Newspaper Page Text
COTTON
NO MARKET —HOLIDAY 1
Vol, CXVII, No. 273. Associated Press Service
Battling Bulldogs Hold Tech To 7-6 Margin
Lilienthal, Others Charged With Plot To Give Britain A - Bomb Secret
S R X Y
R R o R
SR BRGNS e 5 5
o E
T s 3
rRTEE e : i g
R R . w o
T SN 3 R .
Ro . :
Lo e :
BemEU . U
P e e
B iR e
Sl
BI . o
Rgmeon i e e
B e S e
S S R R
AR R BRI
Seed £ e e
G G
B 2 (I R 4 DR
o it
e S
R R R
e B s
R 4 R
coah i R G
RBe % P
R 35 > s
%3?% SRS, By
foo e RO
R o B
P B B RN
", O e AL SO SRR e
R R s ; SR e
R S S 3 % R "'A-Z:Z-.:!:.l:.' R
RA e o
WALTER S. BROWN
. « « Highly Honored
Huge 4-H
Congress
Opens Mon.
Numerous Athenians
Among State Leaders
Going To Chicago Meet
Georgia’s 4-H delegation, 35
strong, left Atlanta last night on
the “Georgian” for Chicago and
ithe National 4-H Club Congress.
Among the delegation were sev~
eral 4-H elub leaders and Georgia
Agricultural Extension Service of
ficials, from Athens. Some of the
officials went to Chicago ahead of
the regular delegation.
Last night’s group included 28
hoys and girls; two advisers, Mrs.
M. H. Tappan, Greene county, and
Coy Dekle, Colquitt; two assistant
Extension Service agents, Miss Le-.
nora Roberts, Greene, and W. F,
Bazemore, Richmond; two as
sistant state 4-H leaders, Mrs.
Martha Harrison and R. J. Rich
ardson, Athens, and Miss Elizabeth
Zellner, Terrell county home dem~
onstration agent., Mrs. Harrison,
Miss Zellner and Mr. Richardson
will be in charge of the group. |
Also attending the Congress will
be Walter S. Brown, Athens, di
rector of Georgia Agricultural Ex
tension Service; O. B. Copeland,
Athens, editor, Georgia Agricul
tural Extension Service; and Dr.
Milipn P. Jarnagin, Athens agri
cultural eonsultant for University
System.
Director Brown is one of the 11
versons throughout the nation who
have been chosen to serve on the
Extension Service Sub-committee
on 4-H Club work. This group
will direct and form plans. Direc
tor Brown is also a member of
several other committees.
Editor Copeland is one of the
seven State Extension Service edi
tors from over the entire country
that will serve on the Press Com=-
mittee,
Two of the boys and girls repre
senting Georgia at the Congress
received their trips for outstand
mg work in supporting the State
4-H Club Foundation. They are
Rachel Hardy and Bobby Stokes,
Bibb counmty. The other 26 are
state winners in project work.
Mrs, Tappan and Mr. Dekle, who
are both community and county
4-H advisers, also received the trip
(Continued On Page Two)
FARMERS’ MEETING
Clarke County Farm Bureau will
meet in Winterville on Tuesday
night at 7:30. All farmers and
their wives are urged to attend.
The Winterville High School senior
¢lass will serve the dinner. Cost
per plate will be sl.
CIVIL RICHTS TRIAL
Government Stresses Work
Of Klan In Flogging Case
ROME, Ga., Nov. 26—(AP) —
The government is painting, al=
most incidentally, a picture of the
Ku Klux Klan at work.
Insofar as the government is
¢oncerned, however, the Klan is
just backzround far = Seasdes
¢anvas: the mass oivil rights trial
of 12 men. .
As trials go, this one probably
Would be elassed as dull, but it
élready has produced one pre
¢edent,
Each of the defendants — Dade
County Sheriff John W. Lynch,
three of his deputies and eight
private eitizens — is accused of
eonspiring to arrest seven negroes
without eause and turn them over
i a band for beating.
For U. 8. District Attorney J.
gllis Mundy, the fact that the
aélgsotsoto'm men wore Klan
¥o was a detail.
Mundy’s chief cor.cern is with
e charge that four representa
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Sen. Johnson
Hurls Charges,
Denies Others
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26—(AP)
—Sen. Edwin C. Johnson (D.-
Colo.) charged tonight that David
E. Lilienthal is the ringleader ‘in
a “nefarious plot” to give Great
Britain the secret of an Americar
super atomic bomb. §
Johnson asserted that work’
with Lilienthal, retiring chair ‘
of the Atomic Energy Commie. & |
are “certain politicians, scient. s
and publications in this country.”
All of them, Johnson said, are
“actively engaged in a conspiracy.”
The Senator also linked the
Washington Post to “this unwise
scheme.” He made his charges in
a letter to the Post replying to a
Post editorial ecritical of him,
Johnson made the letter public.
Lilienthal could not be reached
for comment.
At the Post, an official asid the
newspaper was reserving com
ment today but that it planned to
print the letter and an editorial
regarding it on Monday morning. |
Video Charge
Johnson’s accusation came after
a high government official had
said privately that the senator’s
discussions of atomic weapons oni
a television program were a big
factor behind President Truman’s‘
crackdown on talk about defense‘
secrets.
Mr. Truman yesterday ordered
Attorney General McGrath to
tighten the safeguarding of atomic
and other security information.
The President’s action is under
stood to have been directed main
ly at Johnson, a member of the
Senate = House Atomic Energy
Committee.
Johnson repeated foday, how
ever, that he does not believe his
telecast remarks had anything to
do with the Presidential directive.
And he said again that he talked
about nothing which had not been
disclosed previously.
On the television program,
which emanated from New York
on November 1, Johnson took the
position that there has not been
enough secrecy about this coun=-
try’s atomic program. Durjing the
telecast he said the United States:
New Bomb
1. Has developed an atomic
bomb six times more powerful
than the one dropped at Nagasaki
in 1945.
2. Has made much progress in
work on a bomb 1,000 times more
potent than the Nagasaki weapon.
3. Is well on the way toward |
development of a device which
would explode an enemy bomb
before it reaches the target.
In an editorial November 21, the
Washington Post criticized John
son for his television remarks. I
In his letter today to the editor,
Johnson said the newspaper had
“charged me with the serious of
fense of disclosing top secret in
formation which might affect our
national security.” He denied the
charges,
“Probably the Post is nettled by
my statements that certain politi=-
(Continued On Page Two)
Youth Injured;
Struck By Auto
Ray Danner, eight-year old son
of City Councilman and Mrs. W.
N. Danner, jr., of 284 Bloomfield
street, was slightly injured yes
terday afternoon when he was hit
by an automobile at the intersec
tion of College avenue and Wash
ington street.
Ray was carried to Athens Gen
eral Hospital in a Bridges ambu~
lance, but was released shortly
later, He had no broken bones,
only scratches and skinned places.
Ray was crossing the street when
hit, police reported.
A reckless driving charge has
been placed against a resident of
Winterville in connection with the
accident, city police reported last
night.
tives of the state conspired with
citizens to deprive scven people
of their constitutional rights to
equal protection and immunity
from illegal punishment.
So far each of th 2 witnesses in
the Federai bisirict Couri irial
has told of an exciting day in lit=-
tle Trenton, Ga., and Dade county
last April 2.
There was & big Klan parade
and speech-making in the square
before the hooded men roared out
of town in automobiles and sped
down a side road to the home of
Mamie Clay.
Here, one witness said, the Klan
purned & cross, strutted up and
down a bit and then entered the
Clay home.
‘ He said the men who went in,
came out with others who wore
‘[no robes, but he was unzble to
‘say whether the unrobed ones
' were the plaintiffs,
SERVING ATHENS AND NORTHEAST GEORGIA OVER A CENTURY
China Reds
Seize New
i
i < s
l' i EII
|8 o2t Voy
) s s,b g 5
& "/ard’s Top Aide
v . Accused Of Spying;
+ U.S. Blockade Asked
p
| WASHINGTON, Nov. 26—(AP)
‘| —Chinese Commuanists have sud
| denly seized another American
|diplomat at Mukden — Angus
| Ward’s top aide. A Repubilcan
| congressman immediately propos=-
|ed that the United States Navy
‘| blockade the China coast until he
‘tis released.
The Communists errest of Vice
Consul William N. Stokes in con=
| nection with “spying charges” was
| made known today by the State
'| Departmel.t. It ordered “the
| strongest protest’” to the Red com=-
| manders in the Manchurian city.
That was not enough for Rep.
Judd (R-Minn), a member of the
‘| House Foreign Affairs committee.
| He suggested the blockade.
; “We should have begun a naval
| blockade a year ago when they
| first started this line of action,”
| said Judd, a former medical mis
sionary in China. “Failing this,
we should have mobhilized the
-| forces of world opinion — some
| thing we didn’t try until a few
days ago.”
The State Department last week
asked 30 nations to bring pressure
on the Chinese Reds before they
freed Angus Ward, Mukden consul
general. What effact this appeal
had was not clear.
Rep. Mansfield (D--Mont), who
also is a member of the Foreign
Affairs Unit, suggested that the
State Department immediately
lay* the case before the United Na
tions and ask prompt action to get
Stokes freed.
Stokes was the chief lieutenant
of Ward, who was leleased only
this week after a month’s impris
onment by the Communists on
charges which the State Depart
ment declared were entirely
trumped up.
The new seizure came with
stunning unexpectadness at a time
when American officials believed
that worst was over in the Ward
case. They had assumed it would
be only a matter of days before
Ward and his staff would be al
lowed to leave Mukden.
Rep. Judd told a reporter he
was not demanding direct military
action against the Cnpinese Coni=-
munists. But he said:
“There are types of action that
|can be taken short of war and we
had better take those steps if we
]want to keep the respect of the
| Asiatic people.”
Cutter Towing
Disabled Yacht
NORFQLK, Va,, Nov. 26—(AP)
—The Coast Guard cutter Travis
radioed this afternoon she was
heading for Charleston, S, C., with
the disabled yacht Good Hope in
tow.
She was proceedi?g, she said, at
a speed of five knots, and estima
ted she would arrive at Charles
ton sometime Sunday morning.
There are five persons aboard
the leaking vessel.
The Travis said the yacht re
ported all hands well “except for
fatigue due to lack of sleep and
continuous baling water with
buckets for past four days.
Violence
By The Associated Press
The funeral of the slain bro=
ther of the Liberal candidate
threatened to become the focal
point of a new explosion in Co
lombia’s bloody presidential elec
tion today (Sunday).
Vincente Echandia, brother of
Dario Echandia, was killed along
with two other Liberals in a po
lice shooting at the monument to
Colombia’s liberator, San Martin,
Friday night. 3
The Liberals, who have no hope
in the election because they have
it oo IR DALAYTE Ay
candidate and
wlgrld New' boycotted the
OUflduP voting booths,
e - PCPAred 'a big
martyr’s funeral for the slain
mai on €ieciivii day ucspite EoOvV=
ernment orders banning meetings.
Barring something completely
unforeseen Conservative Laurea
no Gomez will be elected. He is
backed by President Mariano Os
pina Perez whose government has
declared a state of siegé, sus
pended parliament, imposed cen=-
sorship and declared new rules
for the supreme court in an ef
fort to keep the lid on. About 500
persons have been reported killed
in Liberal-Conservative cam
paigning in recent months.
; Panama Strife
Panama also was tied in knots
by @ general folded arms strike
ATHENS, CA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1949,
T R B
W o : Siiae
0 e, TR =
&‘; B e oSR o
LN T o
k. w'*\\m%?\\\ ol s ;’f 3‘ b
R . e Py v
e R Fals ¥
§ 3 s_:"_:;.-"" Svl N e
R R o v dr el
R i R TR T T
oTi R R
I N e R By
- oo R o
.g e e
‘ § § ‘;é;“fii ¥ ,%,} i,, »_';*."l::'i “,
3 : R e 3 3 Ry Te S
o %“u’\ Lo
Sole R o TT T T .
i e @ e T :
oR A e
Thm o T :
R b e e
i;;l:;v S BB SR R T, - B S
b3bege o, & R 3
e Laow a O R L L e
i:&S R e e S
*”%gw W R o ioo A S ‘v
eo : G
e ‘s% R - e
gaeß e B O et e e S
R ‘:’\gt B S LR 1 ::§;3=
’
MIAMI’'S ORANGE BOWL COLLEEN
Miss Colleen Delaney poses among the palm trees to
publicize the Orange Bowl football game at Miami
January 2. You can hardly blame the Orange Bowl
Committee for overlooking a minor inconsistency in se
lecting a Delaney to be “Senorita of the Fiesta” for the
Orange Bowl festival.— (AP Wirephoto.)
BOWLS AT A GLANCE
Wildecats In Orange
®
Bowl: N.C. In Cotton
NEW YORK, Nov, 26—(AP)—Here’s how the college teams are
lined up for the various bowl games, with several selections yet to be
announced:
JAN. 2:
ROSE BOWL—California vs Ohio State, Pasadena, Calif.
COTTON BOWL~—North Carolina vs Rice, Dallas, Tex.
ORANGE BOWL—Santa Clara vs Kentucky, Miami, Fla,
SUGAR BOWL—Oklahoma vs opponent to be named, New
Orleans, t
GATOR BOWL—No choices made yet.
# SUN BOWL—Georgetown vs opponent to be named, El Paso, Tex,
PINEAPPLE BOWL—Stanford vs Hawaii, Honolulu,
OLEANDER BOWL—MecMurray (Tex.) College vs Missouri Val=
ley, Galveston, Tex.
DEC. 16:
PAPER BOWL—Jacksonville (Ala.) State Teachers vs Livingston
(Ala.) State College, Pensacola, Fla,
DEC. 3:
GLASS BOWL—U, of Toledo vs. U. of Cincinnati, Toledo, Ohio,
REFRIGERATOR BOWL—Hillsdale (Mich.) vs Evansville (Ind.))
at Evansville.
« . SHRINE POTATO BOWL—Boise (Ida.) Junior College vs Taft
(Calif.) Junior College, Bakersfield, Calif.
BOZO ENDS SEASON WITH .875
MARK; BELIEVED TOPS IN NATION
Boze Cledfeller TIT was really strutting last nighs, as well he
might be.
The old gent dropped by the Banner-Herald T
just as the news room was tidying up the last y
bit of copy. “Well, I told you so 0,” he almost g% =
smirked. e
“Told us what?” we asked, amazed. "’%
“That I'm the best,” he explained, “This XL Wl
week proves it,” and he left. L 2 /e
We quickly scratched some calculations, and il f’
found he was right. Out of 404 games, Bozo hit - M .
344 right, missed 49, and tied 11, for an 875 SO/
average, That should be about the best in the NFRFE: -~
nation for the second straight year, His mark e 3 2me
last year was slightly over ,840. BOZO
e STRIKES AND BLOODSHED m——
Threatens Colombia Election
of workers demanding the re
moval of Police Chief Colonel
Jose Remon who engineered
three changes in the republic’s
presidency in six days. ’
Arnulfo Arias, the president
since Friday night, said he had
the signed resignations of Remon
and two of his deputies and
would act on them in due course.
Crowds of strikers were fired
on by police and two men were
W oman Pawns Husband For $45;
. .
Redeems Him Short Time Later
ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 26.—~(AP)—A woman “pawned” her
husbang foir 945 yesterdaw and “redeemed” him a short time
later. 2
Milten F. Levison, cperator of a pawn shop, told the story to=
day.
He said the couple eame to Albany from Stony Point in Rock
land county to pick up a state check, but first had to pay $45 to
the state retirement fund.
They offered their wedding rings as collateral but were told
that the rings weren’t worth $45.
Levison proposed that the husbhand stay at the pawn shep as
“collateral” while his wife took the loan and obtained the state
check. -
The couple agreed. In a short while the woman came back, paid
back the $45 and reclaimed her husband,
Levison added that the couple paid him $1.35 interest, figured
at three percent for a month or any part of a month,
wounded. Other crowds stoned
busses and made them stop oper
ating.
Spy Struggle
Poland and France continued
their “spy for spy” struggle.
France deporte’ nine more Poles,
making a total of 26, besides a
vice consul held in prison on es
pionage charges.
Poland announced the arrest of
a French vice consul in Warsaw
New Sex
@
Crimes
Reported
14-Month-Old Baby
Attacker Arrested;
Salesgirl Assaulted
By The Associated Press
. Solution of a new set of sex
crimes faced police in various parts
of the country last night.
In New York, police questioned
a husky youth in connection with
an indecent attack on a 14-months
old girl in a Staten Island home.
They held a youth identified as
George Kane, 20, who was quoted
by police as saying “I can’t ex
plain why I did it.”
The child, dazed and bleeding
from internal injuries and body
bruises, was found unclothed in
bed by her parents Thanksgiving
morning.
In Pittsburgh, police were ques
tioning an elevator operator in the
slaying of an attractive 38-year
old brunette salesgirl.
A neighbor reported she saw
Miss Jean Brusco beaten and
dragged away from her home
nearby. Mrs. Ellen Flannagan
called police who searched but
found nothing.
Later a milkman stumbled on
Miss Brusco’s body 150 feei from
her home Saturday morning. Po
lice said she had been assaulted.
They held a man identified as
Mike Pidich, 36, of nearby Mon=-
essen, Pa. |
~ No charge has been placed
against him.
Girl Knifed
At newport News, a pretty 18-
year-old high school gi:ll is in
critical condition with. throat
slashed. !
Warwick County Police Chief
Leroy Woody said a 20-year-old
youth is being held for question
ing but withheld his name. The
girl, Millie M. Summs, fell through
a neighbor's doorway Friday night
' with her throat cut and unable to
talk. |
‘ She still cannot speak after be=
ing taken to a hospital early Sat
‘ urday morning. |
- The new group of crimes fol
lowed a series committed against
voung girls in various parts of the
country.
Other Cases
In the pact two weeks, a seven=
year-old girl, a six-year-old girl
and a 17-months-old baby died
following what police described as
sex attacks. Detroit police said
another seven-year-old girl was
kidnapped and indecent liberties
taken with her.
Charged in Los Angeles with
the sex murder of six-year-old
Linda Joyce Glucoft, Fred Stroble,
66, a baker, told newsmen “I’ll do
everything I can to live.”
Body I Canal
At Twin Falls, Idaho, Neale But
terfield, 16, confessed slaying sev
en-year old Glenda Joyce Bris
bois. Police said the high school
youth also assaulted the girl be
fore leaving her in an irrigation
canal.
A later victim is 17-months-old
Josephine Yanez whose body was
found Sunday night in a muddy
field near Huron, Calif,
A coroner said the child had
been assaulted then smothered
after being taken from her parents’
automobile. |
to even up with the arrest of the
police vice consul at Lille, and
reports to the French enrbassy in
Warsaw said seven more French
men and women and French em
ployes had been arrested at vari
ous places,
Diplomatic circles in Warsaw
feared the chain reaction from
Poland’s arrest of a French con
sular attache, Andre Robineau, at
Szczecin (Stettin) last week,
might snap diplomatic relations
between the two countries com=
pletely. Anyway, if it continued,
it looked like both might run out
of diplomatic employes to arrest
and deport.
Each ccuntry accuses the other
of using its personnel for spying.
Indian Document
The Indian constituent assem-’
bly adopted a consiitution makiiig
that dominion a sovereign repub
lic when the document goes into
effect January 26, 1950. India be
came independent in August,
1947, She has approved a London
agreemrent allowing her to stay in
the British commonwealth even
though a republic,
The assembly wNI meet the
day before the constitution goes
into effect to elect a first presi
aent for a five year term, The
first general elections, when
about 160,000,000 Indians will be
eligible to vote, wili be heid in
the winter of 1950-51,
-Read Daily by 35,000 People In Athens Trade Area
Fumbles, Intercepted Passes |
® ® =
Curb High Scoring Machines
ATLANTA, Nov. 26.—A superbly conditioned and a
finely coached Georgia football team battled to the final
whistle here at Grant Field today before going down in
defeat to Georgia Tech, T-6.
Over 40,000 fans were kept on their feet for most of
the game as the determined Bulldogs held a highly touted
Tech eleven to one lone score.
The Bulldogs drew first blood
with a second period touchdown,
but a missed extra point by Bob
Durand, subbing for Georgia's
injured place-kicking specialist
Bob Walston, missed his mark,
Georgia led 6-0 at intermission.
In addition to missing Walston
in the PAT department, and on
pass receiving, the Bulldogs suf
fered grievous penalties at critical
times which could have easily
turned the tide of victory.
Tech’s injured and braced up
quarterback Jimmy Southard
scored the touchdown after Coach
Bobby Dodd finally consented for
him to run a play or two in this,
his final college game.
This was the first one-point
Tech-Georgia game since 1933
when Georgia won 7-8, and makes
this Georgia’s worst season since
1939, Georgia has lost six games.
Fumbles and pass interceptions
weren’t alarmingly frequent, they
just came at bad times.
Bobby North dumped the ball in
the second quarter on Georgia's 43
and the Bulldogs foliowed with &
touchdown pass. A later pass in-‘
terception gave Tech the ball in
Georgia territory but the half end
ed the Tech threat, Numerous oth=
er bobbles and mis-firing passes
hurt both sides.
Floyd Reid fumbled twice but he
was a brilliant runner for Georgia,
By far the best-to-watch play of
the game was Reld’s 42-yard
sprint from his six. A Georgla
fumble later ended that.
The game roughened up ¢on=
siderably even for a Tech-Georgia
fracas after intermission.
Tech’s Touchdown
[ Late in the third quarter little
Jimmy Jordan brought back a
punt to the Georgia 40. Nine plays
later Tech had its touchdown.
Humphreys was nearly un
stoppable on 8 dash to the 12, On
the next play he fumbled, but
finally recovered. North took his
usual short plunge, a couple of
plays failed to gain and then
Southard headed across on a quar=
terback sneak, 1
Patton’s kick was perfect. |
Georgia spent most of the
fourth quarter in its own territory
and throwing iong passes Whichi
seldom hit, Pat Field, one of the
South’s best kickers got Georgia
out of trouble after the gambling
passes.
Deadly Blocking
FEvery time either team got the
ball in the first half, they moved.
It wasn’t a case of weak defenses,
it was hard running and blocking
which seldom missed. Tech made
ten first downs before the halftime
breather with short, punchy gaing|
while Georgia made four in’
carniverous bites.
Hulking Dick Steele rooted un
der a Tech pile for the ball and
in just one quick play Georgia had
the lead.
Sophomore Mal Cook, threw &
high looper to equally large Gene
Lorendo,
The Minnesotan took the ball on
Tech’s 20 and waddled across with
Tech men firing at him but always
missing.
Statistics
First downs, Georgia 9, Georgia
Tech 21.
Yards gained rushing (net),
Georgia 113, Georgia Tech 276.
Forward passes sttempted,
Georgia 17, Georgia Tech 8.
Forward passes completed,
Georgia 5, Georgia Tech 1.
Yards by forward passes, Geor=-
gia 105, Georgia Tech 8.
Forward passes intercepted,
Georgia 2, Georgia Tech 2.
Yards runback ilntercepted
(Continued On Page Two)
SEALS ON SALE LATER
Sale Of Tuberculosis Bonds
Will Begin Here This Week
Sale of Tuberculosis Bonds to
business firms and organizations
will begin this week with T. B.
Seals, sold only to individuals, be
ing put on sale later, it was an
nounced Saturday.
Sale of the Bonds is under spon
sorship of the Jjunior Chamuer of
Commerce, which contacts the var
ious business interests here.
It is only through this drive that
enough money is raised to employ
a full-time nurse to help wage the
fight against T. B.
Out of each dollar eontributed
seventy-five cents remaing in
Clarke county, twenty cents goes
to the State T. B. Association and
five cents to the National Associa~
+Han
Chairman of the sale is Bob
Maupin, while C. O. Baker sis
president of the local T. B. Asso=
ciation. In announcing the cam
HOME
EDITION
Cotton, Corn
Wiinners To
Re Henored
Youth and adult winners in var
ious county agricultural contests,
including cotton and corn fompe
titions, will be honored at a Clarke
County Achlevement Day program
in the court house here next Sat
urday. e
The affair begins at 10:30 and
will be held in one of the eourt
rooms on the second floor of the
eourt house.
County Agent D. L. Branyon
said yesterday that prizes will be
awarded county winners in the
pouliry and pig chains. Also he
said 4-H winners in the eotton,
corn, poultry and garden con
tests will be presented prizes.
Adult winners in the five-acre
cotton and two-acre corn eontests
‘will ba awarded their prizes, The
‘names of the various winners will
not be announced wuntil the time
of the meeting.
Before the affair gets underway
officers of each 4-H club in the
county will meet in the ecourt
house at 9:30 for the election of
County 4-H Club Council officers
for 1950. Officers of the many
clubs make tl‘:? the council, whose
President s year is Donald
‘Branyon, ir.
The achievement mcflnt’which
will be presided over 4-H
Council President Branyon, will be
a climax to this year’s 4-H club
work for the 4-H boys end girls
in this county.
Dr. Howard P. Giddem,'&enor
of First Baptist Church, de
liver to the honorees an inspira
tional talk. A few of the boy and
girl winners will make brief t<i .5
on the program about their preo
ject work.
Planning the affair are County
Agents Branyon and Mrs. Mary
Smith, county home demonstration
agent
FAIR HEADS MEET
Directors of Athens Agricultural
Fair Association will meet Monday
night at 6:13 in the Georgian Ho
tel, announced Association Presi
dent A, P. Winston.
ATHENS AND VICINITY
Sunday partly cloudy with
high aftermoon femperature
near 62, becoming coeler dur
ing the night. Sun rises 7:17
and sets 5:24,
GEORGIA—Fair and warmer
Sunday and Monday. :
TEMPERATURE
Highest 'c..6 viee Wik Haibl
TOWERE oiss semih iiaks ks
Mean sees snse sess sese --‘z
Norwal iviv vann sian 5009
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours .. .. .00
Total since Nov. 1 .. .., .. .81
Deficit since Nov. 1 ~ .. 1.50
Average Nov. rainfall .... 2.74
Total since January 1 ....39.87
Deficit since January 1 .. 3.08
paign, Chairman Maupin pointed
out that contributions are allowa=-
ble income tax deductions and
asked that checks be made out to
W. R. Antley, treasurer. .
Buy Christmas Seals
Heip Stamp Out TB ij