Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
70th Stalin
(Continued from Page One)
two ways of life.
At the same time the peace
theme was underscored by the
announcement of the Presidium of
the Supreme Soviet that it had
estabiisned, in the prime minis
ter’s honor, an international Stalin
peace prize to be awarded each
year on his birthday, beginning
=
= St
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Sneclal . 209
nexi December.
The special 12-page edition of
Pravda honoring Stalin today also
carried an article by Vyacheslav
M. Molotov, former foreign min
ister, who relinquished that post
to devote himself to duties as de
puty prime minister.
‘While Malenkov spoke of peace,
Molotov lashed out against the
United States and Britain, charg
ing them witn preparing for a new
war, and with planning world
domination “with the help of any
aggressive means, including the
atom bomb.”
Untamed
(Continued from Page One)
head with the other.
“That made the lion drop her
and back up. Must have stunned
him for a second because he sag
ged back on his haunches.
“But I didn’t have much time,”
Muller said. “Just enough to pick
up Mrs. Schafer. Then the lion
started for me and the children,
“I backed out, inch by inch, nev
er taking my eyes off the lion. The
children got out Little May held
the door open for me and I got
out. It was a near thing for those
youngsters. "He probably would
have got them too.”
Services For
Elmer Todd
Set Tomorrow
Funeral services for Elmer Odell
Todd, 33, whe was killed in an ac
cident Tuesday, will be conducted
from Lexington Baptist Church
Fricay nmoning 8t 11 o'elock,
Rev. J. H. Wyatt officiating.
Mr. Todd, a native of Louisiana
but a resident of Oglethorpe Coun=
ty for the past 12 years, was fatal
1y injured in an accident which oc
cured on the Lexington highway at
noon Tuesday. At the time of the
accident he was returning to Lex
ington with his step-daughter,
Charlene Holmes, having come to
Athens to accompany his wife and
baby back to their home in Lex
ington. Mrs. Todd and the baby
were riding in an ambulance
which was in front of the Todd
automobile when the accident took
place.
Pall-bearers are George Math
ews, Frank Mathews, Ralnh Ma
thgws, O'Neil Woods, Sebrien Rob
erts and Ed Smith.
{ Surviving Mr. Todd, other thanl
his wife, Mrs. Allen Mathews
Todd, are a daughter, Phyllis Ves
per Todd, a step-daughter, Char
lene Holmes, both of Lexington;
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
O. Todd, Crawford, Georgia; four
sisters and four brothers.
Interment will be in Clarke
Cemetery, Lexington, Georgia,
Bernstein Funeral Home in charge
of all arrangements.
-
School Girl Is
Attacked By Con
WRENS, Ga., Dec, 21.—(AP)—
A negro school girl was attacked
and brutally beaten near here
and Sheriff Janres Hubbard an
nounced he had charged a life
term white convict with attempt
ed criminal assault. 1
“And if she dies,” Sheriff Hub
bard added, “then it will be mur
der.”
The sheriff named the convict
I as Pete Coleman, 30, and said he
| received his iife term for ihe
RICHARD HUDNUT
THREE FLOWERS
YANKY CLOVER
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FOUNDLING FINDS A MOM—Twenty years ago, Mrs, Betty
Cunningham of Houston, Tex., was labeled “Nobody’'s Baby” after
she was abandoned in a parked car.. Now Mrs. Cunningham wants
to adopt the foundling, “Miss Christmas,” who was left in a bus
station recently. Mrs. Cunningham fondles the baby she wants
to add to her own family of two children.
slaying in 1947 of Bertha Mehr
tens, called the “Good Samari=
tan” because of her commmunity
benefactions in Savannah.
Hubbard said the girl, 14-year
old Dorothy Carswell, was at
tacked Monday morning on the
way to school. Her head was bat
tered and she was tossed into 2
hrier patch to die.
FREE GIFT WRAPPING SERVICE °isis
RS R SRR SRR
PARKER — SHEAFFER
EVERSHARP
PENS - PENCILS - SETS
3.7510 24.00
WITH FREE MONOGRAM
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AMITY - MEEKER
Billfolds .. ... 1.49 up
FREE MONOGRAM
R R N e
Stockinos .. .. .. 59c up
SRR R R TR
Cioars .. . .. .. 1.8 up
RS R T
Gift Sefs . .. .. .. 2.50 up
oo e e e e
WRISLEY MEN’'S
Spruce Sefs .. .. 1.95 up
Another negro, Ed Carroll,
found her at 10 p. m.—after she
had lain unconscious for 14 hours.
He took her to a Louisville, Ga.,
hospital where Dr. J. W. Pilcher
said she was so critically injured
he couid hardly touch her {for
examination.
He commented that in 18 years
as a law officer he had “never
scen a more horrible erime.”
00l Onn~ |
TR ————— N ——————r— e S, ol
o THE BANNER:HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
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FOR THE MAN
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DELUXE 4 PIECE .... .. 8.75
SHAVING BOWLS ..... 1.00 |
e e .
University
(Continued from Page Ove)
tition follow:
R. C. Westbreok, (Belmont
Cleaners); M. N. Keller (Industrial
Laundry & Dry Cleaning Compa
ny, Inc.); C. W. Griffeth and H.
C. Griffeth, (New Way Cleaners
& Laundry); H. L. Cornelison and
J. F. Cornelison, (Choke’s Dry
Cleaning Company); F. P. Thomp
son, (Findley Dry Cleaners); H. G.
Williams, (Athens Pressing Club,
Wililams Dry Cleaners); J. B.
Daniel and F. H. Daniel, (Ogle
thorpe Dry Cleaning Company);
H. A. Doolittle, (Red & Black Dry
Cleaners); H. C. Whitworth,
(Whitworth Cleaners-Dyers); D.
R. Gray and J. E. Gray, (Gray
Bros. Dry Cleaners); G. E. Cole
man, (Athens Laundry & Dry
Cleaning Service); W. A. Thomp
son, (Charlie James Dry Clean
ers): Warren Bullock and W. E.
Whitehead, jr, (B & W Dry
Cleaners).
Farm Bureau
Relates
Price Figures
MACON, Ga.—“ Farm people of
Georgia and the Nation have en
joyed a period of prosperity dur
ing the past few years,” stated H.
L. Wingate, president of the Geor
gia Farm Bureau Federation, in
releasing statistics from the bureau
of agricultural economics showing
the relative position of farmers and
non-farm workers. . i
Although farm prices have ad
vanced considerably during the
past few years, he added, “our
commodities have not kept pace
with the income of non-farm
workers. To be exact, while the
price of farm products rose from
a base of 100 per cent in the 1935-
39 period to 217 percent in 1948,
the income of industrial workers
rose from 100 percent base in the
igrrge period to 339 percent in April
4 '9?
~ The Farm Bureau president
pointed out that although many
consumers blame farmers for the
high cost of living, “it is obvious
that the rise in farmer Income has
not mada the same progress as that 1
recorded in other economic seg
ments of our national life.” |
“There is greater stability of
wage income per employed non
farm worker than there is with
the farm worker income,” E.‘
Wingate pointed out. “This dispari
ty between the incomes of the
farm and non-farm widens to the
disadvantage of the farmer dur
ing periods of business adversity.”
In pointing out the wide vari
ance between farm income and
that of the non-farm worker, the
GFBF leaders emphasized that his
organization is not against high
wages for industrial workers, but
we are vitally interested in bring
ing about a fair distribution of the
national income, plus facts sub
stantiating the position of farmers
that the high cost of living cannot
be successfully charged to the pre
sent cost of agricultural commodi
ties.”
Farm prices have shown a stea
dy decline during the past several
months, he continued, “yet there
has been no appreciable reduction
in the cost to the consumer of the
| '(cii}irtxg's necessary for a balanced
iét.
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o . VP ek 1S B
Girl Scout News
Brownie Troop 34
We had & Christmas party and
our third grade teachers, Mrs. Mec-
Ginty, Miss Tabor and Miss Wilson
were invited. We played put the
pipe in Santa’s mouth and from
one country to another. We had
nice refreshments.
Poem
Through his book he’s thumbing,
Because he soon is coming.
His nose is very red
And we hope he will be fed.
—By Linda Hughs
Scribe, Troop 34
BETTER USED CARS
— AND —
“YOU ALWAYS SAVE” 'i
AT ;
pesoro SILVEY'S pLymourn B
T R
/ROM CROW’Sv CANDY - LAND WILL SOLVE
YOUR QUESTION OF WHAT TO GIVE.
~ WHITMAN - NORRIS
¥ HOLLINGSWORTH
"~ DEMET - PANGBURN
59¢ - SI.OO - $1.50 - $2.00 - SIO.OO
REMEMBER — CROW'’S GIFT WRAPS AND
PAYS THE POSTAGE ANYWHERE IN U. S. A.
S DS RR
ELGIN AMERICAN (Large Asst.)
LADIES COMPACTS .. .. ......29%
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LOTION
COLOCNE
DEODORANT
1.00 each
1.25 MEN'S
FIVE PIECES
Jergen Sefs
While They Last
08¢
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Blosser’s soothing medical smoke quickly
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SHAVING
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With Badger Bristies
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