Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
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% RECORDER'S COURT
: A total of 34 cases were heard
{ by Judge Olin Price in Recorder’s
Court today, but defendants ap
peared for trial in only six cases.
The remainder forfeited bonds
by failing to appear for trial.
! Drunk and disorderly cases
! pgain headed the usual heavy
{ Monday docket while speeding and
. ‘reckless driving charges appeal
. quite frequently today.
Some 17 cases concerned drunk
¢« and disorderly charges while 11
' were for speeding and reckless
driving. The majority of defend
ants forfeited $12.75 bonds for dis=
orderly conduct, $15.75 for speed
ing and reckless driving and $24.75
~ for drunk and disorderly eombined
charges.
One defendant was fined S2OO
. or 180 dayvs in the stockade for
' driving a truck under the influence
of alcohol, while a university stu
dent was fined $50.75 for blowing |
a siren while speeding up Broad |
street. Judge Pricé dismissed the
speeding charge against the de
fendant for the lack of evidence.
Oue person forfeited a $100.75
bond in connection with a hit-and
run charge. |
BOOTLEGGER CAUGHT
Chief of Police Clarence Roberts |
announced today that Thurm(md!
“Turnip” Leard, was arrested last |
night, and charged with hauling |
and possessing illicit non-tax paid |
L°°K.
TERRIFIC SALE!
Tuesday and Wednesday 'Til 1:00
&
QUALITY CLOTHING TO CLOSE OUT
e NOTE VALUES —o
Lot—Men’s Suits, values to $35.00 ... .... $19.95
Lot—Sport Coats, values to $18.50 ... . ... . $12.95
Lot—Rayon Pants, values to $7.95 . $4.95 and $5.95
Lot—Men’s Shoes, values to $7.95 ... .. ... . $4.95
Lot—Shirts, Sport and Dress, value $2.98 . ... $1.49
Lot—Boy’s Suits, values to $18.50 .... ... . $12.95
Lot—Little Boy’s Suits, values to $14.95 .. ... $9.95
Lot—Sport Coats, values to $14.95 . $7.95 and $10.95
Lot—Rayon Pants, sizesto 12 . ... .... .... $3.95
Come Early — Get your needs for now, and later.
No Alterations, Flease. We Rent Tuxedos.
CLOTHING STORE
433 East Broad Athens
TUSSY'S NEW
¢L v ;
“TWO-IN-ONE”
Brings You 2 Full-Sized [.
Lipsticks in one smart case =, ;
% “ _V-, 3 - i
; \"M " - R
D ot §]
"du value $ T
- : /’;
i l ¥ R . ; i y
0r 0“ y . plus tax < b
. 5
Think of it! You get 2 full-sized Tussy
Lipsticks in a beautiful burnished metal case.
All for the price of a single lipstick!
You get two of the famous Tussy shades~in that flatiering
Tussy texture. All this beauty in a smart-looking gilded
case that makes a handsome purse accessory. You'll
want ane for yoursell and several more for gifts,
Tussy's “Two-in-One” Lipsticks
in glamorous color combinations:
® Garden Party —Midnight....... . for fair compwsion |
& Contrabasd - Midnight .........for medium compiexion
® Raspberry - Funmaker 3 ceesenener-fOr dark complexion
® Midnight - Blueblood ;
® ‘ruwimaKer < Merry Red......... for medium somplexion
B Gurded Party - Chanmerose ........for-fais ompiesion |
. : _ ’ (}(‘( c./e‘("t{
S o 1
TR e 5 FEN RGF N KONE SOID & DERLER
e P ||| L A lalaahibbdet AB ST HTTIRS R 7N
‘ { L 0 e o ——— -
Gt o N ' Y §
| » .
E.S. Latimer, Sr.
'Died Today In
‘Morganton, N. C.
| B.S. Latimer, st., died suddenly
| this morning at the home of his
| daughter, Mrs. J. S. Osborne in
’Mo;‘ganton. 9L L
Mr. Latimer was a native of
| Comer, Ga,, and for the past sev
| eral years he had made his home
' with his daughter in Morganton.
'He is survived by two daughters,
four sons and one brother.
~ Funeral services will be con
‘ducted at the Comer Methodist
Church on Tuesday afternoon, 2
o'clock. Interment in the Comer
cemetery.
whiskey. \
Leard was identified by Officers
Alan Hansford and D. D. Chandler
as the driver of a car who escaped
a trap at the corner of Broad and
Paris streets Saturday morning..
Four gallons of moonshine were
founsl by the officers in the car,
ard Lee Kinney, who the officers
said was riding in the car was ar
rested at the time. Leard escaped
on foot.
Both have been turned over to
county authorities.
For keeping meteorological rec
ords at unmanned weather sta
tions in remote parts of the earth,
engineers have designed an “elec
tric weatherman,” which automa
tically and continuously records
wind velocities and direction on a
roll of paper, and requires atten
tion only once a month. g
Sponge fishermen operating in
the Gulf of Mexico are warned of
approaching hurricanes by air
planes.
Japan’s Top
Author Calmly
Awaits Death
TOKYO. — (AP) — These are
golden days for a frail _little
Japanese doctor who awaits
death in a tiny hut on a Naga
saki hill. Each hour is precious,
for it brings word of his sky
rocketing influence as Japan's
most popular author-doctor.
Before 1945 Dr. Takashi Nagai
was virtually unknown. Today
three of his books are first,
third and seventh on Japan's
best-seller lists. I}l fourth, wnich
hus just recached "the stands, al
ready is 12th.
What may be his final work is
now in the hands of a publisher.
Dr. Nagai was a professor at
Nagasaki medical college. His
field was rays. His experiments
over 20 years had exposed him
to radiation which medical ex
perts told hin: would doom him
to an early death. Serene in his
adopted Catholicism, he contin
ued his teaching and work. Then
on the morning of August 9, 1945,
the atom bomb burst, on Nagasaki
as Dr, Nagai was teaching in his|
classroom. {
His wife was killed and his
home vanished. His school was
destroyed, and he suffered se
vere burns on the right side. The
death of which he already had
been warned was brought close
and made certain.
Dr, Nagai donated his blood to
researchers in efforts to save the
lives of bomb radiation victims.
He personally visited the injured
until too weak to resist orders to
vo 1o bed. Doctors now say he
may live through the summer,
perhaps into the autumn.
Unable to continue visiting the
dying {o tell of his faith in a
hereafter, his hatred of war and
his belief in the bretherhood of
man, Dr. Nagai decided to write
his views. His first 'published
book was ““Leaving These Chil
dren Behind,” a collection of es
says on Christianity,. the atom
bomb and his two small children,
who were not in Nagasaki when
the bomb fell, and thus escaped.
His book has sold more than
200,000 copies and tops Japan's
hest sellers. Dr. Nagai's first
book was “Bells of ' Nagasaki,”
which was published last Janu
ary, three years after a publisher
accepted it. “Beads of the Ro
sary” and “River of Life” are
his two other works.
, . .
British Salesmen
Learn To
.
Sell Again
! BRIDLINGTON, Engalnd—(AP)
—The buyers’ market has returned
to England, But, say most mer
chants, it was gone so long most
salesmén have forgotten how to
sell.
To teach salesmen how to say
something to customers other than
“sorry, we are all out of that
item,” the local chamber of com
merce has issued these 12 tips.
1. Always be neat.
2. Greet customers pleasantly
because people just naturally avoid
a sourpuss.
3. Be courteous instead of
nosey, gossipy or too friendly.
4." Refrain from flattery and go
easy on the “soft soap”
5. Make friends with children
and pets.
6. Be alert and anticipate the
customer’s needs.
7. Sell, don't high pressure cus
tomers.
8. Do your best and don’t kid
yourself that you are getting by
the easy way.
9. Make friends by promptly
handling complaints.
10. Always be cheerful.
11. Be sure your sales story is
sincere, but don’t make it sound
like a recitation.
12. Don't ecarry gossip. The
customer reasons “if he gossips
about other customers he probably
will gossip about me.”
The United States purchased
Florida from Spain in 1820 for
$5,000,000.
| Radio Star I
3 Victims of
- leprosy
4 Abhor
5 Ailments
6 Rough lava
7 Rights (ab.)
8 Low haunt
9 Drunkards
10 Units of
electrical
intensity
11 Bamboolike
grass
12 Conclusion
17 While
22 Harvest
28 Unoccupied
25 For fear that
26 Columns
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted radio
star, Harriet
9 Weight
deduction
13 Marked with
interstices
14 Portent
15 Calyx leaf
16 Broke under
strain
‘lB Hardens
15 Sow
20 Symbol for
rhodiumn |
21 Railroad (ab.)
22 Get up
24 Vend
27 Editor (ab.)
28 Ocean
29 Altitude (ab.)
31 Street (ab.) |
32 Clever |
34 Devotees 1
36 Three-toed |
¢ sloth \
37 Symbol for -
niton
38 Containers |
40 Seaport in
Straits
Settlement
42 Affray
45 Large blood
vessel
47 Type of '
molding :
48 She is on the
50 Poet
51 Wanders
aimléssly
VERTICAL
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M .o R A e 2
SAFETY TALK — Lieutenant E. S. Burke,
supervisor of the safety education department
of the Georgia State Patrol, outlines a point of
his organization’s safety education program at
the recent State convention of Georgia Junior
Top Journalism
Students Receive
Honors At Banquet
Gus Shaddix, jr. of Upatoi was
presented. the Sigma Delta Chi
award for achievement as. “Out
gtanding Male Graduate in Journ
alism” at the University of Geor
gia on “Grady Day” here Friday
night.
A banquet was sponsored by
Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma
Phi, journalistic fraternities, and
attended by students in the Henry
W. Grady School of Journalism,
University of Georgia.
Sigma Delta Chi Scholarship
awards for excellence in journal
ism were presented by Dean John
E. Drewry to William Murray
Bates, Soperton; Simeon Augustus
Shaddix, ir.,, Upatoi; . Elizabeth
Williams Etheridge. Royston;
Gretchen Mingledorff, Springfield;
Jack Burton Haskins, Macon.
Richard D. Bullock, Fort Ben
ning; Frank Adolph Majors, Clax
ton; Harold Earle Davis, Sasser;
Emmitt E. Neland, jr., Ben Hill;
Reva Ann Dame, Macon; Raleigh
Gee Bryans, McDonough; Walter
Henry Mitchell, Columbus; John
Westhead Crea, College Park; W.
H. Miller, jr., Gainesville; and
Carol Pyle, Moultrie. 3
A new type of bearing has beé’n
introduced whereby a rotating
shaft is suspended in air by mag
nets, so that it touches no 'surface
as it spins. First application of the
“floating-on-air” principle was in
a watt-hour meter, the familiar
device that keeps a record of elee
tricity brought into a home.
FUNERAL NOTICE
MAXWELL.—The relatives and
Iriends of Mr, and Mrs. Charles
C. Maxwell, Miss Norene Cook,
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hilley, all
of Athens; Mr. L. E. Cook of
Anderson, S. C., are invited to
attend thp funeral of Mrs.
Charles C. Maxwell, 'Tuesday
afternoon, May 31, from Brid
ges Chavel at four (4:00)
o’clock. Rev. Charles Middle
brooks, pastor of the Oconee
Street Methodist Church, will
officiate.. Mr. Cicero Johnson,
Mr. J. W. Johnson, Mr. Joe
Wages, Mr. Charles Mason, Mr.
Robert McMullins, Mr. Frank
Bridges and Mr. Charles C.
Bridges will serve as pallbear
ers and meet at Bridges Chapel
at three - forty - five (3:45)
o'clock. Interment will be in
Oconee Hill cemetery. Bridges
Funeral Home. J
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41 Passage in
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49 Egyptian sun
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30 Teacher
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35 Perish-with
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38 Roman
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39 Symbol fcg
selenium
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BIG AND LITTLE OF IT—The biggest and the littlest Jaycees
in Georgia shake hands on the sidelines of the recent State
Junior Chamber of Commerce convention in Augusta. Monroe
Bowyer, Augusta chapter, meets C. O. (Fat) Baker, an Athens
delegate to the State meet of Jaycees.—(Photo courtesy Augusta
Chrenicle.) ;
What It Means: Conservatism
Vs. Liberalism In High Court
BY CLARKE BEACH ‘
WASHINGTON. — There’s not
much use in a layman’s attempt-|
ing to make up his mind whether
the .present Supreme Court is
predoniinantiy “liberal” or “con-|
servative,” The Terminiello de-|
cision on May 16 proved the fu- |
tility of it, if any proof had been]
necessary. i
Experts on constitutional law |
often attempt to.figure it out by
making a statistical analysis nl‘l
the justices’ votes on civil rights
cases. But their conclusions don’t
prove much,
In the first place, what is lib
eral to one man seems conserva.
tive to another. The words don’t
have any clear meaning,
And often in a so-called civil
rights case the court’s decisions
are based on legal points quite
apart from the main issue.
“I don’t believe I know what
they mean when they talk about
a liberal or a conservative judge,”
one eminent legal authority re
cently told this reparter. “It is
not a field in which the term is
applicable,
“T know what a liberal politic
ian is. But a judge can’t be either
liberal or conservative. He is ('11{)-1
able or incapable. If he is a good
judge, all he seeks to do is base
his opmion on the law and the
Constitution.”
The Terminiello case involved
the right of free speech, whether
the city of Chicago could conviet
a man of disorderly conduct for
giving an inflammatory talk
when the audience and the crowd
outside were in a condition of
near riot.
The Supreme Court has re
peatedly recognized that the
right, of free speech is not abso
lute, that there are times and
places where a nvan cannot be
permitted to say everything he
wishes. i
But you'll never know whether
the majority of the court be
lieves ' “Perminiello overstepped
the bounds, That wasn't decided.
The court reversed Terminiei
lo’s conviction, But the case was
not decided on the content of his
speech or the circumstances of
its delivery. In reading through‘
the record, the court stopped
short when it came upon the
trial judge's charge to the jury,
and it never went any further.
The trial judge, interpreting
the Chicago ordinance under
which Terminiello had been con
victed, said that “misbehavior
Chamber of Commerce. George L. Fuller,
Augusta, vice-president, on the left, and J. W.
Henry, Athens, state president of the Jaycees,
listen attentively. — (Photo courtesy Augusta
Chronicle.)
may constitute a breach of the
peace if it stirs the public to an
ger, invites dispute, brings about
a condition of unrest or creates
a disturbance.”
Justice Deuglas, writing the
opinion of the Court majority,
said: “A function of free speech
under’ our system of government
is to invite dispute. It may in
deed best serve its high purpose
when it induces a condition of
unrest, creates dissatistaction
with conditions as they are ov
even stirs people to anger.”
The parts of the ordinance
concerned in the case, as con=
strued by the trial judge, were
declared unconstitutional. Wheth
er they would have been if the
trial judge had said something
different, or nothing at all, one{
can only guesy, '
Voting with Douglas on the
majority side were Justices
Reed, Murphy, Black and Rut
ledge.
The rest of the court, dissent
ing, thought the majority was
entirely wrong in hinging its de
cision on the trial judge's re
marks. They pointed out that the
defendant - had taken no excep
tion to them and that none of |
the lower courts had taken any
notice of the judge’s charge. It
hadn’t beconve an issue;, as Chiel
Justice Vinson pointed out in a
dissent, until the U. S. Supreme'
Court ‘“ferreted it out of a
lengthy and somewhat confused
record.”
On this general contention, the
other justices, Frankfurter, Bur-|
ton and Jackson, agreed with
Vinson. But they didn’t agree |
with “the Chief” on another |
point. L |
Vinson in his dissent indicated
that he too was shocked at the
trial judge's statement. He said
that if the defendant had made
an issue of it, he would have
agreed with the decision of the
majority.
Jackson, however, in a 25-page
dissent not only deplored the |
manner in which the court had
reached its decision. He also de
fended Chicago's right to punish
Terminiello for his utterances,
He even spoke sympathetically ot
the trial judge’s remarks.
But is Jackson, the dissenters’
chief spekesman in this case, a
“conservative”? A friend ,;e%his
says that Jackson, a former New
Deal politician, once told him “I
believe in liberal laws, strictly
construed.” el
Army Reserve In State Needs
Lieutenants, Enlisted Men
Colonel Walter D. Buie, Com
manding Officer of the Georgia
Military District, says the Army
Reserve in this state needs several
hundred lieutenants and 4,000 en
listed men.
In announcing a drive to obtain
additional military personnel,
Colonel Buie emphasized the fi
nancial benefits which will be of
fered young Georgians who join
the Army Reserve.
He said members of the reserve
receive a full day’s pay for week
ly training sessions which last only
two hours. The training periods
are held at night and do not con
flict with civilian occupations.
Summer c¢amps are not com
pulsory.
Promotions and retirement pay
are two of the most attractive fea
tures of the new Army reserve
program, Colonel Buie pointed out.
Every Opportunity
He said men who-enlist in the
Army reserve will be given every
opportunity, under the guidance
of highly trained instructors for
promotions.
“Any inteiligent enlisted reser
vist who applies himself to the in
struction which is offered him has
an opportunity to earn a commis
sion as a second lieutenant,”
Colonel Buie said.
He added that after being com
missioned, a reservist has full op
portunity to attain high military
rank. “How high the officer rises
depends on his energies and abili
ties,” the colonel commented.
He said that under provisions
recently enacted by Congress, the
reservist, officer or enlisted man,
becomes eligible for retirement
pay at the end of 20 years service.
He said that each year of service
is accumulated on the basis of a
maximum of only two hours duty
each week.
Qualifications
“Many young men have heen
discouraged from joining the
Army Reserve and trying for a
commission because they believe
a college degree is a prerequisite
for becoming a reserve officer,”
Colonel Buie said.
“This is not the case,” he ex
plained, “because enlisted men
who have one year of active or
inactive service and who complete
the necessary courses may become
eligible ,for a commission.”
Colonel Buie said he would wel
come letters from men in any part
of the state who are interested in
joining the Army reserve. He said
he will furnish them any addition
al information they may desire.
Army reserve units are located
in key cities all over Georgia.
Letters should be addressed to
Colonel Walter D. Buie, Com
manding Officer, Georgia Military
District, 699 Ponce de Leon Ave.
N. E, P. O. Box 1736, Atlanta, Ga
Modern rope makers use fibers
from 15 to 20 countries to produce
the various types of cordage used
in industry today.
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