with the understanding you must like
the way it quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money back.
@tgughs,ChcstColds,Bronchifise
s B sIR M o i
University
News Briefs
ATHLETIC PROGRAM
- A recreational athletic pro
gram for male members of the
University of Georgia faculty has
been launched by the Intramural
sports department of the Univer
sity.
Meeting each Tuesday after
noon at 4 p. m., at Stegeman Hall,
the male members of the faculty
take part in various athletic
events including basgketball, vol
leyball and others.
KIWANIS SPEAKER
Dr. B. O. Williams, head of the
University of Georgia sociology
department, spoke Wednesday
before the Xiwanis Club of
Washington, Ga.
ROTARY SPEAKER
Lt. Col. J. T. L. Schwenk, se
nior infantry instructor at the
University of Georgia military
department, spoke Tuesday night
to the Rotary Club of Jefferson
on the “Far Eastern Situation.”
Before he was transferred to the
University fnilitary department,
Col. Schwenk served in the G-3
section of general headquarters
the Far East Command.
10TH DISTRICT MEETING
Nienteen members of; the Uni
versity College of Education class
in Social Studies in English at
tended the Tenth Distriet: meet
ing of Georgia Educatfion'sAsso
ciation in Elberton recertlyo Dr.
W. Theo Dalton, associate pro
fessor of education, ‘lß’ the’ class
instructor. nITIRRe
Speakers were J. G. Garrison,
president of GEA; Dr. M. D, Col
lins, 'state superintendent of
schools; and Dr. O. C. Aderhold,
head of the College of Educa
tion.
Miss Ruby Anderson, Athens
High School teacher and a dele
gate to the National Education
Association convention in Cleve
land last summer, presented a
report of the convention at the
meeting.
DEAN’'S LUNCHEON
The Atlanta alumni members
of Alpha Xi Delta will he the
guests of Mrs. Edith Stallings,
dean of women at the Univer
sity of Georgia, at a luncheon at
the Home Economics Tea Room
Friday.
DAIRY SHORT COURSE
Dr. D. H. Jacobsen, dairy plant
sanitation research worker for
the Cherry-Burrell Corporation,
Chicago, wlil speak at the Sev
enth Annual Dairy Manufactur
ing Short Course at the Univer
sity of Georgia, November 18-19,
on “The Operation of Can and
ottle Washers in Dairying.”
‘ Dr. Jacobsen was graduated
{from South Dakota State College
‘in 1926, and received his masters
|degree in' dairy manufacturing
from Washington State College
in 1930. His next eleven years,
with the exception of one year
~which was devoted to graduate
study at Towa State College, were
spent at South Dakota State Col
flege in teaching and research. He
‘received his Ph.D. at Ames Col
‘lege in 1936.
| Since 1944, Dr. Jacobsen has
been with the Cherry - Burrell
Corporation. He workea for three
'years as quality and production
supervisor for the Illinois Pro
ducers Creameries. At present he
is concerned chiefly with pro
!ducing and coordinating infor
mation on the effect of cleaning
’materials on the operation of can
and bottle washing machines, and
{dairy processing machinery.
NEW BUSINESS COURSE
{ ‘“Personal Adjustment to Busi
ness”’ is the title of a new course
introduced this fall by the Uni
versity of Georgia College of
Business Administration.
j “The coursc is designed to in
‘doctrinate the student in the cus
{toms of business organization,”
istated Dr. James E. Gates, dean,
|“as well as to make him acquaint
ied with the problems of getting
‘a job, getting along after he is on
‘the job, and making promotional
opportunities for himself.”
The course also attempts to
‘acquaint the student with the
‘various types of businesses and
jobs within businesses, to make
him fully aware of the services
of the Placement Bureau, and to
lay the groundwork for effective
lalumni relations.
MEETING IN WASHINGTON
| Dean Pauline Park Wilson and
|Dr. Maude Pye Hood are in
tWa\shimgtcm, D. C.,, attending the
meeting of the Land Grant Col
leges of America Association this
week. Dean Wilson as adminis
trator of the School of Home
Economics at the University and
Dr. Hood as chairman of research
reported on that phase of home
economics.
~ Plans will be made at this
meeting for continuing the Sou
thern Regicnal = research project
on housing preferences of which
Mrs. Hood is chairman also.
RESEARCH MEETING
R. H. Driftmier, head, agricul
tural engineering department of
the University of Georgia, is at
tending a series of meetings in
Washington, D. C. From Nov. 4-8
represented the University at a
meeting of the Advisory Commit
tees to the Agricultural Research
Administration of the Amercian
Society of Agricultural Engineers.
From Nov. 12-13 he will attend
the meeting of the Structures Di
vision of the Bureau of Plant In
dustry, Soils, and Agricultural En
gineering, U.. S. Department of
Agriculture,
Prof. Driftmier is chairman of
both committees; which meet an
nufmy to review the agricultural
—1 e i
SRN o e
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Satisfactory Family Program
Part Of Education Program
- BY PAULINE PARK WILSON
Since today's family provides
the framework in which children
learn their way of life, relation
ships established within any giv
en family sets the pattern for all
subsquent relations in an individ
ual’s life.
Mothers and fathers have a
challenge to meet and responsi
bility to assume in helping their
children to develop as individuals
and as functioning members of a
democratic society, Without par
ents’ intellectual recognition of the
child’s needs which must be met,
without their acceptance of demo
cratic principles within the fami
ly, without their imaginative use
of all home experiences as oppor
tunities for satisfactory living,
and without the daily practice of
these principles, they cannot pro
vide the kind of home life within
which a well adjusted personality
will develop. :
Suppose we consider some of
the factors important to satisfac
tory family living.
Every family member has the
right to have his needs met with
in the home. Good physical health
should be maintained. The child
should be given deep and sincere
love and affection. He needs to
have ample opportunity to be im
portant and to be valued for his
own worth. He needs to find sat
isfaction in work and accomplish
ment. Above all, he must be ac
cepted because he is a person, and
because he belongs to that par
ticular family. Unless these ba
sic needs are met satisfactorily,
his struggle to achieve them re
mains paramount. 3
Concern for the rights of others
is of extreme importance in fam
ily living. Each member must rec
ognize the rights of all other
members at the same time he un
derstands and appreciates his own.
The home wherein the father is
considered only the bread winner
of mother only a means of physi
cal comfort can never be a truly
satisfying family. Neither can the
home be one which disregards the
individual personalities of each
child. One mother’s statement that
“our children do not interest us
until they are nearly grown, so
we let them grow up like puppies”
makes one wonder at the outcome
of such a parental attitude. An
other equally disturbing thought
is presented by the mother who
considers her oldest daughter
“queer and freakish” in compari
son with the others in the family.
Each parent and each child in
meeting his own needs must have
them tempered by his apprecia
tion of and concern for the worth
of others.
| Living With Others
- Learning to live with others is
‘a major factor in family life. The
kind of relationships which exist
between children and parents es
tablish the pattern that will be
carried over to others in school,
on the job, in community life, and
ultimately in marriage. They
Jearn to accept readily their roles
of men or women if they have
seen these roles bring satisfaction
to their parents. Their very first
relationships are with parents. If
these are positive, satisfying, and
constructive the subsequent rela
tionship are good. Destructive and
unsatisfactory relations establish
ed early with parents also carry
over to other people.
Getting along with brothers and
sisters is more important than
many parents realize. Competi
tion among siblings unless under
stood and constructively directed
can establish relationships which
are undemocratic and destructive.
The boy who holds an exalted po
sition because he is a male child
not only derives a false opinion of
his own importance but may cre
ate in his sisters the feeling that
being a girl is undesirable. The
girl who gains all the family ap
probation and is shown marked
favoritism can produce similar
feelings. This was obvious in the
six-year-old boy who when told
that the girls should show their
pictures first said to ' his playmate
with some synicism, “You know,
Jerry, girls!” :
Chivalry is not good unless it
operates for all and represents a
basic courtesy and consideration.
The father who yells at his child
violates good taste for more than
the youngster who fails to say
“please” and “thank you.” Good
engineering research program of
the U. S. Department of Agricul
ture. He will also attend the meet
ing of the Association of Land
Grant Colleges and Universities,
Nov. 8-11. -
ADMITTED TO BAR
Four new members have been
named to the University of Geor
gia student editorial board of the
Georgia Bar Journal. Termed a
distinct honor by Prof. Meade
Feild, faculty adviser, who made
the announcement, appointments
were made on a'basis of scholar
astic standing. e
The board, composed of 18 stu
dents, submits case notes for the
Georgia Bar Journal, a quarterly
publication. New members are
John Kennedy, jr., Savannah;
Truett Smith, Camilla; Cecil J.
Olmstead, Savannah, and Hoyt
Whelchel, Moultrie.
UNIVERSITY VISTED
Miss Elizabeth Powell, super
visor of correspondence study and
extension classwork, University
of Georgia Division of General
Extension, recently returned from
a two-week conference with di
rectors in similar departments in
four universities.
Universities visited by Miss
Powell were Minnesota, Wiscon
sin, Chicago and Indiana.
“I was chiefly interested,” stat
ed Miss Powell, “in the office pro~
cedure and the methods of hand
ling records. We discussed various
courses offered by all the schools
and some that are not being of
fered here at the University.”
.
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To help relieve conges- g
tion, eo‘:x,ghlng: muscular Y/ !ggs
soreness, tubon waning W Vasoßue
manners are never outmoded but
serve to facilitate human relation
ships. They are a matter of form
into which consideration for oth
ers can be channeled.
Older siblings threatened by
their younger brothers and sisters
often become demanding and dic
tatorial in their defensiveness,
while the younger child may de
velop a sense of intense inferiori
ty or of deepndence. Then aagin
because of the unevenness of
sibling relationships the younger
child may become the dominating
and even domineering victor in
the competition between them.
Too often parents are unaware of
the negative aspect of their chil
dren’s relationships.
Group Decisions
Each and every member of a
family has the right to participate
in the group and should have a
voice in direction of the family.
Seldom are children allowed to
participate fully in group decis
sions. Family conclaves function
as true democracies in certain
families but in others they are
mere formalities which deceive no
one, especially the children do not
exist.
One mother could not under
stand the rebellion of her adoles
cent daughter because ‘“she has
always been allowed to make her
own decisions.” The daughter’s
analysis of the situation gave a
completely different picture. Her
decisions were always contingent
upon some stipulations of the
mother. Hence, the child felt more
controlled than if she had been
dominated in an outright fashion.
Finally the mothers grasped an
understanding of what she was
doing to her daughter. She made
a real effort to change matters
and after many thwarted efforts
convinced the girl of her sinceri
ty. Suspicion subsided and with it
the rebelliousness, too, but only
after the mother accepted some
justifiable criticism from her
daughter. Having a voice in home
affairs and being respected for it
prepares for effective group liv
ing.
_ Personal Satisfactions
Maintenance of a balance be
tween personal and group satis
factions is another important fac
tor in family development. Every
individual must find many per
sonal satisfactions. At the same
time, he must be aware of what
‘is good for the larger social group.
Helping children to find and
maintain a balance between these
two is the responsibility which
faces every family." When a child
learns that group needs are also
his needs in addition to his more
individual and personal desires,
he has taken on a concept that is
one of the basic principles oper
ating in democratic living.
The conflict of parental back
grounds may work against an in
tegrated home life. Community
and family patterns are often
stronger than any single family’s
'intellectualized democratic phil
osophy.
Even the most thoughful par
ents. must battle with. their own
habitaul reactions as well as with
the pressures which come from
relatives and community expec
tations. Such preconceived ideas
as “the head of the house,” ‘“the
boss,” “the little tyrant,” and
others must give way to more ef
fective democratic concepts.
No iother experience offers the
same 'opportunities for satisfac
tory living so early and so long as
does modern family life. Parents
not only can contribute to the per
sonal satisfaction of each family
member, but they can prepare
their children for the continuation
of satisfactory family living.
Responsibility for development
of the right kind of family living
for tomorrow rests with the par—}
ents of today.
,3 i
S in |
A T ‘ :
-,;,_:;-"~':§§:;"5'::¢'1~13 . R 1 i 2
omorrow s Leader
%ey * F Give your child the spiritual training while he is
A e s i
/‘ e i young so that he will grow up to understand the
(f , \%Mj .. values of clean living. If the kid gets into the habit
g o 8 ; of attending Church while a growing boy, he will
p B e = e \
;,Q, , always seek its solace when older. Today’s kids
1‘ J 5 i » will lead our Churches of tomorrow .. . they wiii
. *“ o direct our many civic organizations .. . take part
* § ?fif’ in our local, state, and national governments. Give
“w FEX LA Ll ; A
EM. e T your kid a break. Guide him right. Attend Chtirch
G mfiff with your child. He will thank you when he's
# i % g >
e v iy older. ;
/%'* P e, T
77 s, Ait L W
. .
This Message Contributed By
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Findley Dry Cleaners ® Thornton Bros. Paper Co.
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R S K DR
DR. JAMES PATTON. JR.
Dr. James Patton, Jr.
To Speak Sunday At
First Presbyterian
The current Stewardship Series
at the First Presbyterian Church
will be brought to a close Sunday
with an address by Dr. Jomes G.
Patton, jr., of Atlanta, Georgia.
The subject of Dr. Patton’s talk
will be “Thirteen Weeks of Hap
piness.” .
Dr. Patton is a native of Deca
tur, Georgia. For the past five
years he has served as Secretary
of the Stewardship Commitiee to
the Southern Presbyterian church.
Prior to assuming this church
wide post he held pastorates in
Atlanta, Georgia and at two loca-
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tions in Vi-rg*iénia. Dr. Pfttpn is a_
forceful speaker and will bring a
| strong mes%ge on stewardship.
\ Other ‘speakers on 'prévious,
| Sundays in the series whick Dr.
'Patton will conclude have - been
Kenneth S. Keyes, President. of
| Keyes Realty Company, " Miami,
‘ Florida; Dr. H. Kerr Taylor, Exé-
OF THE sth WARD
If I should not be able to see each voter per
sonally (and it will probably be physically impos
sible for me to see everyone), it will not be be
cause | am not interested in each one’s problems.
It will only be because time prevents a personal
chat with everyone. .
Many friends in all sections of the ward and in
all ve,j,alks of life have offered to talk to anm
who wants to find out about me.
cutive Secretary of the Presbyte~
rian Program of Progress, Atldnta;”
Georgia; and nggp’r‘u Sibiey,
Vice Pfesident " Trea of
the Monarch Mills, Union, South
Carolina. it ey
A ecordial invitation is extended
ta*visitors to hear Dr, Patton on:
Sunday . 3 W
Bick Thompson
PAGE FIVE