Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Police &%
Blotter 9% s
BY ED THILENIUS
TWO STILL RAIDS
Federal revenue agents have ar
rested five persons and destroyed
two 60-gallon stills in this area
in the past two days.
Agents Bob Thomas, T. Y. Har
ris and L. A. Mika made their
first strike Monday 12 miles east
of Elberton. They arrested four
negroes who were operating a 60-
gallon metal still. They found 400
gallons of mash and seven gallons
of moonshine at the still site.
Arrested were Lucius Allan and
his cousin, Elige Allan, Joe Tur
mon and Thomas Bone. All have
been released on SI,OOO bond each.
Yesterday th three agents loca
ted another 60-gailon still seven
miles west of Monroe. The still
was of wooden construction and of
the steamer type. The agents
found 1,800 gallons of beer and
10 gallons of moonshine. They
arrested Bill Thompson, of RFD
Loganville.
He is in jail at Monroe, his bond
set at SSOO.
RECORDER’S COURT
The first cases against persons
not having city registration tags
QUESTIONS-I-
By ROLAND BROWN
(Here are more true experiences of
people® who suffered deficiencies in
vitamins B, and 8., iron and wiacin
and who wish to help others.)
THE QUESTION
Are you taking the remarkable new
HApACOL medicine and what has
becn your experience ?
THE ANSWERS
Mrs, Wiilie Mae Hays, 218 Booker
Bt., Sebring, e . .
glorlda.""ll've ! R
een suffering © A A
with my stomach ! f 'l 4
for quite some e 3
time. There were » il
things 1 couldn’t | 4 ”’ ‘
eat. And when I | i
did, I'd have to .. 9" :
take a dose of | @ % "F
soda, I heard so = e o :
much about HApAcOL over the radio
I decided to try it. Since taking
HADACOL, I haven't had to take one
dose of soda. I sleef well and eat
well. Anytime I eat, it digests well.”
Mrs. W. C. Owens, ng, Alabama.
e i “I had neuritis
75, pains in my hand
Sar e <o had T couldn't
f° SN lift anything,
ST s @ Nothing seemed
I T to help. I thought
"9 &&g I'd give HADACOL
e a trial. T've taken
, "% 7 bottles and am
E ggnztoconunue
ause it did me
more good than anything I've ever
taken. I feel fine and keep store 6
days & week.”
Marcus Matthews, Route 1, Van
zant, Ky. “T DAI peapa o
been bothered § N
wlthm&sntomach. ke PR
Everything I ate @ ) 5
disagreed with & § 3 i
me. But after * - 3
taking 3 bottles %7 @&
ottwwot. I cag Lo 3
eatl an g anda N § ¥
feel flvlg\mlt all Foa M
times. I don’t *===
have to take any more soda after
each meal. I sure can recommend
HADACOL for your stomach.”
Louise Jackson, 4841¢ Mitchell St.
S. W, Atlanta,
A ‘ : Ga. “I had been
. to the doctor
4% @ about my leg and
£ RW R he said I had
4 et SRR neuritis pains, 1
wfwfl R . took one bottle of
“_;msé; : Ht:’mcgé. and \it
LN stopped my le
L f from hurting, T
toss syt bckees Fou b
ng use I would have
lndl{eoflon. But now after mabacoL
I eat anything and it doesn't hurt
me. HADACOL is wonderful”
m‘mm Route 3, Wichita
17 'Tex:fi' ..gm ‘
years old. Be- Sy \-
foro{ took HADA
cor, Iwasathin, EF ™
pux‘:y runt wme- T
out ener 0 B SO W
keep up with the fi@ “‘§
other fellows of B ey Sl |
my e group. & N W
I've :&m HADA- £ :{ge*
coL 1% months * —
and have shown remarkable im
rrovmt‘. I'm now strong and
ull es pep. Hapacor has done won
ders for me.”
*NOTE: Do you want your name to
:mr in [hh popular column
with other prominent folks?
Ootpontlm,‘ nl:‘.te ;:tte La hng
A 3 . 8N
tell your own experience in taking
that W HADACOL medi
cine. , there's only one
m:no mwol.fiu'l};l‘d size, :125.
family or tal size, $3.50.
Photos of professional models.
© 1950, The Leßlane Corporation
Rate Reductions
On Private Automobiles
Substantial rate cuts on private passeng@r cars went into effect
May 29 and are retroactive to April 1, 1950, they apply to Com
prehensive, Collision, Fire and theft.
We will welcome an opportunity to explain the new rates to you.
SMITH - BOLEY - BROWN, Inc.
Writing All Forms of Autemobile lasurance
Featuring Prompt Settlement of Losses
101-5 Shackelford Bidg. — Phdnes 3076 & 3077
e
on their cars were heard in Re
corder’s Court today by Judge
Olin Price.
Six cases were heard, with four
of these concerning no city tags.
Three defendants forfeited $5.75
bonds and one other defendant
paid a similiar fine.
Any person who uses the .city
streets for as much as 30 days out
of the year is required to purchase
a city tag. They are available in
the basement of the city hall. They
cost 50 cents,
A negro woman, Fannie Mae
Dorsey forfeited a SIOO bond to
day for possessing a half gallon of
non-tax paid whiskey.
In the sixth case today, a negro
woman received a suspended sen
tence and was placed on proba
tion in connection with a charge of
drunkenness.
. ’
Athenian’s Father
-
Died In Lyons, Ga.
The Athens friends of Mrs, Bill
Hartman, jr., will regret to learn of
the death, of her father, Virgil
Glenn Landers of Lyons, Ga., on
Saturday, May 27. Mr. Landers
had been ill for six weeks.
Funeral services were held on
Sunday in Lyons and he is sur
vived by two daughters, Mrs. Bill
Hartman of Athens and Mrs. Cur
tis Cheney of Reidsville, Ga.
Mr. Landers had visited in Ath
ens on several occasions and his
friends here will regret to learn of
his death.
Two Rescued
From Sandbar
~ AUGUSTA, Ga., May 31—(AP)
~—A 17 year old Augusta bov and
his uncle, stranded for nearly 12
hours on a sandbar in the Savan
nah river, were rescued early to
day.
Ja mes Hayes of this city, and
hig uncle, L. W. Hayes, of Gilbert,
8. C., were found by a search part- |
ty around 6 a. m. after an all-night
search,
Young Hayes and his uncle left
the Fifth Street dock early yes
terday afternoon for a river cruise
in a new motorboat which had
been given the boy for a gradua
tion present.
When they failed tc return after
nightfall several searching parties
were organized. The river was pa
trolled throughout the night.
This morning they were sighted !
asleep in the sandbar near new
Savannah locks. |
Candidates
(Continued from Page One.)
candidate .
Avery On Air
Rome’s gubernatorial hopeful,
Pat Avery, went on the air with
a charge that “Thompson and Tal
madge are the gold dust twins of
Georgia politics. They are both
financed by the same big interests,
and they both seek to prostitute
and burden the people with new
taxes.”
Mrs. Jessie W. Jenkins of Co
lumbus, the fifth candidate, re
leased letters to Talmadge and
Avery urging them to withdraw in
her favor. She warned Talmadge
that Thompson is gaining on him.
Thompson got some outsidé help
from Columbus Roberts of Colum
bus, fornier Commissioner of Agri
culture and one-time Talmadge
supporter,
In a radio address, Roberts de
seribed Thompson as a man of
“courage, humility, common hon
esty, industry and good will.” He
said the ex-governor is the son of
a tenant farmer who “will set a
S;od example to the youth of
orgia . . . a man of modesty,
‘sobriety.”
~ The stigma of picayune pensions
for old people was tossed back at
Thompson yesterday by State Wel=
fare Director Alan Kemper.
Thompson has accused the Tal
madge administration of padding
pension payrolls by handing out
| grants of 50 cents and sl.
Kemper admitted some $1 pen
sion checks had been sent out, but
declared it wasn't original with the
Talmadge administration. He said
Thomison’s Weltare Director in
1937, L. C. (Tiny) Groves, did the
same thing. -«
- Manufacturers report a steady
increase in the number of home
freezer units being installed on
farms and in suburban areas.
) Truffles are an important com
mercial crop in France and Italy.
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“YOU CAN TAKE 'IM, JOE'—Ohio's Joseph Ferguson, center, Democratic candidate for the
Senate seat held by Robert A, (“Mr. Republican”) Tafi, gets what looks like a pep talk from two
politically-wise gents in Washington, Vice President Alben Barkley, right, and Leslie Biffle, secre
tary of the Senate. 3
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ATLANTA, Ga.—Governor Talmadge, right, and Sims Gar
rett, Jr.,, examine Georgia's first invitation to sixteen million
readers of “LIFE” Magazine to vacation in thisz State, Clark
Gaines, Secretary of the Department of Commerce, inaugurated
this plan of advertising as a means of bringing extra revenue
to the people of Georgia from the Tourist Trade.
NOT ENOUGH STRONG YOUNG
NEW GIMPS IN AMERICA NOW
By HAL BOYLE .
NEW YORK—(AP)—Every day
we wake up ta a new crisis. And
don’t think we haven't got a grim
one for today.
It’s this:
America is getting short of
gimps, There are plenty of old
gimps, but there aren’t enough
strong young new gimps coming
along. .
A gimp is a person who earns
his living sewing buttonholes.
“There are only about 3,500 but
tonhole makers left in this country
—and most of them are old men,”
said John Maxmillian Bappert, the
Rembrandt in this field.
“The young people seem not in
terested too much in buttonholes.
They séem interested in other
things.”
Butfonhole Maker
This is heresy to Bappert who
recently was picked by a trades
school here as the nation’s out
standing buttonhole maker. His
family sewed buttonholes for three
generations before him in Hun
gary.
Bappert, a quiet, stocky man of
42 came here at the age of 13. He
figures that in thé last 29 years
he has made 13,920,000 loops with
his needle in sewing about 348,000
buttonholes. He averages 12,000
buttonholes a year.
“I do not find it dull,” he said
People think there is nothing to it.
They say, ‘What is a buttonhole? A
buttonhole is nothing.! But it takes
years of work to learn to make a
buttonhole right.”
Bappert supervises 18 gimps in
the buttonhole department of Stu
arts hand-tailoring firm. It takes
him five minutes to make a 40+
loop buttonhole.
He works without glasses.
“My eyes are good,” he said. “I
can read anything—even the small
print on a check.”
His buttonholes are strictly for
coats and vests. In 29 years he
hasn’t even seen a pair of trousers
in his workroom.
“Ninety per cent of the trousers
have slide fasteners or machine
made buttonholes,” he said, “so
they have nothing to do with me
at all.”
Won't Die
Despite the shortage of gimps,
Bappert doubts that the fine old
art of making buttonholes by hand
will ever die.
“The machine-made buttonhole
does not look so nice and neat,” he
said. “We need to teach the young
people to make buttonholes.” Bap
pert also helps out with the sewing
at home. His wife is an expert
dressmaker, but he says she hasn’t
mastered the skill of makiag but
tonholes.
“So far it looks like I'm going
to be the last one in the family
in the business,” he said, sadly.
“I have only a daughter. My
brother, who is a barber, has four
children. But they are all girls,
100.”
When he was a small boy, his
parents despaired of making a
gimp out of him.
Was Outrageous
They saw I was leaning to my
left hand in playing games,” he
recalled. “They thought it was out
rageous. They had never heard of
a left-handed buttonhole maker.
“In Europe people thought it
was terrible to be left-handed. So
my family made me change to the
right hand.
“And you know, in all the years
since then I didn’t see one left
handed buttonhole maker.
“There i§ nothing impossible, but
I couldn’t even imagine it—a left
handed buttonhole maker. How
would he do it?”
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ORI AR
ALY'S UP - Still on crutches
from last winter's skiing acci
dent, Prince Aly Khan managed
to astend the races at Epsom,
Surrey, England. His horse, “T.a
Baille,” failed to place:'in the
classic Qaks race.
S § ’
(Continued From Page One)
after assurance that the national
arbitration committee would hand
down a decision within 15 days
on their demand for a 30 cents
hourly boost in the current 95
cents wage rate. Some 4,500
workers were on strike.
A spokesman for the AFL Com
mercial Telegraphers Union said
the 247 striking teletype operators
and maintenance men are reject
ing an offer from the United Press
to end a 30 day walkout. The
spokesman said the vote for re
jection is running more than five
to one witk between 96 and 97
per cent of the returns counted.
Open Shop
The management proposal in
cluded a wage boost of $2.21 for a
work week of 37% hours and a
$2 monthly contribution on the
cost of hospitalization and surgi
cal insurance. The UP said it
also offered to drop its demand
for an open shop and to retain the
union shop.
~ The union asked a sls weekly
wage boost, later shaving this to
$6.50. Supervisory employes have
been manning teletype machines
during the strike.
At Morristown, Tenn., a battal
ion of National Guardsmen—sß
enlisted men and eight officers —
was removed from the strike-rid
den American Enka“Corporation’s
plant. However, 240 officers and
men remained to preserve order.
The troops were sent in Mon
day to handle disorders which
Sheriff Robert Medlin told Gov.
'Gordon Browning had grown out
- of control.
’ The CIO Textile Workers Union
is demanding a pay increase of 10
cents hourly over the current aver
age scale of $1.32. The strike
started March 28,
\ A guard officer said 250 work
;ers reported for work yesterday
and another 75 to 100 were re
inorled seeking work at the plant
- which normally employes 700.
(Continued from Page One)
Mine); Jimmie Dudley (Spider):
Dorothy Sams (Flower Design);
Stephania Foss (Design); two rib
bons for Nancy Harris for (The
Sister)) and (Design); two for
Olivia Carlisle (Man Overboard)
and (Children); two for Susan
Bennett (Egg Laying Contest) and
(Birthday Party); and one to Bob
Segrest (U. S. Marine).
Third Grade
Three ribbons went to Winston
Stephens (Parking Meters),
(Quartreling House), (Boy Cloud
Crying); two to Irene Dodd (Rab
bit and Dog), (Little People): Sara
Owens (Pattern); four ribbons to
Ben Tate (Explosion), (Ghost
Fire), (Covered Wagon), (Ships);
Carlson Chambliss (Textile Fac
tory); Robert Hornea (Pattern).
Fourth and Fifth Grades
Awards went to Jimmie Henry
(Railroad Yard); three to Jimmie
Green (City Night Reflection),
(Coal Mine), (Jungle Jim); David
Sanders "(Dégn); Marion Tal
madge (Ghost House); Sally
Montgomery (Coal and Milk
Man); two to Carol Downs (Moth
er and Daughter), (Children in
Color); Beth Akins (Design); two
to Carolyn Christian (Little Peo
ple Flowers), (The Crazy Quilt
Dragon); Janice King (Design);
Barbara Mitchell (Sunshine);
Kitty Bolton (Abstract Design);
Jean Epting (Fairy Queen): two
to Buddy Broadnax (Bulldozers
Grading), (Totem Pole); Joe Wil
fong (Uncle Remus); Tommie
Wilkins (Swamp).
Sixth Grade
Two ribbons were given Peggy
Westfall (Cancer Poster), (Stu
dent Drawing); Mazie Talmadge
(My Monkey); two to Mary Wed
dell (Manger Scene), (Spooks):
two to Sherry Gabrielson (Music
in the Air), (Circus); five to
Jules Alciatore (Fire Bear), (Init
iation), (Men Fighting), (The
Diver), (My Daddy); Anne Fow
ler (Elephant Family); two rib
bons to L.aFreda Maddox (Gar--
HOLIDAY NOTICE
Saturday, June 3, 1950,
JEFFERSON DAVIS BIRTHDAY
A Legal Holiday will be observed by the Athens Clearing
House Association, Saturday, June 3, 1950, and no Banking
business will be transacted en that dafe.
The National Bank of Atkens
The Citizens and Southern National Bank
Hubert State Bank.
den), (Mr.‘fi’;"bfis). 25558
Junior High
In Junior High School three
ribbons went to Susan Frobos
(Flower), (Clown), (Murder); one
to Nan Danner (Jungle House);
and one to Jane Eberhart (Bal
loon Man).
Only Two More
School Days
Only two more full days of
school lie ahead of pupils in Ath
ens public schools, with an abbre
viated session being on Wednes
day, June 7, when final reports
will be given the children and
they will be free for a summer of
play and rest.
Thursday and Friday will be
full-time sessions and the lunch
rooms will be in operation.
All of the white schools in the
county closed last Friday with two
or three exceptions. Winterville
High School had its commence
ment exercises Monday and Tues
day nights of this week, while
Joseph M, Hodgson Academy at
Whitehall has graduation tonight
and the Demonstration School,
which started a week later than
the others, will have its exercises
Friday night in the Fine Arts
Auditorium. - All of the colored
schools in the county closed a
week ago last Friday.
The first ambulance corps op
erated during the Napoleonic Wars,
and consisted of French soldiers
assigned to the work of removing
casualties from the field on
stretchers.
Baby chicks eat no food or drink
no water the first 24 hours or so
of their life.
The chief source of the world’s
supply of amber is the Baltic coast
of Germany, Lithuania and Latvia.
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
DILLARD, MR. HENRY—of Ste
phens, Ga., aged and respected
citizen of Oglethorpe County,
departed this life May 27, 1950,
at the age of eighty-six. Surviv
ing relatives are: children, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Dillard, Ste
phens, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Dillard, Maxeys, Ga.; Mr. Fos
ter Dillard, Stephens, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Buchanan,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence McKinley, Harlan,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs, Roosevelt Di
llard, Athens, Ga.; Mr. Hamp
Dillard, Mr. Henry - Dillard,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mr. Booker
Diilard, Memphis, Tenn.; one
brother, Mr. Nathan Dillard,
Maxeys, Ga.; thirty grandchil
dren; twenty-eight great-grand
children; and a host of other
relatives and friends, including
Mrs. Frances Finch of Athens,
Ga., and many nieces and ne
phews, Funeral services for Mr.
Henry Dillard will be held to
morrow, Thursday, June 1, 1950,
at 2:00 p. m. from the Thankful
Baptist Church, Huching, Ga.,
with Rev, F. C. Williams and
other ministers officiating. In
terment Fallen Creek cemetery,
Maxey, (RFD) Ga. Mack and
Payne Funeral Home.
HAYES, MRS. LIZZIE LANDRUM
—of 247 Arch Street, Athens,
Ga., departed this life May 28,
1950. Surviving relatives are
one son, Mr. Roger Landrum,
Athens, Ga.; one sister, Mrs.
Sarah Landrunr, Athens, Ga.;
five grandchildren and a host of
other relatives and friends, in
cluding Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie
Huff, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dil«
lard, Athens, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Plumber Elder and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Pinkie Porter, Wash
ington, D. C.; Miss Irene Mat
tox, Mr, and Mrs. Ozzie Mat
tox and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Lonnje Landrum, Mr. and Mrs.
Wright Landrum and family, all
of Athens, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lux Sheats, Watkinsville, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lumpkin
and family, Athens, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. George Fortson, At
lanta, Ga.; and Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Wise, Athens, Ga. Funeral ser
vices for Mrs. Lizzie Landrum
Hayes will be held tomorrow,
Thursday, June 1, 1950, at 3:00
p. m. from the Shiloh Baptist
Church, Winterville Road, with
the Rev. J. H. Sims, pastor, and
other ministers officiating and
interment in the church cem
etery. Mack and Payne Funeral
Home.
MARYLAND, MR. JULIAN—ISO
South Rockspring Street, passed
at a local hospital Monday, May
29, 1950. The relatives and
friends of Mr. Julian Maryland,
Athens, Ga.; Mrs. Sarah Grant,
Mr, and Mrs. Lonnie Webster‘
Mr. and Mrs. Mal Tubman, Mr,
and Mrs. Allen Maryland, Miss
Mary Giddings, all of Augusta,
Ga.; Mrs. Emmie Byras, Atlan
ta, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Thonras
Mitchell and family, Mr. Henry
Payne, Athens, Ga.; Mr. Amos
Payne, Hartford, Conn.; Mr.
Willie Payne, Springfield, Mass.;
Mr. Andrew Payne, New York
City; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Payne
and family, Mrs. Daisy Watkins,
Athens, Ga.; Mr. William Whit
field, Washington, D. C.; Mr.
Robert J. Watkins, Athens, Ga.,
are invited to attend the fun
eral of Mr. Julian Maryland,
Thursday, June 1, 1950, at 3:00
o'clock from the Ebenezer Bap
tist Church. Rev. C. J. Gresham
will officiate. Interment in the
Brooklyn cemetery. The body
will lie in state in the church
from 12:00 o’clock until hour of
funeral. Selected pallbearers are
asked to meet at the church at
2:55. McWhorter Funeral Home.
(Continued from Page One)
Jeering, then fisticuffs followed.
The anti-Reds won.
The pro-Commimists begged for
a truce and surrendered their blue
shirts- and blue flags. These went
on bonfires. City police said the
rioting stopped at midnight and
that all but a few stragglers ap
parently managed to leave the city
MOVIES ARE BETTER THAN EVER
m
. * 8 S —
—'—T"ATH ENs u PO/VJ’ 407
By i 22
et L 0 [ £
B W ATLANTA HIGHWAY Y
Tonite and Tomorrow
Clifton Webb — Maureen O'Hara — Robt, Young
in “SITTING PRETTY™
m STARTS TODAY
' IT'S THE BIG STORY &
BEHIND THE AIRLIFT
_ OF HOSE WONDERFUL GUYS WHO DROPPED
OUT OF THE SKIES . .. TO WIN THE HEART
OF A CITY .. . AND THE WORLD! ..
MONTGOMERY CLIFT
PAUL DOUGLAS
THERE'S NEVER BEEN A PICTURE LIKE 3
W
JOHN PAYNE — RHONDA FLEMING &
" in “THE EAGLE AND THE HAWK”
PALACE FEATURE STARTS: 12:39, 2:46, 4:58, 7:00, 9:07
[m TOMORROW and FRIDAY :i
[DESTINY RODE THE GUN SIGHTS...* s
AS THEY ROARED OUT TO MEET IT}: o«
p e Vi o gS L
PR ’ > C R AR 3
esf f 4 (
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o hen men are SSSN
Yy . g stripped to raw
SLO &3 emotions...as .
&3N their women never -
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) w,_ng;f-» \ 1
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NZO% TS
2 «n HUGH MARLOWE » GARY MERRILL'
Producad by Diracted by MILLARD MITCHELL - DEAN JAGGE?
DARRILF ZANUCK - HENRY KNG - 2005 et loce 805 PATTEN
Scrsea Py by Sy Dartiett & Beirae Lay, Jr.«Busad or the Novel by Beime Lay, Jr. &Sy Berfielt . JOYCE MacKENZIE
: Last Times Today:
SPENCER TRACY — JAMES STEWART
in “MALAYA”
GEORGIA FEATURE STARTS: 1:11, 3:12, 5:13, 7:14, 9:15
Thursday
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— FLast Day —
“WE WERE STRANGERS”
WEDNESDAY, may 31, 1950,
| TORERATENNN R s B R ENR K.
by bus er train er on ;—o{' ’
The straggless were not mole:;.
ed.
No serious injuries were repo;i.
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Capons are specially treateq
roosters which grow to more-tha,,.
average size and produce ehoice
meat.
e e ——
Early Egyptians undoubtedty
knew and used an elementary typ.
of algebra.
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