Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
President Truman Endorses
“Religious Education Week
CHICAGO, Sept, 6—The im
portance of religious teaching in
the struggle with forces of selfish
materialism is emphasized in a
letter from President Harry Tru
man endorsing the I°th annual
observance of Religious Educa
;ion Week, September 25-October
The letter was released today
by Dr. Roy G. Ross, General Sec=
retary of the International Coun=-
cil of Religious Edueation, which
sponsors the observanc. through
its 40 member denominations and
more than 700 territorial councils
of churches and religious educa
tion.
Declaring that the democratic
way of life has the same motiva~-
tions as those of religion, the
President stated that “The spirit
ual ideals which impelled our
forefathers to seek freedom of
worship in this country must
constantly be renewed if our
democratic institutions are not to
decay.”
“Particularly in this crucial
year of 1949 will united celebra
%nes of Religious Eduaction
k serve a practical purpose,”
the Chief Executive wrote, “It
Here's Blessed Relief from
If you have tried various things without getting satisfying results
from the merve-racking aches and pains of rheumatism, commonly
known as neuritis, when caused by a deficiency of the B Vitamins,
then listen!
You ewe it to yourself to try HADACOL. Yes, HADACOL, which
supplies the elements your system may lack, could be the answer
te your problem.
From Guifport, Miss. April, 1949
LTTURR. For the past fiffeen
o years | was a semi-
A involid, suffering from
CE R A, %
Gtk . @ Rheumatism. |am now
. #%4 on my seventh bottle
L& of HADACOL and #
¢-y hos given me entire
’ i relief from the aches
& F7R ond pains. | am abie
“ *io do a full day's
work, something | have not been able
to do in the post 15 years, | feel that the
manufacturers of such o marvelovs rem
edy should be complimented by appre
ciative people who have benefitted from
its wea,
-Mrs. Ophelia Jefferson.
from Flat Weod, Ala, March, 1949
W, | em 75 years old and
(& & have suffered with
& . & Rheumatism. | started
Rt w\?&* te take HADACOL,
P ' and since the second
r ST bottle | threw away
g *‘& ’:‘\“ my walking stick, and
AR now | feel like o new
T . Colvin Moors.
IS HADACOL A MIRACLE FORMULA?
No. There i nothing miraculous about
{ADACOL, but sometimes the results
wople get from its' use seem almost
niraculous. Your doctor can tell you that
« continued lack of the B Vitamins and
certain Minerals in your system will
cause bodily disorders
', #uch as diseased nerves,
\ resulting in rheumatic
e ' & aches and pains, com
" ¥ monly known as neu
"R o ritis. When this defi-
R TSNS ciency disorder exists
"SR geE there is no known treat-
L ment ... no medicine
‘% &’ ... that will bring you
Nl = positive relief except the
& needed Vitamins and
. “ Minerals, Of course,
certain types of aches and pains may
come from other causes, and you should
#a your doetor regularly, but don't
wait, Start taking HADACOL now,
HADACOL contains no drugs, no oil,
» narcoticz—only Mother Nature's nu
itional elements, Drugs and medicines
‘ay & relatively unimportant part in
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"“sm, They give only temporary relief
nd 'hil to remove the cause of the
mble,
HADACOL eomes to you in liquid
lorm, already dissolved so that it will be
re=dily and easily absorbed into the blood
sl am, After you take HADACOL a
wiile, healthy and vigorous blood will
% .rga through your whole body, bringing
uva of Mother Nature's B Vitamins and
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(Photes in this ad were pose
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will demonstrata the incontest
able validity of religious teaching
in our struggle with the forces of
selfish materialism, both at home
and abroad.”
This Number One Christian ed
ucation event is being celebrated
throughout the United States and
Canada. Starting with the tradi
tional Rally Day events the last
Sunday of the month, thousands
of communities and tens of thous
ands of churches will sponsor
many types of projects to show
the significant place that Chris
tian educali?n has in the life of
the people of the nations.
Red Cross field dircctors regu
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Sixty languages and dialecs are
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From DeQuiney, La. Fob., 1949
My mother suffered with "
Rheumatism for years » \
and had tried nearly
everyihing withoui ben- e - o
efit. She started to take JRHH #
HADACOL and she im- §&: o
proved rapidly, Then, " %:"
my father saw such an B v
improvement in her that "
he started the treatment. Now, thanks
to HADACOL, they are both doing fine.
All our praises to HADACOL and its
founders.
~—Mrs. Duel Smith.
From Bogalusa, La. Fob., 1949
1 was suffering from P,
Rheumatism, unable to £
do anything. Tried all £ .3 3
kinds of medicine, o b,
port of the time in | ‘:"
hospital. | started to s 7S
take HADACOL, Now B
| can do any of my a
work end am doing -
fine. | recommend it to everybody | meet.
—Mr. John W, Carter,
every muscle, so your mervous system,
and to all of your delicate tissues and
vital organs, thereby helping Mother
Nature to replace or repair and to even
nourish the nerve cells and tissues that
may be damaged or sickly as & result of
the deficiency of lchc Vitamins and Min
erals that HADACOL contains,
The people whose letters appear above
are just s few of the thousands and
thousands that HADACOL has already
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didn’t help them—what they realy need
ed was a supply of the Vlhm'lni and
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5 S VD BB B VYD RED - Firanci - SERNE iR )
Louis, meet twi : Francis George (1°1l), 7, and his twin, Marti
™ » more twins, Guernsey calves ong day old, at the Illinois State F: SD™
’ 013 te Fair in Springfield.
U. S. TOUR
Famed Rider
Passes
Near Here
COMMERCE—Harry Lacey, a
Rochester, Minn., bieyclist, who
is making a nation-wide trip,
stopped here recently on his trip
into every stale of the union.
Upon completion of the trip he
will be awarded $5,000 by the
Bicycle Association of Columbus,
Ohio. In addition to the money
he will be given a ticket to any
city in which he desires to locate.
His mother is blind so he plans
to use the money to provide a
good home for her upon com
pletion of the trip. His bicycle
trip expenses are being paid from
donations he receives in the cities
through which he passes.
He started from East Port,
Maine, on June 6 and has been
in 19 states since, and has plans
to complete the tour on January
1, 1950.
Last year professional Red Cross
workers in military hospitals
handled 102,860 cases concerning
service patients. >
Truman
(Continued from Page One)
road between the unfeitered poy
ers of concentrated wealth on one
flank, and the unbgridled power of
statism on the other.”
CIO President Philip Murray,
whose United Steel workers are
nearing the crucial point in their
campaign for fourth-round wage
increases, charged the steel indus
try with taking the lead in saying
“no- to what he termed labor’s
legitimate demands.
. ~ecession Cited
Murray, whose - spcech was
broadcast from Pittsburgh, also
said tha a “man made recession”
has been delivered ‘hy the small
and greedy group of men who di
rect the destinies of our vast poli
tical machine.”’
William Green, ** e president of
the AFI, lit into “fories” and
communism in a speech .at San
Diego. He spoke of “toryim pro
moted by a reactionary combina
tion in Congress,” and mentioned
“the Tafts and the Byrds” in that
connection. \
.~ And at Chicago, Secretary of
Agriculture Brannan keynoted the
theme that labor and agricultyre
must cooperate in the coming
—ear’s congressional elections.
“From the economic stand
point,” Brannan told an AFL din
ner, “farmers and workers have
every reason for unity. . . wages
land farm income go down togther
when there is a depression.”
Holiday
(Continued from Page One)
shire 1 0 0; New Jersey 7 0 0; New
Mexico 3 0 0; New York 15 1 6;
North Carolina 12 1 5; North Da
kota 2 0 2; Ohio 18 3 5; Oklahoma
8 1 0; Oregon 6 1 0; Pennsylvania
11 2 9; Rhode Island 2 0 0; South
Carolina 11 1 4; South Dakota 1
0 0; Tennessee 12 0 0; Texas 9 1 7;
Utah 3 0 0; Vermont 2 0 0; Vir
ginia 26 1 3; Washington 5 1 2;
West Virginia 2 0 0; Wisconsin 5
2 2; Wyoming 1 0 0.
APPLE SAUCE
Windfalls and culls are often
used for apple sauce. Over-ripe
apples which are not suitable for
canning make good sauce, but
:lggaged apples should be discard-
Funeral Notice
WALKER, — The relatives and
friends of Mr. and Mrs. William
Stephens Walker of Bishop,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Thrash
er, Farmington, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. B. C. Thrasher, Mr. and
Mrs. L. E. Saxon, Charlotte, N.
C.; and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Stephens, Philadelphia, Pa., are
invited to attend the funeral of
Mr. William Stephens Walker,
Wednesday afternoon, Septemr
ber 7th, 1949, at three (3:00)
o'clock p. m. from the Salem
Methodist Church, Oconee
county. Rev. James Griffin
will officiate. The following
gentlemen will serve as pall
bearers: Messrs. Sam Hale,
Albert Hale, Carlton Hale, A.
F. Carson, Harl Lowe and
Ralph Malcolm. 'The remains
will lie in state from two p. m.
until the hour es the service.
Interment Saiem church cem
etery. MeDorman Funeral
Home, 220 Prince Avenue,
THE BANNER HERALD, ATHENS.|GRORGIA
POLICE (s
BLOTTER <
BY ED THILENIUS
SLOT MACHINE RAID
Five slot machines were cap
tured last night in a raid on the
Howell Cheney American Legion
Post 535 coolred at the corner of
Broad and Rock Springs streets,
Chief of Police Clarence Roberts
reported.
Four city policemen, Emory
Sanders, Dan Warwick, Jimmy
Maitland and Alan Hansford, made
the raid in answer to a complaint
after obtaining a search warrant,
Chief Roberts said.
The slot machires have been
turned over to county authorities.
Other information on the club
will be turned over to the Solicitor
General Pollock, Chief Roberts
said.
No arrests were made.
RECORDER’S COURT
Nine cases were heard by Judge
Olin Price in Recorder’s Court to
day, with disorderly conduct
charges appearing the most fre
quent on the docket.
Two joint cases of disorderly
conduct resulted in twe defend
ants forfeiting $12.75 bonds while
the other two were placed on pro
bation.
Another case of disorderly con
duct resulted in a $15.75 for the
defendant.
Bob Thomas Says:
Burl lves Develops Yen
For Goat’s Milk, Drama
By HOWARD C. HEYN
(For Boh Thomas)
HOLLYWOOD, s§ept. 6—(AP)—
Bearded Ballard Singer Bl Ives
has added dramatic film roles to
his Sunday activities as an en
tertainer. He is also on a diete,
which may or may not have any
thing to do with his new yen te
be a serious actor.
Ives has been working in “Sier
ra"” and flying each night to near
by Laguna Beach to play the lead
in a Summar Stock presentation
of “The Man Who Came to Din
ner.” He did this part once be
fore, in an upstate New York
straw-hat house, and he's good,
too.
Heretofore Ives’ film appear
ances have been as a singer of
folk songs. “But I don't want to
be just a vaudeville act in a mo
vie,” he said. “I want real parts.”
An Illinois farm boy, Ives got
his start in “The Boys from Syra
cuse” on the New York stage in
1937. He spends three months
each year on concert tour, another
three months on the nightclub
circut, and the rest of the time in
summer stock, radio shows and
record sessions. -
He lives in New York and raises
Great Danes and goats in Cali-
PRIZES, BEBONS AWARDED
4-H Ciub Poultry Shows
‘Unusually Good’--Bennett
“This year’s 4-H ¢lub poultry
shows are unusually good. In fact,
those that haie been held thus far
have been the best in several
years,” H. W. Benne't, Extension
Service poultryman, who is in
charge of the shows, declared to
cay.
The shows are already under
way in the southern part of the
state. and will continue through
October 8 when the last one will
be held in Whitfield County. Four-
H members of the Sears. Roebuck
and Company poultry chain and a
number of local chains in 115
counties of the state are partici
pating in them this year.
The boys and girls are exhibit
ing the best birds from laying
ocks that werc started last spring
when they received 100 baby
chicks through the chain. Follow=
ing the shows they are given the
opportunity to buy trce birds in
order to keep their flocks com
plete. Otherwise, they are sold and
the money used to resay the chain.
Prizes for the best birds in each
county total SBO and ribbons are
Three cases were heard for
drunkenness. Two defendants for
feited $15.75 bonds while the third
was sentenced to 10 days in the
stockade.
One defendant drew a suspend
ed fine of $15.75 for reckless driv
ing and was placed on six months
probation.
Another defendant forfeited a
$25.75 bond for a charge of drunk
enness and disorderly conduct.
SHOOTING PROBE
Garnett Colbert, 32, colored of
Colbert, Ga., is in fair condition in
the Athens General hospital re
covering féom two bullet wounds
while Madison county authorities
continue to investigate the inci
dent in which he was shot.
Sheriff Pat Coile said he is con
ducting a thorough investigation of
the shooting before any charges
are made.. The negro was found
lying on the side of the road be
tween Ila and Danielsville by
Sheriff Coile late Saturday night.
The negro claimed he was shot
by a taxi driver from Commerce.
The cab driver told Sheriff Coile
that Colbert had shot him in the
arm.
Colbert has wounds in his right
shoulder and lower left thigh, hos
pital attendants reported.
fornia. The diet has cut him
down from over 300 to about 280
pounds. Every day fresh goat’s
milk is flown to his six-months
old son in New York. And he
says his danes are the biggest’ of
the breed.
“They get goat’s milk too,” he
explained.
English Custom
Phyllis Calvert, the British ac
tress who makes one picture a
vear in Hollywood, says that as
soon as she .gets here she stops
drinking tea and starts drinking
coffee. Doesn’t like tea bags.
“But just as soon as I board a
ship for England I have to have a
cup of tea,” she said, “The last
time, I asked the stewardess if I
could get any tea made without
tea bags. She was quite curt.
‘Madam,” she said, ‘This is an
English ship!"”
* & %
Psychological movies are going
to the dogs. Dope at Metro is that
Lassie is being readied for a good
dog, bad-dog, Jekyll & Hyde role.
The collie’s stand-in, Laddie, will
have to double for him, however,
in scenes showing Lassie snarling
and biting. Seems Lassie is too
well adjusted; he’s never been
trained to be anything but refined.
being awarded according to the
quality of the birds. The two best
pens of birds will be entered in
state-wide competition this fall at
th State Fair in Macon. Cham
pionship prize there will be $25
and reserve champion prize will
be sls. }
One of the best shows which
has been held this year took place
in Clynn county, according to
Benneft. Nine boys and girls ex
hibited birds in theshow, and four
of them won blue riboons. At the
time of the show one of the win
ners, Dorothy Griner, of the
Blythe Island 4-H Club, had al
ready received more than 1,000
eggs from her flock of 44 six
months-old pullets.
Mrs, Bernice E. Grant, Glynn
County home demonstration agent,
said that Dorothy lost only two of
the: chicks she receivad last spring
and they were killed accidentally.
She followed al’ directiong on care
and management closely, and the
pullets storted produciyg around
the first of Jul:
Three Nations Talks
Begin Tomorrow
By The Associated Press
Two key British cavinet min
isters are expected to arrive in
New York tonight enroute to
Wask?ng'wn for three-nation talks
on Britain’s economic plight.
Sir Stafford Cripps, Chancellor
of the Exchequer, and Ernest Be
vin, Foreign Secretary, are arriv
ing by ship for the British-Cana
dian-American ta.ks opening to
morrow.
Diplomatic authorities in Wash-~
ington said Britain will ask per
mission to spend = Marshall Plan
dollars anywhere she likes—not
just in the United States—as one
way out of her financial crisis.
Bevin is convinced, this source
said, that Britain shortly will
have to dip into her dwindling
reserves for millions of dollars
unless Marshall Plan policies are
reiaxed.
Bevin wants Britain to buy
large quantities of Canadian nran
e ulactured goods:
World Newsm a c hinery,
R d foodstuffs an d
oundup paper products
- itk Rarshal
Plan dollars. The Marshall Plan
provides these products must be
purchased in the United States.
In Canton, the Chinese Nation
o VU
g ?"’Wiffié}? e %
F i R
L L L e
g
- e . o 8
g’}f i} = .
JUST RELAXING = Mickey the
Monk rc® xes with a beer after
a hard day's work at the home
of his owners, Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny Taral of Queens Village,
N. Y. Mickey likes to sit by the
window and make wolfish noises
_at pretty girls passing by.
American Red Cross services to
the armed forces are a primary
obligation of the organization, laid
down and defined by federal sta
tute.
UCH DEPENDABLE QUALI
t.Joseph AsPIRIN
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alist government said the Com
munists are probing the govern
ment defenses for weak points on
the Canton perimeter, The Nat
ionalists claimed their forces are
holding their own against Com
munist drives to cut the Canton-
Hankow railway, 170 miles from
Canton.
Reports from Kumming de
scribed the southwestern China
city as quiet but tense after a
bloodless seizure of power by
Governor Lu Han of Yunnan
province Saturday. Earlier re
ports said the governor had pro
claimed the independence of Yun
nan from the Natonalist admin
istration. Today’s reports said no
Nationalist officials have been
molested and all government
banks were open,
The 10-day old rightist revolt
in Bolivia against the middle-of
the-road government appears to
be fast collapsing. The govern
ment radio said Carlos Torres,
leader of the uprising, had been
captured in Sucre. That town and
Potosi, seized by rebels last week,
have been retaken by government
forces. An army communique said
loyal troops and planes are pur
suing remnants of fleeing rebel
forces.
12 Killed
(Continued from Page One)
sion of what happened:
Unruh's house at 3202 River
Road was next door to a drug
store operated by 40-year-old
Maurice Cohen. There is no front
entrance to Unruh’s house.
Cohen at one time permitted Un
ruh to cross his yard when leav
ing or entering his own house
from the rear.
But recently Cohen stopped Un
ruh from crossing the yard by
building a fence and a gate.
Always Walked
Today Unruh walked—detec
tives said he never ran during all
the shooting-—from his house into
the drug store, tramped upstairs
and shot Cohen’s mother, Minnie,
63, as she lay in bed.
Cohen’s wife, Rose, 38, heard the
shot and ran into a bedroom where
she locked her 12-year-old son
Harold in a closet.
Unruh tracked her down and
shot her on the stairway of her
home,
Then he walked out the rear of
the drug store.
Cohen chased after him.
Unruh turned on him and shot.
Cohen -taggered through the gate
he had built to keep Unruh out,
collapsed in a gutter, dead.
James J. Hutton, 15, a West
mont (N. .J.) insurance collector,
was entering the drug store as
Unruh rounded a corner after
leaving the' Cohen ‘yard.
Single Shots
A“single shot killed Hutton.
Then Unruh paraded up and
down River Road eniering one
business establishment after an
other. A single shot killed each of
his victims.
Finally he walked quietly back
through the Cohen yvard into his
own house and barricaded himself
in his room.
On his shop-to-shep killing
spree, Unruh walked into a bar
ber shop and shot cown Clark
) bl STI
3 g B ‘sl _ Y
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4y s P N
« /"’"’
TUESDAY, SErTEMBER ¢,
I s LR R R M
Hoover, 33-year-old . karber and
two-year-old Thomas Hamilton,
who was sitting in a ehair gettin,
a haircut.
A car crossed the sticel as Un
ruh emerged from a shop. A shot
resounded and the driver slums.
in his seat. The car climbed
sidewalk, :
Another stopped for a light
Unruh fired three times. Thrg e
women fell, -
Witnesses said they saw Unru!
reload the fatal wepoan at leas
three times during the shooting.
Thompson said Unruh was an
“incredible shot.”
Then he ran into a shoe repair
shop at 3206 and killed the pro
prietor.
Home Arsenal
From there Unruh dashed int
a dry cleaning estaolishment as
3218 and killed the proprieto
there. At the same addMss he
found a young bride and shot her
Then, Thompson said, Unruh
ran to his own room where he ha
what Thompson described as ar
“arsenal of knives, clubs and am
munitions.”
He barred the doot and : tool
shots out the window as passersh:
in the street. He fell>d several o
them.
Among those shot down in the
street was six-year-old ' Morri:
Smith ancd an unidentified boy o
five. .
Both died later at Cooper Hos
pital in Camden.
The whole battle lasted les:
than three quarters of an hour. I
was 9:15 a. m. (EST) when Unrul
was captured.
The dead and wounded wer
taken to Cooper Hospital, whicl
for a time rcsembled a field sta
tion at a battlefront.
All available doctors and nurse:
were pressed into service as thc
litters were brought in.
Dust Diary Tags
LOS ANGELES—(AP)—A nev
gadget will tell how much the air
is contaminated in atomic energ:
work. It was invented at the
University of California atomi
laboratory here.
Jets of air are shot at a revolv
ing glass disc. It is so sensitive i
will collect ash in the air from :
burning building five miles-away
It also records dust stirred uj
when someone goes near it anc
changes in the weather whicl
cpange the amount of dust in the
air.
Athens C. of C.
*
Committee Set
Chairman W. R. Pate of the
Merchants Council of the Cham
ber of Commerce has appointec
a committee composed of E. C.
Crymes, chairman; S. H. Butler,
C. W. Fitzgerald, as a group to
make recommendations in regarc
to a cooperative fall trade even!
in Athens and also ot mrake plans
for the annual meeting of the
Merchants Council which will bc
held prior to November Ist. Th
first meeting of this committe
will be held Wednesday mornin:
at 10 o’clock in th offices of th:
Chamber of Commerce.
At the annual meeting of the
Merchants Council members ©
the Executive Committee of th
Council are expected to be name
to serve from November 1, 1940
to November 1, 1950. The Execu
tive ommittee is now composed ©
fifteen members representing the
same number of classifications.