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Vol. CXVI, No. 311.
Georgia
Opens Mon.
.
Over 500 Bills
Expected To Jam
. -
Six-Week Session
ATLANTA, Jan. B—(AP)—A
new Georgia legislature will con
vene Monday with a dollar mark
hanging over its head.
A flood tide of more than 500
bills drafted by the State Law De
partment for individual legisla
tors was ready to jam an expected
six-weeks session with action,
color and controversy.
But the top question was the
fate of proposals to raise $42,000,-
000 in new taxes to pay for more
state services, mostly - public
schools. And no one could be
found who has dared write a spe
cific tax program yet.
Before 259 members of the as
wembly wade into the business of
charting the state’s future, Gov.
Herman Talmadge had a busy
round of week-end caucuses to
iron out an administration pack
age for them. His own supporters
still were debating details of two
top programs. :
One of these was a new regis
tration of voters, an overhaul of
registration machinery. and new
voting qualifications— all aimed
at curbing the negro vote.
A second controversy centered
about the Talmadge plan for a
three-man constitutional highway
board and a down-the-line shake
up to “take road building out of
polities.”
Accord Foreseen
But there was little doubt the
governor would consolidate his
forces over the week-end and
present his full program in a
“state of the union” address
Tuesday or Wednesday morning
—as soon as the assembly com
pletes routine organization. g
Most observers expected the
new governor and the new legis
lature to get along well. Chief
cause of concern among adminis
tration forces was ' the record
number of lawmakers who never
have served before — 97 out of
205 houme members. “Freshmen”
are regarded as less predictable.
The Talmadge package embrac
ing most of his campaign pledges,
was slated for early action. It
included hills to extend the county
unit system to general elections
(it applies only in primariss gow)
free drivers’ licenses for veterans,
a merit system and pension plan |
for the highway patrol, a $3,000-‘
000 fund for rural hospitals, and |
a new state-wide forest fire pro
tection service. ‘
Aside from the administration
program, many battleground bills
were ready for submission by in
dividual lawmakers. They run the‘
gamut from a statewide dry bill
barring sale of liquor, beer or
wine to a bill for satewide liquor
stores owned. operated by the!
state.
Education Bills ‘
Another headline proposal is
the $83,000,000 minimum founda-(
tion program for education: It
calls not only for $33,000,000 more
money for schools and colleges,
but a revision in distribution and
administration of school funds.
Rep. Charles Gowen of Bruns
wick will launch another fight for
home rule — a move to let cities
and counties adopt legislation af
fecting onty their own locality.
Hundreds of “local bills” re
vamping city and county govern
ments were ready for action by‘
the assembly, ;
Talmadge is expected to present
his budget recommandation in a
separate message during the sec
ond week of the assembly. He ap
parently wants mere - time . for
sentiment to jell on the thorny
linancial problem. Present plans
ml]} for a $108,000,000 ‘ regular
budget, along the lines of present
expenditures, and, a $42,000,000
tontingent budget hinging on new
taxes,
4 Port Issue . ‘
Also at stake are proposals for
@ §20,000,000 bond issue by the
State Port Authority, a compul-
Sory - pre-martial examination,
Georgia’s role in a plan for re
gmnal‘ college education, a new
state fire safety council, retirement |
for ‘employes” under the present
S‘élte merit system, prison expan-
Slon, and many other issues. |
_ Leadership in both'the House
and Senate is slated- to be strong-.
ly pro-Talmadge. The House line
\{p calls for Rep. Fred Hand of
‘Tl,:.t.('he” as speaker,” Rep: Frank’
Witty of Mitchell as floor lead
¢, Rep. George Smith of Emman
(“,’j; as speaker protem, Rep Frank
Jross of Toccoa as chairman of
e Ways and Means Committee,
Sf:'~“]oe Boone of Irwinton as‘
:TK,
ATHENS AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy and warmer
today, |
GEORGIA — Parfly cloudy
and warm Sunday, Mostly
cloudy with geccasional show
¢'s Sunday night apd Mon
day. Colder and wnidy Mon
day and in mountain Sections |
late Sunday night. _ |
ey 1
TEMPERATURE
Highest .., (0% oo tis <t g
Lowest ... 20 i o
Mean .... il oy
Normal iy inad- dund B
RAINFALL
Inches lagt 4 hours .. .. .00
Total since January 1 ... 2.26
Excess since January 1 .. .99
Average January rainfall, 4.26
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Associated Press Service
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A HELICOPTER IN NIGHT FLIGHT—The U. S. Navy
HelicopterHO3Sl is ready to take off at Washington
on a night fiight—and what a sight to see! The tips of
the whirling rotor are eguipped with lights which give
this grotesque appearance as the “copter” ascends.
The broad, nearly vertical light path is made by the
exhaust. The ship is based at the Naval Air Test center
at Patuxent, Md.-— (AP Wirephoto.)
ONLY 83 CASES
Juvenile Court Sets
Record Low In 48
BY GEORGE ABNLEY, JR.
Juvenile delinquency is on the decline in Athens.
This tact was made evident vesterday in a summariza
tion of cases in Clarke County Juvenile Court by Judge
Arthur 8. Oldham.
He said that 1948 was a record
breaker for the county since less
boys and girls, who had not at
tained their sixteenth birthday,
appeared in this court during the
past year than any year since he
took office in 1940.
A total of 83 youths appeared
\before Judge Oldham in 1948
compared with 87 in 1947, 100 in
1946 and 112 in 1945. Appearing
in court in 1948 were 35 white
boys, 29 colored boys, 11 white
girls, and eight colored girls.
While 931 juvenile cases have
been before him since .he suc
ceeded the late Judge J. D. Brad
well in September 1940, the pres
ent judge emphasized that 1948
was the best year as to the num
ber of cases. ;
Judge Oldham added that he
was not at liberty to make public
other facts of the cases since the
law prescribed that the hearings
be conducted privately and the
records withheld from public in
spection. “And this is a good law,”
the Judge said, "‘“because few
youngsters would be in trouble if
they had received.bettér care and
attention, and many of them, cer
tainly the majority, do reform and
should not go through life with
the knowledge that juvenile rec
(Continued On Fage Two)
MAYOR CALLS CITY COUNCIL
HEARING ON CIVIC HALL ISSUE
Session Next Friday Result Of
Chamber Of Commerce Petition
A called meeting of the M:
Friday, January 14, at 8 o’cl
ing from the Beard of Direc
merce in connection with the
paney of Civie Hall.
‘The meeting of the Council
was called by Mayor Jack R.
Wells, at the request of the
Chamber of Commerce directors.
The Mayor stated yesterday
that it has been the policy of the
“present Mayor and Council to
give the citizens hearings when
cver requested and I am calling
{he Council into special session
in this instance as a matter of
course. So it was not necessary
for the Chamber of Commerce to
take court action to obtain a
privilege and courtesy the Mayor
and Council has invariably ac
corded all citizens as a matter of
right.”
Text of Statement :
The text of Mayor Wells'
statement follows:
“In compliance with a request
by the Board of Directors of the
Athens Chamber of Commerce, I
am calling a special meeting eof
the Mayor and Council for Fri
day, January 14, at & p. m.
o'clock, for the purpose of giving
tae Di;recto;s of the Chamber of
Commerce an opportunity to pre
sent to the Mayor and Council
their claim to possession and oc
cupancy of Civic Hall,
kS X ¥
80-Y ear-o Old
Digs Own Grave;
“Life Uncertain”
SCARBOROUGH, Maine,
Jan, B.—(AP)—An 80-year-old
man commented today, “Life is
teco uncertain’ as he finished
digging his own grave,
Johm Scoit Pilisbury, a na
tive of this town, has complet
ed arrangements for his own
funeral, Pillsbury dug for three
hours with a pick and shovel
yesterday and finished his
grave in one additional hour
today. He was assisted by his
nephew,
A retired farmer, trucker and
road commissioner, he explain
ed he had a strong dislike for
the procedure—sometimes used
here in the winter—gs placing
the dead in a receiving tomb
until final burial is made in
warmer weather,
¥ X
avor and Council will be held
lock fer the purpose of hear
tors of the Chamber of Com
. latter’s possession and occu-
[ “It +has been’ the' policy of the
present Mayor and Council ta
‘give the citizens hearings when
ever requested and I am calling
the Council into special session in
this instance as a matter of
course. So it was not necessary
for the Directors of the Chamber
of Commerce to take court action
to obtain a privilege and courtesy
the Mayor and Council has in
variably accorded to all citizens
as a matter of right,
“I have been informed that the
Board of Directors of the Cham
ber of Commerce were told that
I would refuse to call the Council
into session to hear from them. If
1 was so quoted, I have been mis
represented. . e e
“Action Unthinkable™
41 have aiso been told that cer
tain persons reported that I in
tended to recommend to the
Council that the Junior Assem
bly Clinic be evicted from the
building erected for that pur
pose. Such action by the Mayor
and Council is unthinkable. The
rumor attributing such intent to
s was a despicable act and does
no credit to its creator or those
who have spread it. The Junior
SERVING ATHENS AND NORTHEAST GEORGIA OVER A CENTURY
ATHENS, CA., SUNDAY, JANUARY 9, 1949,
Israel Shoots Down Five
British Fighters On Patrol
RAF Pilots Are Told 'T'o Regard
All Jewish Planes As Hostile
TEL AVIV, Israel, Jan. B.— (AP) —The Jewish air
force and anti-aircraft shot down at least four British
planes over the still sputtering Egyptian front, Israel an
nounced today.
(British said five planes were
missing from missions . Friday,
and accused the Jews of shooting
them down. A “strong protest” is
being lodged with Israeli repre
sentatives at the United Nations,
the foreign office said in London,
and the Air Ministry said that as
a result of the “unprovoked at
tack” orders had been given its
pilots to regard all Israeli aircraft
encountered over Egyptian terri
tory henceforth as hostile. The
British said one attack was 15
miles inside Egyptain territory.
(At the same time, the British
foreign office announced that
British troops have been sent to
guard the Trans-Jordan port of
Aqgaba on the Red Sea to back up
her mutual defense pact with
King Abullah.
(The clash took place as other
dispatches disclosed that Britain
has instituted armed air patrols
along the Trans-Jordan and
’Egyptain borders as a strong
strong warning to Israeli not to ir}-
terfere with British interests in
the Middle East).
An official Isreali spokesman
said four of five planes shot down
in the Rafa border region were
British.
Pilot Captured
He said one of the pilots bailed
out, was captured and proved to
be an officer of the RAF. The
burned body of another pilot was
found in the ruins of an RAF
Spitfire, he added. Fate of the
other pilots was not known but
they were presumed to be dead.
A fifth plane shot down in the
area was Egyptain, the spokes
man said. Fighters yesterday
‘morning before the 2 p. m. cease
fire went into effect with Egypt.
‘'The other two were shot down
l in the afternoon.
.~ The encounters took place, the
spokesman declared, after ‘“ene
my gireraft” had strafed Jewish
forces. e
N. N. Notified
The captured flier was identi
fied as flying officer Timothy
John McElhaw, 22, of the RAF’s
Aeconnaissance squadron ..00.
208.
The government said it was
communicating its version of the
.
Miners Welfare
Program Begun
WASHINGTON, Jan. B—(AP)—
John L. Lewis began today to put
into operation the United Mine
Workers’ far reaching program of
free hospital and medical service
to ailing coal miners.
The service will be provided by
the UMW welfare and retirement
fund, of which Lewis is chief trus
tee. A2O cent royalty on each ton
of coal finances the fund, now
building up at $100,000,000 a year.
From this, Lewis, the union’s
president, has announced he plans
eventually to finance all medical
and hospital care for the 400,000
soft coal miners. A separate fund
is being used for Pennsylvania’s
80,000 hard coal diggers.
Assembly Clinic is a function of
the City Government under the
Department of Health. The pres=
ent Mayor and Council were the
first to appropriate public funds
to the support of the fine work
this Clinic has carried on for the
!community, and it was my priv
ilege to recommend such apprc-,
priation in the 1948 Annual
Budget.
l “I regret that the Directors of
the Chamber of Commerce have
seen fit in their letter to the
Mayor and Council to phrase
their communication so that it
amounts to a charge that the
Mayor and Council acted unethi=
cally and arbitrarily in adopting
the ordinance affecting the
Chamber of Commerce’s occu
pancy of Civic Hall. But that
charge laid against the members
of Council and the Mayor, al
though naturally resented, will
not be allowed to influence us in'
our actions.
| “I have not made a single
;stabement in private or public
designed to discredit the Cham
ber of Commerce, In fact, I make
a personal contribution to its
maintenance which, while not as
large as that made by some bus
inesses or individuals, compares
favorably in size with that of
some of those who undertake to
speak for that organization,
~ “I wish to assure the Directors
of the Chamber of Commerce
and the people of Athens that all
of the members of the Council
and I are desirous of having all
the facts in this case given a
thorough airing.
l “JACK R, WELLS, Mayor.”
incident to the United Nations im
mediately.
Presumably' the captured Brit
ish flier will be released.
Meanwhile the cease-fire on
Palestine’s southern border still
was shaky.
(Abdel Rahman Azzam Pasha,
secretary general of the Arab
league, said in Cairo he believed
fighting would be resumed if the
Jews do not carry out the U. N.
Security Council resolution of
Nov. 4 orderoing a withddrawal
in the Negev to the Jewish posi
tion of Oct. 14. Egypt said yes
terday she was ordering a cease
fire on the condition the resolu
tion was carried out.) .
Phone Users Told Not
To Pay Rate Increase
Statement By Public Service
Chairman Launches Bitter Fight
ATLANTA, Jan. B.— (AP) —Chairman Walter Mec-
Donald of Georgia’s Public Service Commission today
told telephone users not to pay a recently imposed 50
cants to $2.75 rate hike. ;
McDonald’s statement apparent
ly was the beginning of a bitter
end fight by the commission to
curb the rate-making powers of
Southern Bell Telephone Com
pany.
A commission member who ask
| ed that his name not be used said
‘the fight probably would be car
ried into.the General Assembly
and through. the courts to the
State’s highest {ribunal. * |
In advising ‘telephone subscrib
'ers not te pay the increase, Mc
\Donald charged the telephone
company was “without ‘authority”
from either the commission or the
courts to impose the rates put in
to effect Dec. 23. . J
One phase of the attack now
under consideration, said this com
mission member, is the issuance of
an order by the GPSC fixing low
er rates than those put in effect by
the phone company.
By carrying the battle to the
General Assembly, he added, the
commission hopes to gain permis
sion to examine the telephone
company’s operating expenses.
State Law Cited
“Most of the federal regulatory
acts and state laws provide,” he
said, “that a public utility company
is entitled to rates which will give
it a fair return under ‘honest, eco
namical and efficient manage
ment’.
“This is,” he eontinued, “incor
porated into the regulations of
railroads, motor carriers, express
companies, airplanes, steamships,
and interstate telephone com
panies, 4
“However, under the recent rul
ing of the Georgia Supreme Court
the Public Service Commission
cannot inquire into a company’s
operating expenses unless it can
prove fraud is involved.
“This is an unusual situation in
that it puts the burden upon the
rate payer rather than upon the
telephone company to prove that
the rate is reasonable.”
In conneection with the advice
not to pay the increase, McDonald
said the court had recognized it
was powerless to fix rates, but that
under a ‘“novel” line of reasoning
the court has in effect turned the
company loose to make its own
rates. :
“The action of the court,” said
McDonald, “did not clothe these
utility rates with any legality or
aura or reasonableness, and it did
not make them enforceable or col
lectable.”
Feb., March
Draft Is Out
} WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 —(AP
—The Army announced today
that it will draft no men in Feb
ruary and March.
It cancelled an original call for
5,000 men in February.
Army Secretary Royal said that
“voluntary enlistments and re-en
listments, averaging 35,000 a
month for the past two months,
have made selective service calls
unnecessary for the next two
months.”
Nothing that the selective ser
vice cat requires the Army to lim
it its draft ralls to the difference
between requirements and intake
thrdough voluntary enlistments, he
said:
“As lox? as voluntary enlist
ments and reeinlistments remain
sufficient to maintain the strength
of the army there will be no calls
for inductions.”
The Air Force and Navy have
not used the draft system.,
-~ + ¥
CityTo Preparg
Property For
Recreation Area
Work will begin Monday on
preparing the vroperty at Oco
nee Street School for a recrea
tion center, it was announced
vesterday by Mayor Jack Wells,
The property some time ago
was turned over to the Board
of Education by the Athens
Manufacturing Company, to he
used as a playground.
The Board of Education
voted to accept it for a play
ground. Later on the Mayor
recommended to the Council
that the City fill in the prop
erty so that it could be made
suitable for a playground and
tomorrow the Public Works
Department of the City will
begin such work,
ICivic Aims Are
Pushed Here
By Committees
. Seven of the fourteen commit
tees of the Chamber of Commerce
appointed by President Thos. M.
‘Tillman on January Ist held
meetings at the Chamber of Com
merce during last week and plans
are already underway by these
committees for work on definite
objectives during the year.
The Board of Directors of the
Chamber will meet Monday after
noon at 5 o’clock in the Chamber
of Commerce offices to transact
its regular monthly business and
to receive committee recommen
dations and to consider activities
suggested by the membership on
election ballots cast in December.
The Advertising Committee,
Newman Corker, chairman, and
the Industrial Council, W. A.
Mathis, chairman, are asking for
appropriations for the erection of
signs on the main highways lead
ing into Athens and for industrial
advertising in the Wall Street
Journal. !
Ne approaches into Athens on
U.S. 29 and U. S. 129 will be
sought by the Highway Commit
tee, R. W. Snow( chairman as well
as other highway -improvements
affecting the city and county.
With these projects in mind the
Highway Committee has already
made an appointment with Chair
(Continued On Page Two)
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ROMANCE RUMORED IN “DISAPPEARANCE” OF SENATOR — The name of
Actress June Millarde (left), an heiress also known as Toni Seven, has been
linked with that of U. S. Senator Warren Magnuson (right), Democrat of Wash
ington state. He was listed as “necessarily absent” from the first session of the 81st
Congress. A mild mystery developed over the current whereabouts of the 43-year
old senator, but his office in Washington said it knew nothing to bear out pub
lished reports that Miss Millarde left New York late in November to marry him.—
(AP Wirephoto.)
Read Daily by 35,000 People In Athens Trade Area
Cold War Critics
Resetting Sights
Marshall-Lovett Foes Are Expected
To Renew Attacks On Foreign Policy
WASHINGTON, Jan. B.—(AP)—Critics of Marahfi;ll-
Lovett diplomacy are expected to press the State Depart
ment to reverse itself on several major issues after Dean
Acheson and James E. Webb take over foréign policy di
rection.
President Truman’s declaration
that the switch from General
George C. Marshall to Acheson as
Secretary of State late this month
will bring no change in foreign
policy is taken by most informed
persons here at face value. But
it does not preclude the possibility
that Acheson will go about carry
ing out this foreign policy in a
manner quite different from Mar
shall.
Policy issues to which Acheson
may have to give considerable at
tention in the first week include:
1. American operations in Ger
many and Japan.
2. The question of aid to Chi
na. ¢
3. The state of relations between
the United States and Western
European countries—including the
Netherlands which have been tak
ing an American beating over the
fighting in Indonesia.
| Acheson also steps in at a time
’when Republican Senate anger is
aroused over a Democratic grab of
’eight seats on the Foreign Rela
tions Committee, leaving the Re
publicans five. In the Republican
Congress, the division was seven
1o six.
Bi-Partisan Charge
Indications were that the Re
publican Senators will lifeel freer
to argue on foreign policy issues
before decisions are reached. Sen~
ator Capehart (R.-Ind.) declared
“the Democrats have broken up
the bi-partisan foreign policy.”
He served notice that administra
tion proposals will run the risk of
stiff resistance.
Secretary Marshall and Under
secretary Robert A. Lovett have
consistently won majority support
for their main foreign pdlicy pro
jects, . . !
These include all-out aid for
Europe, only limited aid for China,l
resistance to Russia at Berlin, Ger
man and Japanese reconstruction,
and the prevention of Communism
in Greece and Turkey. |
But their success in putting over
the big program does not mean
they have won all along the line
or without stirring up powerful{
opposition. 4
Some of this opposition which
has been put down repeatedly now
seems certain to pop up again -to
confront Acheson and Webb (as
suming they are confirmed by the
Senate) who are scheduled to take
office January 20.
One indication of reviving hope
among critics cf reecnt U. S. ac
tions came to light today among
leaders of the cooperative league
of the USA, an organization pro
Home
Edition
moting the cooperative movement.
The league published a letter from
the State De-_rtment rejecting its
latest petition for the United States
to support international, coopera
tive ownership of the great Ruhr
industries of Germany,
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JAMES E. WEBB