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UNUSUAL/Z CANDIES /Q
We are approved by the Commodity
Credit Corporation for the storage :
of 1948 Loan Cotton.
We are in a position to handle the over
_ flow cotton from your warehouse.
Warehousemen should phone or write
for further information.
45 GEORGIA-CAROLINA -
- WAREHOUSE & COMPRESS CO.
i : J. L. BARTLEY, Vice-President-Treasurer
.. Phene 2-5381 P. 0. Box 118
! AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
BPevce of Mind all through the Night
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- with a eonvenient Extension Telephone
within arm’s reach
Sleep is sounder and nights are safer when an
_‘ei,xfeneion‘ teicPh‘pne‘is on guard.
Thig is one of the many advantages an extension
tékphope‘ provides for the home and family.
" An extensian saves time and steps. It improves
your service and makes your telephone more
valuable by increasing its usefulness. Extension
telephones can now be installed in homes at
~ small cost, You don’t need to write us or come
to the office. Just call our Business Office.
. Orders Jfor main telephone service are some
’%f W delayed because of shortages of central
3“ ‘!;W other equipment. which are not
;3: f‘, nvol i n the. msta{lakon of extension tele-
Lo ‘f"fi&flwxs why you can now get extension
f§. telephon . though there may still be delays
V fimmg main telephone service |
. SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
BASAE b e ; tncorporated
Advances In Cancer Research
Described By Mrs. Ritchie
| Several new advances. in can
‘(-er research were disclosed by
scientists addressing the ''recent
[annual ~meeting of the American
[Cancer Society, in New York,
Mrs -H. B. Ritchie, Deputy Nat
ional Commander, said today.
Mrs. Ritchie who atended the
meeting, .added that while no
new cures for cancer have come
to light, “a good deal of progress
evidently is being made .in de
tection " and diagnosis, and many
lives arg beirg saved with early
treatment by surgery and rad
iation.” : ‘
She said that even Jung cancer,
rone of the most difficult kinds
of cancer to diagnose and treat,
and regarded until a few years
| 480 as one nundred percent fatal,
now is being cured in an appre
ciable number of cases.
Dr. Alten Ochsner of Tulane
University, reported that 7.7 per
cent .of all cases of lung cancer
which came to his attention—in
cluding early. and late, operable
and -inoperable, willing and un
lwilling\ to undergo surgical re
moval of the cancerous part of a
hung———survive for at least five
|l i
~ Dr Ochsnér. reported that of
590 cases in his' elinic, 334 were
operated upgn, and eancers were
resected J", Nings of 212.
About twenty:, 'f‘ gnt of the lat
ter lived at legst/five years after
the operation, Oply. 30 percent of
the resections Wege undertaken to
cure cancer; but 1e remaining 70
percent ~of “she/ patients -derived
considerable conifort and additi
ona! months of usefu! life from
palliative surgery,
Dr. Peter A. Herbut of Jeffer
son college, Philadelphia, told the
meeting that he is now able to
diagnose lung cancer 95 percent
accurately through microscopic
study of secretions withdrawn
from bronchial tubes. Mrs. Ritchie
commented that this almost trip
les the accuracy of standard tests
under which a'bit of suspected
tissue is -exercised and studied.
Becaus2 highly strained technic
ians are needed for the new form
of diagnosis, howewver, it is not
expected ' that the tests will be
be used in general practice for
some time. A
Virus Theory
Among . the . most interesting
highlights, said Mrs. Ritchie, was
the report by Dr. Ryjun Kinoshita,
eminent Japanese - scientist, . that
he had discovered a new rat can
cer apparently virus-caused. This
gave new impetus to the wvirus
theory and to its implications that
cancer.some. day may be contrcl-
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CONVENIENCE IN THE KITCHEN
THE RANNFR-AERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
led by measures that have stamp
ed out smallpox and other dis
eases caused by viruses.
Diseases of Civilization
Dr. Charles S. Cameron, the
Society’s medical and scientific
director, called cancer “a disease
of civilization,” pointed ouil that
throughout the world, the ean
cer death rate rises with techno
logical and cultural advances, such
as high literacy rates, improved
medical care and- superior liv
ing standards
~ Dr. Cameron attributed this
seeming paradox primarily to in
creasing longevity as medical
science conquers infectious dis
cases. Cancer strikes most com
monly among people forty and
older.
Dr. John R. Heller, director of
the National Cancer Institute,
told the delegates that new stud
ies are being made to identify
and eliminate cancer hazards in
industry. He asserted that among
the causes ni cancer are over-ex
posure to radiation, the escape of
cancer-producing chemicals into
the air, water and soil, and the
constant handling of such chemi
cals as arsenicals, tar products,
chromates, nickel carconyl, ben
zol, soot, paraffin oil, cresote and
various dye intermediaries. He
suggested that the new synthetic
oil industry may hold hazards,
Radicasetive Chemicals
Mrs. Ritchie said that several
experts discussed the wuse of
chemicals made radioactive ‘in
cyclotrons and atomic ovens, in
the treatment of cancer and in
tracing the body chemistry.
Dr. Rulon W. Rawson of M
morial Hospital, New York, re
ported that radioactive ‘iodine
had been beneficial in relieving a
few patients with cancer of the
thyroid. No cures were effected,
however.
Dr. Jahn H. Lawrence of the
University of California Radia
tion I.aboratory, told the meeting
that soluble radioactive phos
phate and calloids had given a
“nearly normal iife expectancy”
to sufferers from polycythemia
vera, an uncontrolled multiplica
tion of red blood cells, and added
comfortable months tec the lives
of some chronic leukemia vietims.
Dr. Bertram V. A. Low-Beer of
the University of California De
'partment of Radiology, reported
that phosphorus concentrates in
tumor tissues. When the phos
phcrus is made radioactive, its
presence—and consequently, the
Jocation of the tumor—can be' de
tected with a Geiger - Muller
counter. By this means. Dr. Low-
Beer has been able to determine
the site ard malignancy of a
iarge number of breast tumors.
| Dr. Norman L. Treves of New
York veported that castration had
lstop;:-ed pain. caused healing anhd
apparently added months to 'the
lives of zeveral elderly men Suf
fering from breast cancer.
“Progress is being made against
cancer,” said Mrs. Ritchie, in
summing up these reports.
“There is a long way to go, how
ever, before all cancers will hLe
cured. Under American Canecer
Society grants, a great deal of
research is being pressed — and
results are being obtained — in
scores of the nation’s finest lab
oratories.”
Snow is not frozen water, but
water vapor that cyrstallizes di
rectly into ice.
Chicago averages about 58
snowfalls a year while New York
has an awverage of about 35.
FUNERAL NOTICE
| (Colored)
EDWARDS, MRS. SALLIE MAE
—of Crawford, Ga., passed away
’ at the residence Monday, No
. vember 22, 1948. She is sur
vived by the fallowing relatives:
‘ husband, Mr. Pat Edwards; chil
dren, Master Pat Edwards, jr.,
! and Miss Annie Lee Edwards,
| all of Crawford, Ga., mother,
Mrs. Celia Echols, Winder, Ga,;
sisters and brother and other
relatives, including, Miss Cula
- B. Cunningham, Winder, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Jewel, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Fleming, Statham,
Ga.; Miss Firdie M. Cunning
ham, Mr. and Mrs. James Flem
ing, Mr. and Mrs. John R.
Smith, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Mr.
Joe B. Cunningham, Suffolk,
Va.; Mr. Ollie Cunningham, Mr.
Eddie C. Cunningham, Statham,
Ga.; Mr. Willie C. Cunningham,
Winder, Ga.; and Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Wall, Dayton, O,
Funeral services were held to
day, Wednesday, November 24,
1948 and 2 p. m. from the Beth
ienem Baptist Church, Ogle
thorpe Couaty, with the Rev.
P. E. Dorsey and other min
isters officiating. Interment,
Bethlehem Cemetery. Mack and
Payne Funeral Home,
~ \*»\‘%%
0 TN .
I OIL BASE-WASHABLE
PASTEL WALL PAINT
AFELTON~SIBLEY Product
- 1863 . 1948 Eighty-five colorful years of quality .
OCONEE HARDWARE 1
378 E. Broad Sipog. i 1 l
. R
Time, 1880 Place, New Orleans
.. Well-to-do Louis Durand car
ries on a correspondence court
ship with a Miss Julia Russell,
whom he has never seen. When
she finally comes from St. Louis
to marry him, he is amazed to find
her young and ravishingly beauti
ful—entirely different from what
’he had been led to expect. Certain
behavior of hers puzzles him from
the first but not until a letter ar
rives from her supposed sister—
\Miss Russell’s sister—does he real
ize the woman he married is an
‘imposter. Before he can face her
‘with it, she disappears with
$50,000, withdrawn from his bank
aceount, The police commissioner,
after hearing Durand’s story, tells
him to come back next day.
— #* W &
XVI
“Have a chair, Mr. Durand,”
the commissioner said, when Dur
and called on him next day.
Durand did so, waited.
The commissioner collected his
words, ranged them in mind, and
at last delivered themy “I’'m sorry.
I find that there’s nothing we can
do for you. Nothing whatever.
And by we, I mean the the police
department of this city.” |
“What?” Durand was stunned.
He could hardly speak for a mo
ment. “You—you mean a strange
woman, a stray, can come along,
perpetrate a mock marriage with
a man, abscond with $50,000 of his
money—and—-and you say you
can do nothing abuot it—?” .
' “Just a moment,” the commis
rsion said, speaking with patient
kindliness. “I understand how you
feel, but just a moment.” He of
fered him the certificaie of mar
riage which he had retained from
the previous day.
~ Durand crushed it in his hand,
swept it aside in a disgusted fling.
“This—this valueless forgery—!”
“The first point which must be
made clear before we go any fur
ther is this,” the commissioner
told him. “This is not a counter
feit. That marriage is not a mock
one.” He underscored his words.
“That woman is legally your wife.”
Durand’s stupefaction this time
was even worse than before. He
was aghast. “She is not Julia Rus
sell! That is not her name! If I
am married at all, I am married
to Julia Russell, whoever and
wherever she may be—This is a
marriage by proxy, if you will call
it that—But this woman was
someone else!”
“There is where you are wrong.”
The commissioner told off each
word with the heavy thump of a
single fingerpad to the desk top.
“The woman who stood beside you
in the church was married to you
in person, and not by proxy for
another. No matter what name she
gave, false or true, she is your
lawfully wedded wife, in civil
law and in religious canon; she
and only she and she alone. And
nothing can make her otherwise.
You can have it annulled, of
course, on the ground of misrep
resentation, but that is another
matter—"
“Great heavens!” Durand groan
ed.
The commissioner rose, went
to the water cooler, and drew him
a cup of water. He ignored it.
- “And the money?” he said at
last, exhaustedly. “A woman can
rob a man of his ‘life savings,
under your very noses, and you
cannot help him, you cannot do
anything for him? A woman can
walk into a man’s house and—"
“No. Now hold on. That brings
us back again to where we were.
A woman cannot do that, and re
main immune to reprisal. But a
woman, just any woman at all,
did not do that, in your case.”
“But-—--
“Your wife did that. And the
law cannot touch her for it. You
gave her signed permission to do
just what she did. Mr. Simms at
the bank has shown me the au
thorization card. Under such cir
cumstances, where a joint account
exists, a wife cannot steal from
her husband, a husband from his
wife.”
! Durand let his shoulders slump
forward, crushed. “You don’t be
{ lieve me, then,” was all he could
l think of to say. “That there’s been
some sort of foul play concealed
in the background of this. That
one woman started from St. Louis
to be my wife, and another ap
peared here in her place—"
“We believe you, Mr. Durand.
We believe you thoroughly. Let
me put it this way. We agree with
you thoroughly in theory; in prac
; tice we cannot lift a hand to help
you. It is not that we are unwill
l ing. If we were to make an arrest,
we could not hold the person, let
ialone force restitution of the
funds. The whole case is circum
stantial. No crime has been prov
.en committed as yet. You went to
‘the dock to meet one woman, you
met another in her stead. A sub
istitution in itself is no crime. It
may be, how shall [ say it, a per
'sonal treachery, a ferm of trickery,
but it is no crime recognized by
law. Mr. advice to you is—"
Durand smiled witheringly.
“Forget the whole thing.”
. “No, no. Not at all. Go to St.
‘Louis and start working from that
end. Get proof that a crime, either
of abduction or even something
worse, was committed against the
,true Julia Russell, Now listen to
my words carefully. I said get
proof. A letter in someone else’s
‘handwriting is proof only that—
it is a letter in someone else’s
‘handwriting. Dresses that are too
big are only—dresses that are too
big. I said get proof that a criine
was committed. Then take it—"
He wagged his forefinger solemnly
‘back and forth, like a pendulum—
“not to us, but to whichever au
thorities within whose jurisdic
tion you have the proof to show it
hfppened. That means, if on the
river, to whichever onshore com
munity lies closest to where it
happened.”
Durand rose with wearied de
liberation, ran two fingers down
the outer sideward crease of each
trouser leg to restore them. “I’ll
go up to St. Louis and start from
them,” he said with tight-lipped
grimness.
(To Be Continued)
Judge Seeks
Divorce |
For Himself
ATLANTA, Nov. 24 —(AP) —
Fulton Superior Court Judge Vir
lyn B. Moore, who has granted
hundreds of divorces, is seeking
one for himself.
Judge Moore filed the divorce
suit last April charging his wife,
Mrs. Dorothy C. Moore, with cruel
treatment.
His petition said they were mar
ried Dec. 28, 1938, and lived to
gether as man and wife until Au
gust, 1947, It charged Mrs. Moore
with “continual fussing, nagging
and abusive and insulting re
marks.”
Mrs. Moore filed an answer 1o
the petition in which she denied
the charges and asked for alirao-
Y-
The bitterly contsted case be
gan before a jury yesterday with
Judge W. W. Munday of Cedar
town presiding.
Mrs. Moore’s attorneys read a
statement in which she pictured
the Judge as “cold, calculating and
mercenary.”
Her answer alleged that he con
sidered Qis marriage “more of a
business arrangement” than a
family relationship and accused
him of “continual fussing” over
finances.
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TOMORROW
NEW YORK, Nov. 24—(AP) —
Two games which mean little in
the national picture but rate four
stars and fireworks displays with
the schools concerned top tomor
row’s skimpy Thanksgiving day
grid program. |
Pennsylvania and Cornell, two
traditional Eastern rivals, clash at
Franklin Field in Philadelphia for
the Ivy League championship and
for sectional runner-up honors to
Army.
The Texas Longforns and Texas
Aggies, once mighty co-powers of
the Southwest Conference but now
fallen on leaner days, will meet in
Austin,
For a change, no bowl game
scouts will attend the two tussles
with rich contracts in their hip
pockets. Penn,and Cornell shun
post-season activities. Neither of
the Texas elevens is a likely can
didate.
Kansas-Missouri
The third Thanksgiving game of
high sectional interest matches
Kansas and Missouri on the lat
ter’s filed at Columbia, with sec
ond place in the Big Seven Con
ference at stake. Each has a 4-1
loop record. Oklahoma has the ti
tle clinched.
The day’s leading attraction in
the South pits Wake Forest against
South Carolina. Wake Forest has
a 4-2 standing in the Southern
Conference and could climb into
fifth place in the 16-team loop by
winning.
Utah, leading the Big Six Con-.
ference with four straight victor
ies, will be out to cliucn honors in
the Rocky Mountain region by
winning its = final . against Utah
State at Salt Lake City.
Pistols Found
In Cars Of
Two Strikers
Rome; Ga.; Nov.' 23—(AP)—
Three loaded automatic pistols
were found in the automobile of
two Celanese strikers last night
when a blockade of State Highway
Patrol cars stopped the vehicle
which had earlier been reported
speeding toward Rockmart, Floyd
county deputies said today.
The wvehicle was said to have
been driven by L. E. Womack, 24,
of Celanese, and occupied by Oscar
Locklear, 32, of a Klassing street
address in Rome. Both are mem
bers of Local 689 of the Text
ile Workers Union on strike at
Celanese. it was reported.
| Reckless Driving
A Avarrant charging Womack
with speeding and reckless driv
ing was taken by Special Deputy
S. F. Dean, while State Highway
patrolmen from the Cedartown
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1945
Sales People
Ready For
Christmas
" You may think that it too
early for ihe -sales people t |
dreading Christmas shopping, bug
they are already dusting off theip
most comforiable shoes, Accopg.
ring to interviews with then, the
real Christ.mfi shopping iy
start in just about a week.
Most of the people behing the
'cnunter gave the day ass,
'‘Thanksgiving for peopie to start
‘purchasing their gifts.
| A jeweler, said that the war
a stop to some of the lasi mj,.
ute rush. He explained that cy.
]tomers had to purchase gifts early
|curing the war to ship them over.
seas to their sons and sweet.
hearts and now the early shop
pirg seems to be a hangover
from those years:
The florists have big rusheg
(the night before. - Forgetful pec.
ple remember a dear old aunt
hack in Athons and wire flowers
to her cn Christmas Eve.
Generally, jewelers don’t hpye
to contend with peopie who can't
make upy thefr mind becayse
they have decided what they
want by looking at the illustrat
ed advertisements in local papers
'and magazines.
' ‘l'ne- manager. of ‘a home appli
ance '‘company agreed with him,
He said that when a person comes
in “his . store that the customer
usually " has ‘@ brand name ip
mind and also the price he wants
to-pav. “If dishow him anythins
more expensive he blows his top!”
headquarters 'prepared additional
charges against the driver for the
same offense in Polk county. The
two men arrested were taken into
custody about six miles south of
Rockmart after a wild chase from
the city limits of 'Rome. Officers
said at times the car ahead topped
“80_to 90 miles an hour.”
Warrants charging Womack and
Locklear with assault to murder
W. M. Johnson. Celanese emyloye,
of a ‘Dean street adivass, came to
day. after alleged shooting infy
his parked autcmobile at-his home
He charged th 2 two men fired at
Johnson and his wife as they sat
in < front of their . home. Floyd
county officers were -passing at
the time and. heard the shoot
ing, thev said.: They immediately
gave chase.
Relicve
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