Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
(Continued from Page One)
asked President Truman’s advice
on how to proceed against House
ingistence that the Air Force
should: be bigger than either the
Senators or the President want it
to be.
The House wrote funds for a 58-
group Air Force intc a money bill
for the defense department., In
line with Mr. Truman's suggestion,
the: Senate held the size of the
air arm: down to 48 groups. The
House refused to budge, thus pre
venting'a compromise on the bill—
which should have been passed
months ago.
Senators said that if the Presi
dent okayed the 58-group plan,
they'dt! accept it. They said the
same applied to another stalemat
ed issue: A Senate-approved cut in
money for stockpiling eritical ma
terials=—a cut the House wouldn’t
agree to.
Olids=—Senate Democratic Lead
er Lueas of Illinois said it’s not
true that the administration will
sidestep action this session on the
contraversial reappointment of Le
land Olds to the Federal Power
Commission.
X 3
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&IQEATR‘! T N
LAST TIMES TODAY
Leo Gorcey — Huntz Hall
in “TROUBLE MAKERS”
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THURSDAY — FRIDAY
Loretta Young — Joseph Cotten
“THE FARMER’S DAUGHTER”
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GEORGIA ToMORQY
AIR - CONDITIONED and FRIDAY
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. LAST TIMES TONITE
Randolph Scott — Eila Raines
in “THE WALKING HILLS”
GEORGIA FEATURE STARTS: 1:52, 8:47, 5:42, 7:37, 9:32
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PALACK FEATURE STARTS: 18:30, 2:89, 4:48, 6:57, 9:06
4-Year Navy
Scholarships
cholarship
Being Offered
Male high school seniors and
graduates between the ages of 17
and 21 are now eligible to apply
for a full four year scholarship at
one of the 52 colleges and univers~
ities throughout the country which
have Naval ROTC units.
Applicants must meet rigid men
tal and physical standards and
pass an apftitude test. Applica=-
tions to take the test must be in
before November 12, 1949 and the
tests are held December 3, 1949,
Successful candidates have their
tuition, books, and normal fees
paid and are paid $50.00 per month
toward their living expenses. Upon
completion of the regular four year
college course students are com
missioned Ensigns in the Naval
Reserve and are obligated to serve
two years active duty as a Naval
Officer. They then are released
to inactive duty or may request
retention as career Naval Officers.
For further informatioin and ap
plication blanks visit the Navy
Recruiting Office, Post Office
Building, Athens, or call 2651.
RITZ
NOW
PITISBURG
é'- «'»:':’t.fi' , ;.;,»‘x'z.
MARLENE DIETRICH
RANDOLPH SCOTI
A JOHN WAYNE AREERE
W
“FLAMINGO ROAD”
Number Of Fires Down,
But Dollar Loss Rises
The number of fires attributed
to the seven principal causes of
fire has gone down 12 percent dur
ing the last two years but the dol
lar loss has gone up 25 percent,
according to the National Fire
Protection Association, sponsor of
National Fire Prevention Week,
October 9 to 15.
LOCAL ACTIVITY
All schools in Athens are being
visited this week by Athens Fire
Chief W. C. Thompson and Fire
Marshal Claud Bridges along
with other members of the de
partment in connection with Fire
Prevention Week activities.
Students are being explained
methods of fire prevention and
several demonstrations are be
ing staged including one where
a fireman wears an ashestos
suit. Chief Thompson says this
seems to be the most popular
demonstration.
Also a fire truck is carried to
ihe schioois ana e Siudenis
have a chance to inspect it.
Misuse of electrical equipment
and defective wiring, the second=
ranking cause, was the only one to
show a rise in the number of fires.
Defective or overheated chimneys
and flues, in fourth place, was the
only one to show a drop in dollar
loss.
These are the seven principal
fire *causes and the number of
fires they caused during one year,
as listed in the latest NFPA re
ports: Smoking and matches, 87,-
000 fires; misues of electrical
equipment and defective wiring,
52,000; defective heating equip
ment, 44,500; defective or over
heated chimneys and flues, 30,000;
sparks on wooden shingle roofs,
27,000; children playing with
matches, 20,800, and careless hand
ling of flammable liquids, 20,000.
Murray
(Continued from Page One)
nounced it is temporarily reducing
some of its passenger train service
to conserve coal.
Murray pulled ouf all the stops
in his speech. Some of his re
marks:
“I have met more hypocrites
since the start of this fight than
I have ever met in all my life.
“Anybody who wants to be
against me can be against me and
I'll beat him in the end.
““Are old people to be thrust into
the poor house or on the industrial
scrap heap and left to die in pov
erty and misery?”
Little Doubt
Murray left little doubt he’ll go
right down the line to get free
pensions and insurance. Industry
has offered him a 10-cent hourly
package but insists the workers
chip in. Murray says no to that—
he contends such a program would,
in effect, be a pay slash as it
would reduce his workers' take
home pay.
The fighting Scotsman reviewed
the events which led to the strike.
He pointed out the Presidential
fact-finding board had recom
mended industry pick up the entire
10-cent tab for pensions and in
surance. Then he declared.
“Charley White (president of
Republic Steel Corporation) told
the board, ‘You have no business
interfering in our business. A
strike is preferable.’”
Murray said his strikers are not
alone. in going payless, declaring
no union employe is being paid
during the strike. He said he
stopped his $25,000-a-year salary
when he flashed the strike signal.
Though no new negotiating ses
sions are scheduled in the steel
dispute, the soft coal operators
went to West Virginia today to
confer with UMW representatives.
Southern operators came to
Charleston a day early and their
leader gave no sign of giving in
to Lewis who wants an increase in
20-cent royalty payments to his
welfare and pensin fund.
Development
(Continued from Page One)
Matthews, president of the Lions
Club; J. B. Tanner, president of
the Optimist Club; Altcn Hosch,
president of the Rotary Club; Uly
S. Gunn, president "of th e Ex
change Club; Mayor Jack R.
Wells; Harry H. Elder, chairman
of the Clarke County Commission
ers; and W. H. Benson #nd Leroy
Michael, co-chairmen of the spe
cial committee. Dr. Horace Smith
gave the invocation.
The Athens Industrial Develop
ment Corporation was chartered
two days ago, with G. A. Booth,
Leroy Michael, W. A. Mathis, and
-« J. Glass, as the applicants.
The corporation will be opera
ted entirely by the stockholders
and directors, it was explained.
and there will be no salaried job
with the corporation. Revolving
stock in the corporatinon is being
sold at the rate of $l9O per share.
Two-Day Pharmacy Seminar
Begins Here On Thursday
A two-day Pharmacy Seminar
dealing with all phases of pharma
ceutical activity and development
will begin at the University of
Georgia Thursday, Oct. 13, under
the sponsorship of the Georgia
Pharmaceutical Association, the
University’s School of Pharmacy
and its Division of General Exten=
sion.
Presiding throughout the pro
gram will be W. A. Blasingame,
Moultrie, president of the Georgia
Pharmaceufical Association.
Speakers will include Charles H.
Evans sr., Warrenton; Dr. Norman
L. Heminway, Broomfield, N. J.;
Dr. James A. Redfern, Albany;
Dean Kenneth Waters and others.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Prisoner’s
(Continued from Page One)
Buck Range community, five an
one-half miles southeast of here.
Shinneman said his fast, down
ward trip was “smooth as silk.”
He suffered only a scratched
finger,
The Barksdale public informa
tion officer said the plane was
flying about three miles east of
Nashville when Skinneman sud
denly rushed past one of the
guards, pushed out a rear door,
and jumped. That was about 1:30
. m.
The pilot alerted the Civil
Aeronautics Administration office
at Texarkana, which in turn no
tified local and state police. A
posse was organized here and
struck out to beat the thickets.
Officers at Forbes Air Base
said Shinneman faces a court
martial for theft of a government
.45 pistol and for going AWOL.
The soldier is separated from his
wife, now at Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.
Shinneman said he made the
bet with a buddy two weeks ago,
after he learned of the projected
aerial tréansfer. But he doesn’t
expect to collect because the bud
dy now is in prison in Leaven
worth, Kas, -
Shinneman said he served two
years with the Navy in the South
Pacific during the recent war and
enlisted in the Air Forces three
years ago.
i Hel
Services Held
For Mrs.
ice Mel
Alice Melton
Services for Mrs. Alice Eliza
beth Melton, widow of the late
Willie Melton, were conducted
Monday afternoon at 4 o’clock
from Central Baptist Church with
the pastor, Rev. C. H. Ellison, Rev.
W. S. Pruitt, pastor of West End
Baptist Church and Rev. Hugh
Eberhart officiating.
Burial was in Boggs Chapel
cemetery, Bernstein Funeral Home
in charge of arrangements. Pall
bearers were A. A. Strickland, A.
L. Melton, E. B. Addington; D. S.
Boone, C. F. Lunsford and J. R.
Hatcher.
Mrs. Melton died at her resi
dence at 648 Nantahala avenue
Saturday night at 9:45 o’clock after
an illness of several months.
She is survived by four sons,
Leon Goodrum and James H.
Goodrum, both of Athens, Jessie
Melton, Monroe, and Johnnie Mel
ton, Cornelia; eight daughters, Mrs.
Lyskah Smith, Mrs. Ellie Duna
way, Mrs. T. A. Noell, and Miss
Lula Melton, all of Athens, Mrs.
Eula Ford, Winder, Mrs. Clyde
Burt, Mrs. Harlow Hanson and
Mrs. J. M. Mcllntosh, all of Co
lumbia, S. C.; step-mother, Mrs,
Emma May, Atlanta; five sisters,
Mrs. Henry Knight, Jefferson, Mrs.
Lottie Butler, Mrs. Vada Feters
and Mrs. Geneper Pressley, all of
Atlanta, and Mrs. Nina Collins,
Hapeville; three brothers, John,
Thomas and Dewey May, all of
Atlanta, and several grandchil
dren.
A native of Madison county,
Mrs. Melton, who was 70 years old,
had been a resident of Athens
nearly all of her life. She was a
member of Central Baptist Church.
Reds
(Continued from Page One)
small shopkeeper, landlords, pro
fessional men.
Business Change
Nationalized business is spring
ing up in shops whose owners
were seized. The business of the
small druggist, baker and book
store has been taken over by the
Communist - controlled Nation=
alist administration. Reliable re
ports said many of the persons
seized are now in forced labor
camps. Big business and indus
tries were long ago taken over by
the Communists.
In Berlin Otto Grotewohl,
prime minister of the new Soviet
sponsored Eastern German gov=-
ernment, announced his cabinet
and policy. He said the new gov
ernment’s foreign policy would
adhere to that adopted by the
Soviet satellite foreign ministers
at their Warsaw conference in
1948.
The East German government
accepts as a final “peace border”
the Oder-Neisse frontier which
gave the formrer German territory
to Poland and Russia. The gov
ernment said it would abolish all
rationing except for meat and su
gar next year.
Kidneys, along with liver, rank
high in iron, one of the minerals
~ we need for good health. Use both
& kidneys and liver frequently in
menus.
Evans, long a prominent nation=
al figure in pharmacy, is past
president of the American and the
Georgia Pharmaceutical Associa
tions. He is chairman of the board
of directors of the Georgia group.
He will moderate a panel discus
sion Thursday on “The Pharma=-
ceutical Training of the Appren=-
tice.” "
At the Friday morning session
Dr. Heminway, head of the Scher=
ing Corporation’s Medical Service
Department, will discuss hor=-
mones. Dr. Redfern, a 1908 Uni=
versity graduate, will talk on
“Professional Relations Between
‘the Pharmacist .and the Physi
cian.” fegh
Nehru
(Continued from Page One)
points may be changed, officials
hoped, if he carries out his plans
to talk to businessmen as well as
politicians and people in all forms
of activity.
What is most important from
the American official viewpoint is
Nehru's attitude toward the cold
war, from which he has sought!
to keep aloof though hostile to
Communism in his own country. |
India with its 300,000,000 pop
ulation, natural resources and
geographical position is in a vital
spot at the moment The U. S. |
would like to see its leaders and
the commonwealth government
take a more definite role in block~
ing the advance of Communism.
e e —— \
Funeral Notice ;
JETTON.—The friends and rela
tives of Mrs. Robert M. (Josie
Shipp) Jetton, Comer Ga.; Miss
Mary Shipp, Charlotte, N. C.;
Mr. and Mrs, Joe Luckett,
Gulfport, Miss.; Dr. and Mrs.
Robert Shipp, Austin, Texas;
Mr. Samuel Luckett, Gulfport,
Miss., are invited to attend the
funeral of Mrs. Robert M. (Josie
Shipp) Jetton, Thursday mor
ning, October i3th, ai nine
thirty o'clock from the resi
dence. Dr. C. A. Bates, pastor
of the Comer Baptist Church,
will officiate. Interment will be
in Davison, N. C. Bernstein
Funeral Home.
e e Sk,
HUNT, — The friends and rela
tives of Mrs. Ula Fortson Hunt,
Winneka, Il1l.; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
gar Cook, Verdel Cook, Winne
ka, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Fortson. Hunt, Anniston, Ala.;
Mrs. L. H. Eberhart, Carlton,
Ga., are invited to attend the
funeral of Mrs. Ula Fortson
Hunt. Saturday afternoon, Oc
tober 15th, at two o’clock from
Bernstein’s Chapel. Dr, Pierce
Harris, pastor of First Metho
dist Church, Atlanta, Ga., will
officiate. Interment will be in
Oconee Hill cemetery. Bern
stein Funeral Home.
HOWARD.—The friends and rel
atives of Mrs. Ernest T. How
ard of Lexington, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. Claude E. Silvery, Mr.
and Mrs. J. Bowen Thomas of
Greensboro; Mr. and Mrs. E.
Walker Howard, Mr. and Mrs.
William T. Howard, and Mrs.
M. S. Weaver of Lexington,
Ga., are invited to attend the
funeral services of Mrs. Ernest
T. Howard at the Salem Bap
tist Church in Oglethorpe
county, Thursday, October 13,
1949, at 11:00 a. m. The Rev.
Rutherford Coile officiating.
Interment in church yard. The
remains will be in state at the
church from ten a. m. until fun
eral time. McCommons Funeral
Home, Greensboro, Ga,
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BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
© 1949, The Coza-Cola Company
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1t