Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
g 1 ¥ y Al L]
ATHENS BANNER HERALD
ESTABLASHED 1832
Published Every Evening Except Ssturday snd Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
Co. Entered at the Post Office at Athens, Ga. as second class mall matter.
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Ye ask, and recelve not,
because ye ask amiss, that
7 ye may consume it wupon
) your lusts.—James 4:3,
—L, O, Pledger, City.
i s bt
Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A, F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel,
B e o i
.
Georgia Cavalcade
By GUS BERND, Historical Research Assistant,
Georgia Department of State
A valuable natural gift to Georgia is her rivers
—often picturesque and beautiful, sometimes tur
bulent and destructive. There in the Southern
Appalachians, starting clear and periect, rivers
wind and twist seaward, first over rocky crags and
through deep gorges, then across {fertile valleys
and plains, gradually muddying. Georgia mountain
water touches 12 states on its way to the sea in
varying directions.
In Northeast Georgia, within several hundred
vards of each other on the Blue Ridge escarpment,
ve three gprings which discharge their waters to
e sea through three separate distant outlets, One
.ows into Tallulah River and to the Atlantic via
¢ Savannah River, Another flows into the Soque
a4d the Chattahoochee and thus to Appalachicola
.ay. A third flows into the Hiawassee and via the
ennessee River reaches the Mississippi and then
ne Gulf.
High on & mountain in Union county emerges a
.pring that starts the Chattahoochee., The namre is
derived from the Creek words: Chata~huchi, an in=
dication that there are “flowered” or “pictured”
rocks in the river. Down through White county
and the lovely Valley of Nacoochee joined by
many branches flows the mountain stream to meet
the Soque tumbling from the Hills of Habersham.
On through the Valley of Hall to receive the
Chestatee out of Lumpkin, A great river over 500
miles long is thus born. A usually placid stream
put one that on occasion swells and moves past
Atlanta like & charging bull, to overrun towns, -to
tear bridges, to deface the land it can reach—
Sidney Lanier’s historic Chattahoochee,
The Savannah tumbles first as Chattooga from
the mountains of western Carolina; receives from
Rabun the Tallulah, which drops several hundred
feet in less than three miles. They unite in Tuga
loo, which beconres the Savannah some distance
above Augusta. On the giant moves, more quietly
now but broader and deeper, not far from Au
gusta’s sacred “White House” and the old “Hor
net’s Nest,” past the Silver Bluff of DeSoto legend.
On through the valley where freedom was fought
for and paid for with a heavy price in patriot's
blood, past Burke and Screven and Effingham, by
Oglethorpe’s Yamacraw Bluff, and Cockspur and
Fort Pulaski, and on into the Atlantic past Tybee.
Part of the upper Savannah was once a part of
the Chattahoochee; but headward erosion culmi
nating in the gelogic act of stream piracy enabled
the Savannah to capture the Tallulah, Tallulah
Gorge is a result. Toccoa Falls on Toccoa Creek in
Stephens county is also a well-known Georgia
phenomenon. Broad River which flows into the
Savannah between Lincoln and Elbert; Little
River between Lincoln and Columbia; and Briar
Creek, which rises in Warren and enters the Sav=-
annah in Screven, are all tributaries of consider
able size.
The Coosa is formed by the union at Rome,
Georgia, of the Etowah and Oostanaula. The
Etowah, often called the Hightower, rises in the
northern part of Lumpkin county near the Chat
tahoochee’s branch, Chestatee. Between Dawson
and Gilmer is the Amicalola Falls, one of the nat«
ural wonders of Georgia, which adds to the Eto
wah, Oostanaula River is formed by Conasauga
and Coosawattee Rivers, which unite in Gordon.
The latter starts near the line between Gilmer and
Fannin, Conasauga rises near the Georgia-Ten
nessee line; separates Murray and Whitfield. The
streams of Coosa Basin have extremely crooked,
looping ¢ourses,
The Altamaha River in southeast Georgia is the
lergest of those entirely within Georgia, It is
formed by the union of the Oconee and Gcemulgee
along the southern boundary of Montgomery
county. The approximate distance from the source
of the Oconee in Hall to the sea is 430 miles. Via
the Ocmulgee from its head springs in Gwinnett,
the distance is nearly as great. The Ohoopee en
ters in Tattnall. The Creek word “Ocmulgee” sig
nifies the “boiling” or “bubbling up” of water in
z spring. The Ocmulgee supposedly got its name
irom the sulphur-tasting Indian Springs in Butts
county., The nmain stream begins in Jackson Lake
where Alcovy, South, and Yellow Rivers unite.
The Towaliga River, Tobesofkee and Echeconee
Crecks, and Little Ocmulgee River are consider
able feeders further down. The two head streams
of the Oconee unite just below Athens; and the
Apalachee falls into it in Morgan, Little River and
Turkey Creek are also large tributaries, Altamaha
has several mouths.
Flint River, prominently mentioned in the novel
“Cone With the Wind,” starts in the southern part
of Fulton eounty and after 350 miles unites with
the Chattahoochee to form the Appslachicola. It
{Continued in Column Four.)
We Mustn't Flinch in the Face
Of Russian Threats
This is a time of supreme urgency in America.
Not since Russian fighters buzzed our airlift planes
over Germany have we had greatér need to view
the future with courage and determination, .
Dr. Harold Urey, atomic scientist, tersely ex
presses the danger: “If the H-bomb is created
there will be no place to hide.”
Another eminent scientist, Dr, Vannevar Bush,
warns that the only real defense against the A
bomb or the H-bomb or any other explosive wea
pon is to keep it away from our shores.
Urey underlines that warning by telling us that
not only Russian bombers but innocent-looking
tramp steamers which slip almost unnoticed into
our harbors may bear the dreaded explosive cargo.
He foresees a possible Soviet effort before the
year is out to split European Atlantic Pact nations
off from us by mining their key harbors with
atomic charges.
Rumors are rife that Russia may strie any
time at defiant Tito in Yugoslavia or at Finland,
tiniest partner in the Soviet Union’s circle of com
pulsory friends.
Admiral Sherman, chief of naval operations,
declares the Russians have a vast submarine fleet
in Asiatic waters, Military experts see submarines
as prime carriers of super-explosives for possible
launching against our inland outposts or our west
ern shores.
- A government aviation research official reiter
ates an old story: Russia has a bigger air force
than ours.
Air Secretary Symington goes him several points
better, asserting that Soviet dictators have the
world’s largest armed forces and are capable of a
surprise attack upon any part of America’s 3,000,-
000 square miles.
These signals of peril have not gone unheeded,
The cry for action to stave off civilization’s ruin
has risen everywhere. And that call has been ans
wered, by Secretary of State Acheson, with the
full support of President Trunran,
Our policy for dealing with Russia in this hour
is to be founded solely on strength and power, For
these blunt tools of diplomacy are the only ones
which impress Moscow,
Let the meaning of that decision sink in, There’ll
be no more big-power meetings, no peace treaties
with Germany and Japan, no disarmament or
atomic control talks untii we and our friends
among free nations are strong enough to establish
conditions that Russia must accept whether it
wants to or not. ~
We do not have that kind of strength now.
Therefore it is clear we must set about getting it
without sdelay. Otherwise our policy of power is a
string of empty phrases.
As a beginning we must stop deluding ourselves
that we do have such strength, Nothing is more
dangerously misleading than the statement of Sec
retary of Defense Johnson that we're ready to “go
over and lick hell out of Joe Stalin.”
The truth is we plan to reduce our military
budget for the coming fiscal year by some $2,-
000,000,000. Obviously we aren’t going to get more
defense for less money.
To obtain the power we need will force us to
some hard choices. Expanded military strength
almost certainly will mean contracted civilian
comforts. We'd better find out soon where those
choices lie—and start making them. We can't
stand off a world-wide menace while enjoying
business as usual., . ‘
Our military and scientific experts must make
the maddening decision as to the relative value of
atomic bombs, guided missiles, long-range bomb
ers, naval forces and land armies in a future war.
We must seek balance in our strength,
We can’t assume any weapon, including a hydro
gen bomb, would give us decisive advantage even
if we had it exclusively. And the story of Dr.
Klaus Fuchs’ spying is a reminder that we'd bet
ter not count on sole possession. Spies don’t go
out of business just when the stakes get bigger.
The way ahead is grim. To travel it we need
calmness and unflinching courage.
.
Rocks Ahead in Memory Land '
Congressmen trying to remember what they said
last week have nothing on the officers and men of |
the U. S. S. Misouri, who are now trying to pic
ture accurately what occurred just before the big
ship struck a mudbank in Chesapeake Bay.
If the confusing testimony produced so far is a 3
sample of what goes on aboard these proud craft, |
then sticking them away in mothballs would seeml
not only the most economical thing to do but the i
safest as well. . ;
One can only conclude that the decision té lay,
up the Mighty Mo as a training ship saved herl
from the alternative of a hectic career of carving;
her way through stubborn shoals and splimeringi
docks in harbors all around the globe,
Many small businessmen, although still operat
ing at fairly high levels, are suffering a substan
tially reduced profit margin. These reduced earn
ings make continued expansion of plant and!
equipment somewhnat less attractive. — Commerce !
Secretary Charles Sawyer. l
THE BANNER-ZERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Cavalcade
(Continued from Column One,
Editorial Page.)
has a longer course on the Coas
tal Plain in Georgia than any
other river. At its junction with
Chattahoochee, a line of color
variation may usually be seen in
to the Appalachicola defining
clear Flint from muddy Chatta
hoochee.
The Ogeeche€ rises in Greene
county just above the Fall Line,
has a considerable basis on the
Coastal Plain and flows into Os
sabaw Sdund. It is large between
Chatham and Bryan.
The Suwannee River, publi
cized by Stephen Foster's “Way
Down Upon the Suwannee River”
in his poem “Old Folks At Home”
is internationally famous. Its In
dian name, Winding River, it
fully justifies. Gathering in the
mysterious Okefenokee Swammp,
the land of “quivering earth,”
the Suwannee finally emerges
from the western side and heads
toward the gulf of Mexico which
it enters near Cedar Keys, Flor
ida. Legend says origin of its
name is from an ancient Indian
princess of the region who was
called “Su-Wannee.” In Florida
the Suwannee takes in the Alapa
ha and the Withlacoochee from
Georgia. St. Mary’s River, anoth
er stream issuing from Okefen
okee, is associated with an early
Georgia-Florida boundary dis
pute. Due to freaks of geology,
two beautiful rivers that rise al
most together find their ways to
separate seas; Suwannee to the
Gulf; St. Mary’s to the Atlantic.
Among smaller rivers, the
Chattooga and Tallapoosa of the
Alabama-Mobile Basin and the
Toccoa and Hiawassee of the
Tennessee Basin are important. In
South Georgia, the Ochlocknee,
Satilla, and Canoochee, attain
considerable volume. The upland
rivers are red or yellow. Those of
the flat-lands are usually coffee~
colored or clear.
Relating to the rivers and river
valleys of Georgia are legends,
songs, and stories that enrich the
history of the State; Indian
names that add to the language;
and archaeological and natural
treasures that intrigue the curi
osity of the world.
Don’t Sufier Another Minute e
No maiter how many remedies you have
tried for itching eczema, psoriasis, infec
tions, athlete's foot .or whatever your
skin trouble may be—anything from head
to foot—WONDER SALVE can help you.
Developed for the boys in the Army—
now for you folks at home
WONDER SALVE is white, greaseless,
antiseptic. No ugly appearance. Safe for
children. Get WONDg SALVE—resuits
or money refunded. Truly wonder:’
Soild in Athens by Crow, Wat
son and Horton-Reid Drug Stores
or your hometown druggist.
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Duparture of Trains
Athens. Georgia
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:35 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:45 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Flberton. Hamlet and‘
East- |
12:15 a. ~ —(Local).
.eave for Atlanta South and
West—
-5:50 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:35 a. m.—(Local)
4:00 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily) 12:35 p.m '
Leaves Athens (Daily) 415 pm
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYS’I‘EMI
From Lula and Conmerce
Arrive 9:00 a m.
East and West
Leave Athens 9°oo a m
GEORGIA RATL.ROAD
Week Day Only 1
Train No 50 Departs 700 p m
lrain No 51 Arrives 9400 a m |
Mixed Trains.
Monument to Freedom
The Poor Man’s Philosopher Says:
“The Insects Are Laughing At Us”
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK—(AP)—Sayings of
a curbstone Socrates:
The difference between love in
a crowded cottage and love in a
mansion is three children—and
five bathrooms.
Mirrors have caused more self
1,074,544
| chose GULF LIFE!
| ---a truly American example
of the “Freedom of Choicel?*
Y oti have no choice when there’s only one of something. You
1 take what you get—and that’s that. On the other hand, it’s thé
‘American way to offer you a choice. Une
der our free enterprise system, if one man
doesn’t offer you what you want—you
can buy it from semebody else.
- We're proud that in 1949, 1,074,544 peo
“ple chose Gulf Life by éontinuing old
'policies and bhying new ones. Many have
“enjoyed Gulf Life protection for years—
' some for nearly all of our 39 years.
; They have seen Gulf Life grow to
nearly $470,000,000 of protection, doubl
| ing in the past six years and increasing
nearly 413 times since 1939. Notable
~among the many factors that have con
tributed to this growth is our Group In
“surance Department, which provides
business with complete, low-cost em
' ployee protection plans including hospital
" Ization and surgical benefits.
For information how you
&= might get more complete
; protection, consult yoar Gulf
Life representative.
GHOLIL)R |
TP . NSO N——" —— N\ j N g
ILIRIE 1S URANCE COMPANY
'{;&N ~,-.L- A Southern Institution since 1911
Sl ATHENS DISTRICT OFFICE
HOME OFFICE 2951% College Ave. . Phone 1655 :
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA REPRESENTATIVES
Harry M. Harrell Clarence E. Cherry
Jack Sas<ard Joseph Whitaker
improvement than colleges.
A pessimist looks at life through
the other fellow’s ulcers,
Two worn dollar bills were dis
cussing their careers. “Have you
noticed,” said one, “the way the
value of people has fallen off in
our lifetime?”
Unrequited love never mads the
average woman as miserable as
‘litting on a wet rock at a picnie.
Woeful waist makes for woeful
diet.
Sir William Osler once l&id';
“Alcohol is the milk of old age.
The nip replaces *he nipple.
A eynic usually leads a gray life
because he is'color blind to living.
If God believed what tomb
stones said, he’d nave a crowded
heaven.
Young love is ecstatic; old love
is serene. And middle-aged love
is middle-aged love.
Second childhood wouldn’t be so
dreadful if it would just grow hair
on a bald head.
Hate pays no income tax be
cause it returns no profit.
Put television in automobiles
and. the motorists will be kept busy
wiping pedestrians off the screen.
Nothing gets less thanks out of
life than a diaper—or does more
Broiler Chick
EVERY BREEDER STATE SELECTED
STATE LECBANDED, STATE BLOODTESTED
Pennsylvania U. S. Approved — Pullorum Passed
We produce more than 300,000 chicks weekly. During March
and April we always have more sale for the sexed pullet chicks
than for cockerels, therefore we quote you our surplus cockerelsg
at the following bargain prices:
15,000 Barred Cross Cockerels Weekly @ 6c each
10,000 New Hampshire Cockereis Weekly . @ 6c each
5,000 Rhode Island Red Cockerels Weekly @ 6¢ each
25,000 White Leghorn Cockerels Weekly @ 2Vie each
Above prices are prepaid. Book your order now, send your reg
mittance, tell us the shipping date you prefer.
PENNSYLVANIA FARMS HATCHERY
BOX S-8
LEWISTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA
Lewistown is in the Heart of Pennsylvania—ls Fast Trains Daily
T hirty-ninth Annual
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
December 31, 1949 4
. “*m
; L
e ASSETS :
Cflsh .00-oao-o-'-11000032,“4,7w-5’
Bonds
United States Government. , . ~ . . . 680990189
State — County- M\lnicipal. s 0 0 00 7,”7,810.4’ ‘
Mircllsneolth ..o. is i snidone ARYIE :
SUMCORON: & i B F e e b 1,358,i87.8'
WIS s oi S srvmnes eoo ANIERINES
Stocks—(Common Stocks are only 1.19 of
fotalassets) .. .. 0. L. s 2N
First Mortgages on Improved Real Estate . 28,699,414.03
Real Estate Sold on Contract. . . ~ . ~ . 3,298.71
Real Estate (Including Home Office) .. & 187,090.98
Policy Loans and Liense. . . . .. . . . ~ 314801236
Premiums Due and Accrued. . .. . . . 2,193260.34
Interest Due and Accrued ..... .o . 353,424.44 ;
Mibefllgitons .o\:s vs e s sness INNIRY " &
Less: Non-Admitted Assets . , , . . . =223,945.06
Total Admitted Assets ... .. . $60,655,264.91 i
LIABILITIES
Legal Reserve on all Policies. ... . . ,$47,632,353.44 |
Present Value of Disability Claims .. . . 79,123.42 )
Funds Left in Trust and Annuities. . . . 3,064,840.18 :
Claims Reported: Proofs Incomplete. . , 186,559:22
Premiums and Interest Paid in Advance. . 759,315.78
Kesnve -Jok PO, . s s oo voi s s OTS
Ageots’ Cash Bonds «««vso v« 000 14352550
Othor LoabiNE: ‘. ¢oc 6 606 5655 181,77303
. Total . . $52,398,489.62
Contingency Reserve . . . . $1,250,000.00
Surpdas . . « ¢ 4 o o v o 5 = HNGITSDY
Capital Stoek. « o + « « - . 1,000,000.00 § 8256,775.29
Total "s e e e 560’655,264.’1
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27 1959,
e o i oTT SR S
f i & ‘h‘-—-—_
A man who agreés with eve,. .
body is quarreling with hig \
soul,
e ———
Love of evil causes fewe; .
lains than self-pity.
What is prayer? It is the voca.
bulary of hope in the sty \
language of loss,
The insects must be laugh!ny as
mankind. We developed DY
for them—but saved the hydrogey,
bomb for ourselves,
_—-—_—_—\‘\
“DROP .
HEAD coLp
STUFFINESS
zqm. :mm Nose Drops 0
in’ cach Hostril, cool mhars® 0
open nose. You breathe
m':fiu this 2-drop way. s
o PENETRO NOSE nm&
%
PENETRO
Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORFE,
Athens’ Most Complete
Drug Store,