Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
3 § ™ S Vi
2 “"f, oot s b 5 A 8 o ¥ A !
R L fi£s %L Y & é Z !
il e JPhmmnh, SM # . g iB. .94
L e |
R R «gy TR e i
?o % Y W NR ) 3
AR N S L T
LN e .. | {
i Q L N ; |
8g g e i 2
i A ‘ /
CER N s 5 ‘ j
L & %fifi Bk -A%*‘-fiifi 4 ; :
N oot G F?'g*& ? :
) &% . % 2 7
[ W BT
fooe L hib e R :
oR SR RN RO R .N L Rk : A k.
-T e el ff;fi?“ (. iA I .
o 0 4 i <1 SR A O 2
o rs . k.
g ; Gk e R S I R P i
ey g 3 b e ey ,?(fi:._r,?’xs % "?’l";}- W eT e
g "’” sa
TN L SR ‘m"”?’ ‘figr—-'*fi-v—‘—— .
iT B e T e
L RS R fi%' BT : 7 e
ICE CREAM WITH NO SCREAMS Your ice cream man may
soon. be equipped with an ultra-modern tricycle delivery wagon,
such as this plastic-top model exhibited recently at a dairy show
in London. The vehicle was designed to eliminate customer
complaints about dirty ice cream sold in London streets,
\
Plant Roses
.
First Week
In December
“Get ready to plant roses around
the first week in December, be
cause by that time the football
season. i 8 over and the Christmas
rush has not started,” Mrs. Arthur
Gannony member of the Extension
Building Garden Club, suggested
today.
This ¥ose enthusiast specializes
in Pink and Red Radiance varie
ties, because she thinks they are
well adapted to this climate and
give more blooms for the effort.
In speaking to her garden club
recently Mrs. Gannon suggested:
Dig hales two feet deep and
wide eneugh for placing the roots
flat without crowding. It is a good
idea to dig and prepare the holes
about 30 days before planting.
Place -well rotted stable manure
mixed .with dirt in the bottom of
the hole and then wet this time
just prior to planting.
In the winter it is advisable to
pull dirt up over part of the trunk
of the plant to protect it from
changing temperature, In the
summer there should be a depres
sion of about three inches below‘
the level of the plant bed so that
the planmt can be watered easily.
Mrs, Garmon thinks a good wa-|
tering twice a week is not too
much for roses and for fertilizer
she recommends well rotted man
ure and 4-8-8 commercial fer
tilizer. She advises apolying fer-l
tilizer once each month.
Another suggestion . given by
Mrs. Gannon was plant roses 24 to
48 inches apart. ’
— e rer———— 1
FOR WEST '
By The Associated Press ;
it was c¢hilly over most of the
Midwest today but warmer weath- ‘
er was on the way from the West-'
ern states. i
Below freezing temperatures’
extended from the eastern Dako-|
tas to as far South as Northern
Arkansas, The coldest spots were
Wisconsin, southeastern Minne~
sota and central Jowa. The mer
cury was &8 low as 15 above in
some areas, . 1
There were a few cool spots in
the New England states but tem
peratures generally were around
normal levels over most of the
Eastern states. The cool air over
the Midwest was headed for the
Atlantic Seaboard.
Warmer weather spread over
the Rocky Mountain and Western
Plains veghons and was expected
to move across the Midwest by
tomorrow.
There were only a few wet
gpots today. Light rain or snow
flurries were reported in Michi
gan, Indiana, Ohio and eastern
Kentucky.
-
United
~ (Continued from Page One)
gi\ssed by previous YJ. N. assem
-I€B.
One of the Vatican’s leading ad
ministrators, Frances:n Cardinal
Marmaggi, died today He wa 73.
On the eve of the celebrations
marking the 32nd anniversity of
the Russian October revolution,
Moscow m-de furthe- claims to
gcientitie advancemsnt. Sergei
Vavilov, president of the Acade
my of Sciences of thea U. 8. S. R,
said Soviet seientists hve discov
ered hitherto unknown charac
teristics ol radiation from atomic
nuclei.
In Batavia, a government
spokesihian said the Duich admin
istration is granting amnesty to
most mlml presrners in Indon
esia. was the first fruit of
the agreement signed yesterday at
the Hague giving Ind mesia sover
eignty. The agreemert must be
ratified by both the N¢therlands
and Indonesien governments to
became efiective.
In s ?.5" at Addis Ababa
opening Ethiopia Parliament,
fipm Hafle Selassie said his
eounfiy ineists on rflinl POSess
sion of the prewar Italian colonies
w snd Italian Somalia
b O R o
i N e
%' :\‘l'-5:'7"2{;: i SRS s 'f?
3 b i
vy b
ie i 4
P i M R ;
T b T
. o < BRr5%
e G 5 SRR g
e M e
2 ?;;3;%:;??@,.” Gk _g o
i P
~‘_LW i P
B e o s
L i &
vy e g e
e SO A
PS4S S . 3
G | A ; 24
: pamesm i
s o P L
;fi‘f A e o
NOMINATED — Harold
C. Stuart, University of Virginia
graduate and former Tulsa, Okla.,
iawyer, was nominated by Presi
dent Truman as Assistant Sec
¢« petary of the Air Force. ' - |
National Meet
Nathan Jolan, counselor for
Georgia State Division of Voca
tional Rehabilitation, left today
for San Antonio, Texus. where he
wlll attend the Nationa: Rehabili
tation Association convention.
The fi- -day nation-wide af=-
fair begins Sunday. Mr. Nolan re
sides in Athens at 157 C Prince
avenue,
Also nttending the convention
from Georgia will be Paul Bar
rett, director of Georgia Division
of Vocational Rehabilitation. He is
president of the National Rehabil=
itation Association and will pre
side over the convention.
George Mikan holds the high
scoring record in seven of the 11
arenas he played in last season in
the Basketball Association of
America.
John Burnett of the Cleveland
Indians collected nine hits in 11
times at bat in a 1832 game—the
‘major league record.
i%‘fi‘ SRR e g
SN S T B S B R
BN MR e N
§ M **&\:&3@ SN
BN D =S e
My ARGI
\x,\fg | S e
i R
(\&‘ iRI {’g.\shg‘,‘ T
Rt N 5-&‘&{("‘ SRy
TIORGOS S
RSI 3 fif“ TR ey &‘»}‘v}?
AR R fi 15y
TTORRRE: YNS SRR ST iR e
ELEORE .SR BTN
i ‘§é§w BT
O AR DR SRR N R
Sy RAR R
PR A BT el R
{\E AN R T
SRR RQD e
€lB BR T & el TN agh R
SRR NN s B g 3 RRN M e
e anilge KER I e 2 é@
BT S
COTTON NEXT—J. W. Shan
non of Marfa, Texas, foreman
of a large Culberson County
farm, looks at the long grass
which will gg'e way to cotton
now that a Ruge underground
water supply has been located
near Van Horn, Texas.
.
] = .
ane ]A L 3
Hart Services
To Be Held
Friday At 3
Hoyt C. Hart, well known resi
dent of Hull, died at the home of
his sister, Mrs. J. G. Yarborough,
Thursday morning at 6:30 o’clock.
Mr. Hart was 64 years old and
had been ill for about three weeks.
Services will be conducted Fri
day afternoon at 3 o'clock from
Hull Baptist Church with the pas
tor, Rev, A. E. Logan, officiating.
Burial will be in the Hart fami
ly cemetery, Bridges Funeral
Home in charge of arrangements.
Pall-bearers will be Grover Jones,
Guy Patten, Luke Coile, Paul
Mann, Owen Johnson, Clarence
Williams.
Surviving Mr. Hart are three
sisters, Mrs. Yarborough and Mrs.
Maude Rice, both of Hull, and Mis.
Nellie- Spratlin, Athens, and sev
eral neices and nephews,
A native of Madison county, Mr.
Hart had resided in Hull most of
his life, where he had been a
merchant for more than 40 years.
He had been a member of Hull
Baptist Church singe early man
hood and was one of the best
known citizens in this sectica. He
was always ready and willing to
give of his time and resources to
his church and to every worth
while movement dedicated to the
development and upbuilding of
his community.
Talk Of |
(Continued from Page One)
a blow to Lewis’ strategy to make
a separate aeal with Indiana or
Illinois mine operators in hopes
the rest of the soft coal industry
would go along,
An appeal similar to Gov.
Schricker's was made by Gov.
Adlai Stevenson of Illinois. But
Stevenson confined himself to a
plea to both sides for a quick
peace plan,
Minn. Appeal
Minnesota’s Gov. Luther W.
Youngdahl also called for an end
to the strike, but he addressed his
appeal to President Truman.
“Your earnest efforts to bring
the coal strike to an immediate
end are hereby solicited,” Young
dahl wired, “so that subsequent
acute suffering in our severe win
ter climate can be avoided.”
T.ike Youngdahl, Schricker and
Stevenson said their states are
suffering from fuel shortages with
cold weather starting.
The only coal negotiations that
have been going on of late—be
tween the miners union and
southern operators—were broken
off yesterday by the operators.
UMW talks with Northern and
Western operators ended without
result last month.
The southern operators’ Presi
dent, Joseph E. Moody, said at
Bluefield, W. Va., that to continue
talks after five months of getting
nowhere would do no good.
There are almost a million men
on strike in the coal and steel
stoppages. The steel strike has
been going on since Oct. 1,
Truman
(Continued from Page One)
Dewey’s concession of defeat.
Many of the proposais for which
he campaigned have failed in Con
gress—notably Civil Rights meas
ures, a National Heaith program
and Federal Aid=to-education.
He started the 1950 Democra
tic campaign ball rolling last La
bor Day with speeches at Pitts=
burgh and Des Moines. What he
calls the “reactionaries” and “self
ish interests” are his target again.
He was due in Minneapolis at 2
p. m. (EST) for a parade into St.
Paul, a reception, a banquet and
then his speech in the Civic Audi
torium,
1t is all part of “Truman Day”
climaxing the celebration of Min
nesota’s Centennial.
The Presidential Special this
time is a “stag train.” There isn’t
even a woman reporter aboard.
Funeral Notice
THORNTON. — Died Wednesday
afternoon, November 2nd, at a
local hospital, Mrs. May Mont
gomery Thornton in her 77th
year, She is survived by one
daughter, Miss Virginia Thorn
ton; one son, Mr. Arthur
Thornton; a sister-in-law, Mrs.
W. P. Montgomery; four grand
children, Elmer Thornton, Wil
liam Thornton, -Jacquelin
Thornton and Joe Thornton;
and three cousins, Mrs. Leta
Talmadge, Mrs. Ella Gunnells
and Miss Addie Montgomery,
all of Athens.. The funeral was
this, Thursday afternoon, Nov
ember 3rd, at four o’clock from
Bernstein’s Chapel. The follow
ing gentlemen served as pail
bearers: Mr, Elmer Thornton,
Mr. William Thornton, Mr. L.
O. Price, Sr., Mr. L. I. Skin
ner, Mr. L. C. Westbrook and
Mr. S. S. Watson, Rev, J. W. O.
MecKibben officiated. Inter
ment was in Oconee Hill cem
etery Bernstein Funeral Home.
HART.—The relatives and friends
of Mr. Hoyt C. Hart of Hull,
Ga.; Mr., and Mrs, J. G. Yar
brough of Hull, Ga.; Mrs.
Mauce Rice of Hull, Ga.; and
Mrs. Nellia Snratlin of Athens,
are invited to attend the funeral
of Mr. Hoyt C. Hart, Friday
afternoon, November 4th, 1949,
from the Hull Baptist Church
at three (3:00) o'clock. Rev. A.
E. Logan, pastor of the church,
will officiate. Mr. Grover Jones,
Mr. Paul Mann, Mr. Guy Pat
ten, Mr. Owen Johnson, Mr,
Luke Coile and Mr. Clarence
Williams will serve as pall
bearers and will meet at the
residence at two-thirty o’clock.
Interment will be in the Hart
family cemetery near Hull
Bridges Funeral Home.
v LA Rt ¥ L ¢ i 7 4N
THE BANNER-'{{EKAL‘D.‘ araedy &korGia
‘ ek ¢S el SalIE 4 S
VAR S S R Y Sl o VR R
% oy G P ‘fv‘ia . ?,,:_?,'«s&6_‘,"', e LG
f v el 4_3‘., = s A o
' ; ”«%gg‘éf AL B 'Y
2 RP g o " " & g o
i - ISR S b
i il . M 5 .
. & W § b 8 o
| » At SRR
s P .4 o : o SR
PN - O
* ; : i '243_." 3 & 4 gt
Ak Pk 5. S 8 X
wi,’ ";y"“‘-“‘ R B e - ‘xh L g / 1
gy e G A 5 %.ifii_% Sol .
% e G i ‘,;14 "bl s e \s s ‘
! Nke g e e . 4 i 1
EX SR A S A L ¥ i
Dt e G et e — _
v G L BSy e S R
B D S A M N
U T R L BANo ST B LRt
% R e Nl R ;'t”;?fi’f‘“’ eLR EM AR
b dpes i S RkeVe |
By e A R ke ePR L R T
P S ei T B BTt
St TR S R WKk PR Yg RS B S IR el
E’ ; 5S B A B LB S i o B U B NP o
b % 070 Sl R B O R eAN I R 4 G
e LTIRR NI L s e
B b 68 pnilr b eLR S Y Wik
¥ S TR N RGN SR s e L IR YRO SR
; . § R "/?’ A,;_"",, 2r« S v'}‘ %42 ;;,’ _;‘: vTel s_‘
RUBBLE MAKES BRICKS—War ruins in Warsaw, Poland, are
providing the bricks badly needed for reconstruction. Special mills,
located near the devastated areas, grind up the rubble for concrete=
mixing machines. Workmen above are moving the ground rubble
to the mixers. It will end up as finished cement bricks. J
State Suffers
.
By Population
v L
Losses - - Tate
i e PR i
B T e,
AR s e
i AR A <R
" i R i 5 Sl |
DEAN WILLIAM TATE
“We are very conscious of soil
erosion and its consequences in
Georgia, but many of us do not
realize the tremendous losses suf
fered in this state by the ‘erosion’
or losses of population,” Dean
William Tate of the University
of Georgia, told members of the
Athens Lions Club today.
The University official spoke
to almost 100 members of the
club at the regular weekly meet
ing at the Geaorgian Hotel at
noon, -
Young people under 21 years of
age and those over 65 are not
leaving the state, Dean Tate con
tinued, but our heaviest losses
are between these age groups.
This means that many Georgians
are going elsewhere for employ
ment during the years when their
earning power is highest.
Losing these wage earners to
other areas places a heavy bur
den on the state in two fields,
Dean Tate explained. First, Geor
gia bears the cost of educating
the young people who go outside
the state to do their earning, and
secondly, old age pensions are
heavier in proportion to those in
some other states.
“When we lose people we lose
something just as valuable as
soil,” he concluded, in citing the
preblems of employing young
people in this state and through
out the Southeast.
Wholesale
(Continued from Page One)
iness. »
“In all of the operations con
ducted by this man,” he contin
ued. “It has been noecessary for
him to use a front. However, it is
general pub'ic knowredge in and
around Macon that J. M. Simmons
has definitely and openly angaged
in the liquor business during atl
these years.”
The assistant attornev general!
said a case of liquor .aw viola
tion was brought against Simmons
in Macon City Court in February
this year.
“The officers and th 2 court ditl
not make the case against Phillip,
i : . Thewe’ & |
| eOB kY i
» \ ”«s'«g}- §f&~ s
b e T
= s R e S 0 S GHE R
o \v“‘is A L 5
;§ s‘:\\. “( o \,}\‘ i B ‘3‘;",’. 3 i .:: % {{W%’” a 7
NIRRT eSR R AR TTR S Reaenate ‘
AR O e ‘f*% \\ws el ’s“3"§ :
g SRS RSt eSTNN LS B e
siERe, St TR O SAR et SETONNTER . BRR et R
AR gT e e oiaaimE TR B By
PERTRRR e AR RAR e e SRR IR SR o RN S
\.\ Fo e T FatEN ST A Rt e ;
&}\“ eo B g SRR eT RO e
gt lia el L b e §“ “:é'w@ ol L 1
RS R e Se G LA R e
b _\% g CRU AR N S s
‘ a*%) e m eel o S Ranvipen i LR A
EA N S M*“fi&if, UM el TR el
; e e ey CN N g ok
8 VRTINS S X S vt "
| SLSR S SR W e SR
&o- oRI S _"‘ eG 5 I 8 30, ‘;Q, A 3
oT e §LS ; S
F ”““""@*@ e ‘“ B I*,_;4
R T e OB ePS ALN et i
*“ SR S o & },15 B SRR S S ;
Pl S SRR S eLT
egl e e Soht
R fi Le e S T e
e, Sl e R e TR R ‘*\,,'V"m e i
\ ' s
R ,RO_M WAR'S RUBT<E Thuse bricks weie mo
m the war rubble in Warsaw Poland -la speeial ! &
near devastaled areas the iubble n - St .
concreie and finally pre ced U ; e g
e : - . ¥ it 5 nio
the rebulicng ot
but against J. M. Simmors, know=
ing that he was the one who was
actually operating ths busipess’™
he asserted.
Actual Owner
Shaw declared that J M. Sim
mons “is ot only the general
manager of the business, but he
is the actual owner ¢nd opera
tor.” He urged revocation of
Phillip Simmons’ license because
“the licensee is responsible for
the official acts of his general
manager and others whom he
sees fit to put in places of :crust.”
He told Redwine that his in
vestigating auditor, Lark S.
Bragg, found that all books for
the five retailers and the whole
saler were kept in the wholesale
firm’s office by the same book
keeper. This in itself is a violation
of the law, he added, because each
retailer is required 1o keep his
own books on the premises of his
business.
To back up his charge that Sim
mons was the real head of the
combine, SShaw said cac hos the
retailers in their applications for
licenses swore that no one but
themselves would receive a profit
from their stores. Actually, he
contended J. M. Simmons got al
most twice as much from the five
stores as the men who held the
licenses. 5
Auditor Bragg testilied that an
examination of the books showed
Simmons received during 1946~
1948 a total of $60,74” from the
five stores while the actual licens
ees got a total of only $39,55.
The same financial setup has been
operating this year, he added.
In an effort to prove bootleg
operations and falsification of re
ports against, Mamon wholesale
liquors, Shaw brought in monthly
reports made by the firm to the
foderal and state governments,
The federal reports snowed a to
tal of 2,267 3-4 cases of liquor
was shipped into drv counties
from Dec. 1, 1948, to Jan. 19, 1949,
The state reports, which are sup
posed to be carbon copies of the
federal returns, showed this liquor
going to licensed retailers.
Industrial
(Continued from Page One)
to editing the trade paper, is vice
president of the International Con
ference of Industrial Editors.
Don Seiwell, vice president of
Brown-Seiweall Publishing Com-=
pany, and editor of the Southern
Fireside—a regional magazine for
the South—will speak at the din
ner Friday night. John A. Long,
Bowen Press, Decatur, will speak
at the luficheon Saturday, the final
session of the Institute.
Speakers previously announced
for Friday morning sessions in
clude Marion J. Wise, president of
‘the Central of Georgia Railway
Company; D. J. Hardenbrook, vice
president and director, Union Bag
and Paper Corp., Savannah; and
Eugene Black, jr., president, In
ternational Bank for Reconsiruc
tion and Development, Washing
tan, D, C.
Institute leaders Saturday morn
ing are Arno Kretschmer and Reg
inald Mitchell, foreign students in
the Journalism School; John E.
Davis, editor, Shell Progress, New
York; and. Miss Elizabeth Parker,
director, Home Service Division,
Georgia Power Company, Atlanta.
Larry Archambeault, defense
man for the Louisville Blades of
the U. S. Hockey Leiague; was a
four-letter athlete at Muassena, N.
Y., high school.
=bIIE
THE ETHER'S
WORN OFF NOW
«es YES, QUITE
oL ) -’:‘":;\;
Bl Ee\ b oviis
el
‘ R
FLRY
R
e B IR S
e
2 AN
{RT Q
:"*“_ 2 ‘
N BVERAY
B e| 4
PR
CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERRIES .. .. .. .........5
HFRSHEY PLAIN OR AIMOND BARS ... . . .. .12t
ECKO KITCHEN UTENSILS (special) ... ... ... 10
BULR DOLCHE SYRINGES ... ... .. ........%
FONTAI ST W
% HEATING
PADS
. SPECIAL—
53.98
GENERAL ELECTRIC
SUN BOWL
ELECTRIC
HEATERS
$8.95
EMFRSON
RADIOS
$14.95
HAVE YOU BEEN ONE OF CROW'’S
LUCKY WINNERS
NAMES OF NEW WINNERS HAVE BEEN POSTED.
COME IN AND SEE IF YOU ARE LUCKY.
MATCHES . 12c
iR W 8 L S e AR 5
=O, 1V 1)
;,\“j ‘,J v_j:;im;;,—',flf**?j:‘
“@ ”, o o
(AL “Sogping
fi; et DULLS HAIR
= MALO
E===F—""\ GLORIFIES ITI
S %
g '?
= e GIANY
== .j. -
o 0 T
Péisre: & Brush:
SPECIAL wa..
&EE;ER ONiy |
00 69 i
sli\!Al.U! t
- While supplies last!
B RV Y R
SR EL TEL LRSS
LRI
$ """'_-:;f;,}" | The Self-Adher'ng
"e e Couze
Holds fast without messy
sticking. Comes off withour
35c nful pulling. Requires mo pins
— o tying — no fape.
CROW'S JrUE
STORE
e \\\\R&&n /%(//Jz/ FRESCRIPTION SPECALSTS
THERE 1S NO
NEED FOR
ANY FRIGHT }8
f ,
' & Lot P 3
o /) F ol
Ay S
e e!;:‘:
‘ &
ELECTRIC GRIDDIE .. .. .. .. .. 1495
POD (RN POPPER .. . .. .. .. 30
LR R T
GFDREDSRABY FOOD .- .. .. . %
WOODEN BATH SHOES . .. . .. i)
PROPHYLACTIC TOOTH BRUSHES _ 75c
SOAP SPECIAL AT CROW'S
All Reg.
Sizes
SOAP
POWDER
3¢
# 3 C AL b
o J) f BRSBTS A
<) cotps AR
@v ~ \.\V v aa® SRS |
¢ : b v BRI IR -‘;_‘:E‘("(vt A X i
i 378: : S 7 ‘
(ESEN, N e ;
N | a 8 : it
No one knows yet what causes a cold . , . but doctors and
pharmacists agree you can do much so shorten the lengih
of one. Get lots of rest . , , alkalize your system . . . fnsure
regular elimination . . . eat sensibly ~ ~ keep warm. If you
do get a cold and your doctor prescribes for you , . , remen
ber that our Pharmacists are always ready so serve you ...
anytime .. all the time. You will find our prescription serv
ice . . . a compleiely dependable source for your prescrip
tion compounding.
(OUGH AND (OLD REMEDIES
SI.OO SIZE :
CP.CONGHSYRIp .. .. ... 8%
75¢ MIX YOUR OWN
DWEY COMGHSYRUP .. .. .. .. . 5%
MACA] MUAIEDS 2,
FOR BRONCHIAL IRRITATIONS
PINFY FRENCATEN EMITICION 100
ONLY AT CROW'S—IB CAPSIILES
(PN . CADS FOIN CADSINES EOe
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Immunize with Oral Cold Vaccines.
VACAGEN - ENTORAL
ORAVAX —2O capsules .. .. $1.19
SHOP AT CROW'’S AND SAVE
| THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1955,
Hp\a FIRST WORDS
OVE HIS
HEAD'S ALL RIGHT |
AETE] TR o U
5 SIS L AR
' \$ 3
SR
LY AN 7';5“-.
“[ fiw o
T AL oy 1
L S 1) <o
g e L
Sy Fd .
]
o] £
i xene
@6"75,%1;;@&
All 10c
HAND
SOAP
3 For
19c
(’ £ H 3
- IT PAYS 10
SHOP AT
;‘f o~ S
afrersl Pl
o et o "
feney ! g
T e i
©R W, MAUSTER €O, tae. o#’“’
All
Economy
SOAP
POWDER
69¢