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PAGE TWO
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REG. 50c ICE CREAM TOPPING
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| IMPORTANT _,_,,,_,,,,,_2,________'49
}Onr prescription service is— |
Eormraar OREF]
fess. When you bring & pre
mo o woime Ale
B o iked cblemtion of a o 24 HOUR
perienced pharmacist who | ARM CLOCKS
orders with professional skill
RS . 1.49
health and Well-Deing, 5 o ———————
most important to us. GENUINE LEATHER
3 Registered BILLFOLDS
| Pharmacists Reg. 4.06
To Serve You. I'9B
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BAG OF 100 ‘
ASSORTED MARBLES .. .. .. .. 19%¢
25c - ASSORTED
ECKO KITCHEN WRAP .. .. ... 1%
REG. 1.25 COMPLETE
FLASHLIGHTS .. .. .. .. .. .. . 8%
REG. 1.19 SIZE
MEDS (closeout) .. .. .. .. ... 23c
BEAT THE HEAT WITH
HEAT POWDER (Reg. 33c) .. ... 17
REG. 1.50 GUARANTEED
SYRINGE COMBINATION .. .. ... 8%
REG. 1.25 GUARANTEED
HOT WATER BOTTLES .. .. .. .. 69¢
REG. 79%¢ PLASTIC
REFRIGERATOR BOTILES .. .. .. 59c
L B SNI 5 RO SRS A s PO 8
FATHER'S DAY, JUNE 17
Now is the time to purchase DAD’S GIFT. Come
in today and let us help you with your selection.
Avoid disappointment — Shop while stocks
are complete.
T
DRUG SPECIALS
REG. 98¢ — 1000
SACCHARIN TABLETS .. .. .. .. 69
1.25 LINIMENT
ABSORBINE, JR. .. .. .. .. .. .Tl
FULL QUART U. S. P.
MILK of MAGNESIA .. .. .. ... 1%
BOTTLE OF 100
5 GRAIN ASPIRIN .. .. .. .. .. 1%
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SAD BLOODHOUND IS HIGH AND DRY—Stranded in Detroit by the rail strike, this traveling
bloodhound is no sadder Y{mn thousands of other sidetracked travelers—he just looks that way, |
| The pooch wears a long, sorrowful face as he gets a drink of water from freight clerk R. L. Dick, J
JUTE SIS 01 ST
Acheson's Question-Answer
Session Pleases Democrats
WASHINGTON, June 1. — (AP) — Secretary of State
Acheson’s question and answer session with Congress
pleased Democrats but left Republicans cold today.
Senator Lucas of Illirois, the Democratic leader, told re
porters he thinks Acheson’s appearance helped cement
friendly relations between the State Department and Con
gress.
Senator Wherry of Nebraska, the GOP floor leader, said,
on the contrary, he doesn’t think that yesterday’s unusual
meeting in the Library of Congress auditorium “changed
anything, one way or the other.” e e
Rep. Arends (R-Ill) said Ache
son left a lot of questions unans
wered,
Acheson’s real test of his rela
tions with the legislators will come
with an appearance before the
Senate Foreign Relations and
Armed Services committees to
morrow on the foreign arms pro
gram, Wherry said. ’
“Acheson just used Congress as
window dressing for a radio
speech,” the Nabraska senator
complained. “His talk was so gen
eral and the questions and answers
so general that nobody learned
anything new.
“He says we are going to go
into full partnership with the
North Atlantic treaty nations.
Wwe'll find out what we are going
to have to give up and what it
will cost us when he unfolds the
foreign arms program, I suppose.”
Acheson is expected to propose |
that this country spend $1,225-
000,000 in a second year effort to
help western Europe rearm
against the threat of Communism.
He talked yesterday of the need
for this country to take the lead
in strengthening the collective
military forces of the United
States and Atlantic Pact nations.
As a report on Acheson’s con
ferences with British, French and
other foreign ministers, Lucas said i
he was pleased with the proceed
ings. |
However, the Democratic leader
added that he doesn’t expect cab
inet members to trot up to Capitol
Hill for similar meetings with the
lawmakers everytime anybody in
Congress wants to know what'’s
going on inside the administration.
“It will have to be an extraor
difiary occasion, just as this one
was,” Lucas said.
He added that he believed the
aquestions asked by lawmakers on
the whole had been “fair” ai
though Acheson obviously was
somewhat irked by queries of Rep.
Rankin (D-Miss) and Rep. Judd
(R-Minn).
Rankin observed that Trygve
Lie, secretary general of the Uni
ted Nations, seemed to be backing
a move to gain U. N. admission
for Communist China. Wasn't Lie
a “known Communist?” Rankin
asked.
Acheson replied tartly that Lie
had made no secret of his belief
that the Chinese Communists
ought to be admitted. He gave no
answer to Rankin’s “Communist”
query.
Judd wanted to know why
Acheson didn’t use his “total di
plomacy” to prevent the ejection
of Nationalist China from the U.
N.
~ Acheson replied he had told
Judd his position a thousand
times ~—that this country would
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LONDON SILVER MARKET PROVES “GOLD MINE" ~ Under this unimpressive mass of
rubble of a bombed out safe-deposit building in London lies a fortune in silver. it's 8 thriving
market for antique silverware, The unique business, which took over the unbombed strong rooms,
has become a top attraction for American visitors to London because the deveiuction of the pourd
has made British antique silver a “good buy,” and no duty is asked on items macde before 1850.
not veto the admission of the Chi
nese Communists but would let
the majority decide what to do
about them.
BEAUTY TREATMENTS HELP
WOMEN MENTAL PATIENTS
BY EDWARD ELLIS
NEA -S;e—cl;f ‘Correspondent
NEW YORK — (NEA) — Two
women attendants led the mental
patients into the beauty parlors.
Her eyes were closed as she en
tered the gaily colored room in
the Brooklyn State Hospital for
the Mentally Il
She was a manic-depressive in
the depressed stage. About 35, she
was skinny because she wouldn't
eat. Her only nourishment was
eggnog and orange juice, tube
fed through her nostrils.
" oW
Mrs. Mary Kearns, beautician to
psychotics, urged the wan figure
in the coarse blue gingham dress
into a chair. The patient's hair
was straggly. Her nose ran. She
drooled.
Talking quietly to her, Mrs.
Kearng shampooed her hair, and
waved it. Above the closed eyes
she penciled eyebrows. Onto the
rigid lips and cheeks she applied
lipstick and rouge. And, finally,
manicured her nails.
This done, the attendants led
the still silent, still unseeing wom
an back to her warr%. There she
was placed in front of a wall mir
ror. Her eyelids gently were
parted by the attendants’ fingers.
Unable to help herself, the pa
tient saw her reflection.
“Is . .. is that me?” she blurted.
- * *
Those were the first words she
‘had spoken in months. Two days
later she voluntarily ate a meal
by herself, her hands trembling
up to feel her new hair-set.
In about five more months,
what with various shock therapies,
she was discharged. And she nev
er was returned to the hospital.
There are about 1800 women in
the hospital these days. Perhaps
1500 of them receive beauty treat
ments, each patient getting an ap
pointment about every two weeks.
They get the works—shampoos,
finger waves, permanents, trims,
electric vibrators on their scalps,
violet rays for facials, mud packs,
depilatory wax for hair. on their
faces, black beauty marks to cov
er moles, and fingernail polish.
“Our beauty shop,” says one of
the hospital's psychiatrists, “is as
much a therapy as any of our
THE BANNER.MuRALD) AHens, beonéam i
MASK PROTECTS
JET ENGINES
DAYTON, Ohio—(AP)—Tbe Air
Force has developed a sort of
catcher’'s mask to protect jet en
gines from being hit in the mcuth
by stones, shell cases and other
metal. The device is a grill which
can be raised or lowered by the
pilot. It would be in “up” posi
tion during takeoff and landing,
retracted during flight except in
combat, when the grill would catch
or deflect stray cartidges.
Flying metal objects are a seri
ous hazard for some types of jet
engines, where the air flows di
rectly into the compressor wheel,
BEDOT'INS JOIN
ISRAELI POLICE
BEERSHEBA, Israel — (AP) —
Bedouin tribesmen are joining the
Israeli police force. Twenty-five
Bedouins, coming from the Negev
sector, recently were sworn in as
policemen.,
other treatments. It fans to life
the vanity latent in all women,
restores their self-confidence:”
CALLS BRITONS
LAWLESS ON ROADS
‘- LONDON — (AP) — Dr. A. L.
Goodhart, a New Yorker who
teachers jurisprudence at Oxford
University, says that on the high
ways this country “is one of the
most lawless in the world because
its traffic laws are inadequate.”
He told the Pedestrians’ Associa
tion at its anual meeting here, “If
deaths per 100,000 vehicles are
compared, America’s ratio is 71 to
Britain’s 163 a year.”
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COMMAND POST -When dis
aster strikes, the Red Cross puts
| into action all the latest de
| welopments™ in transportation
| and communications. Above,
i G. H. Wade, disaster chairman
| of the Holt County, Neb, Red
| Cross Chapter, uses a walkie
| talkie to guide Army weasels
carrying fuel and food to Isulat
| ed families during a prairie
| blizzard
150 Boys Here
Interested In
Little League
Between 140 and 150 Athens
grammar school boys will be eli
gible and are anxious to play on
teams in the proposed Little
League Baseball loop that is in
the planning stages here, accord
ing to Wayne R. Shields, superin
tendent of City Recreation aed
Parks Department.
That number of boys expressed
their desire to play in the League
here after seeing the film, “Litle
League World Series,” at their
schools yesterday. Of the number
who indicated their willingness to
play, none will be out of town for
more than two weeks this summer.
The moving pictures was shown
in all of Athens four grammar
schools yesterday, to audiences of
350-400 boys between the ages of
8 and 12. Boys were given oppor
tunity after seeing the film to sign
slips of paper showing that they
are interested in the Little League
program,
Radio Station WGAU-FM will
carry the Little League games this
season, Lewis Doster, station man
ager, announced this week.
Play In Aftermoon
Broadcasting of the Little
League games should add much to
local interest in the league. Games
will probably be played entirely in
the afternoon, according to present
plans:
Little League baseball gives boys
from the age of eight to 12 an ex
cellent opportunity to develop
skills that they would ordinarily
learn only after they reached high
school age. The program is popu
lar all over the United States, and
Little League ball is sweeping the
country.
Equipment is scaled down to the
size for small boys, and playing
fields are also in proportion to the
boys. Short outfield fences (180
feet, usually) give the boys a
chance to knock legitimate home
runs over the fences.
Activities are underway now to
secure four sponsors for the teams
of Athens’s first Little League. The
number of boys available, how=
ever, are enough for two leagues,
Mr. Shields pointed out today.
A week’s clinic would be held
before the start of the playing
season in order to give all boys
opportunity to prove their ability
and to allow managers to choose
players they want.
A draft session, or trading ses
sion, would be held before teams
are organized, and managers may
bid on the players they want from
a credit budget of 36,000 credits.
Later in the season, players may
be traded or released, and new
players given a chance to play.
Games here will be played on
Athens recreation grounds, includ
ing Legion Park, Dudley Field,
Lyndon House, and others.
Gold Is Expected
To Plead Guilty
PHILADELPHIA, June I(A?_)
—A federal judge will appoint
counsel, perhaps today, for Harry
Gold, who said yesterday he will
plead guilty to being a courier in
Soviet Russia’s atom spy network.
But the small, chubby research
chemist, 39 years old, asked the
judge to find an attorney . who
would back him in denying that
he is guilty of intending to harm
the United States. Gold said he
wants a lawyer who will let him
cooperate with the FBI.
Looking worried and with his
head Held low, Gold was brought
yesterday under heavy guard to
the chambers of U. S. District
Judge James E. McGranery. It was
McCranery who placed Gold un
der SIOO,OOO bond on May 23,
when FBI agents arrested him as
the link between the eonvicted
Britich atomic spy, Klaus Fucus,
and Soviet operatives.
¥FISHING, FUNERALS IN
LABOR CONTRACTS
NEW YRK—(AP)—Fishing and
funerals are going into labor con
tracts these days. One company
grants its employees fishing and
hunting rights on its private game
preserve. Another provides an
extra holiday to go fishing. Fun
erals app-ar in some new contracts
which provide paid time off when
a member of the employee’s fami
ly dies.
Other new lahor practices and
contract provisions reported by the
National Industrial Conference
board include:
One contract provides payment
for meals besides overtime pay
when overtime is worked. An
other firm guarantees that its
salesmen’s commission earnings
will not be less than last year.
Another contracts for a pool of
maintenance work to reduce lay
offs. One firm cut hours of work
from 40 to 32. but for seven weeks
it paid half the difference in pay
to ease the strain,
One firm found, via court de
cision, that its handbook for em
ployees was a labor contrict. The
handbook promised dismissal pay.
When sued, it had to pay. Another
company started an insurance plan
that pays SIOO when an employee
has a baby.
PERILOUS GALLANTRY
CHICAGO—(AP)—PoIice Lieu
tenant Thomas McCann saw the
old ladv on the platform of a
south side railroad station. He
perceived that she was afraid to
come down to the street level be
ca'se the stairs were wet. The
gallant officer went up and helped
the lady dé¢scend safely to tha side
walk. But on the last step he
slipped, fell and sprained his back.
| FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
FOSTER, MRS. BLANNIE MAgf—
wife of Mr. W. Henry Foster,
266 Bridge Street, departed this
| life at the residence June 1, 1950.
i Funeral arrangements will be
g announced later. Mack and
{ * Pavne Fuiicral Home,
hoace gRI
Blotter ‘9 €%
RECORDER’S COURT
Judge Olin Price heard seven
cases in Recorder’s Court today.
An again today, cases against
drivers for not having city reg
istrauwon tags appeared the most
requent on the docket.
Four of these cases were heard
today, two defendants forfeiting
bonds of $5.75. Two other de
fendants were cited in contempt
of court for failing to appear for
trial.
One defendant forfeited a $50.75
bond for possessing three quarts of
tax-paid whiskey. The legal limit
is one quart. One defendant for
feited a 5.75 bond for running a
stop sign and another was fined
a similar amount for driving at a
reckless rate of speed on Lump
kin street.
Boyle, Poor Man's Philosopher,
Has A Revery In Month Of June
BY HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK.— (AP) —This is
the month which there is nothing
rarer than a day in.
Good old June is back. So soon
again? What are the months doing
now—riding on horseback? The
year turns faster than a merry
go-round.
Time is doing a jig instead of a
waltz. The universe is exceeding
the speed limit. Why, if a man
isn’t careful, he’ll find he’s run
out of Junes, used up his ration,
before he knows it.
Wherefore, let every man pause
and remember his Junes. For
Junes won’t come on forever, and
no season lasts, and isn’t it won
derful to see the girls again in
their summer dresses? They put
the tulips to shame,
June is the heyday of boyhood,
as the poet said. Remember?
School let out at last, and running
from the building you whooped
back in alto bravado: “No more
pencils, no more books! No more
teacher’s sassy loks!” And the
teacher smiled from the window,
comfortably happy in the knowl
edge that for three months she
didn’t have to drum the multipli
cation table into the squirming
minds of other people’s runny
nosed children,
No Vacation
Then came the thrill of putting
away your shoes for the summer,
the ecstacy of going barefoot again
—the sting of hot pavement on the
tender soles, the delirious delight
of squirting the warm dust of dirt
roads between your toes.
And did any boy ever go through
June without getting at least four
thorns in his foot? Remember the
agony as mother placidily dug out
the sharp spikes with a needle,
murmuring, “Oh, quit yelling. A
body would think you were being
murdeied.”
There was always the visit to
your cousins in the country and
the cruel jokes they played on you
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THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1950.
-—
BY ED THILENIUS
Athens school patrolmen today
are still talking about the fun they
had on their trip to Atlanta Tues
day. Taking the trip from Atheng
were 83 patroimen from the var
ious schools of the city.
The youths spent a day in the
Capitol City enjoying the many
sights, including Grant Park and
zoo, That night they attended an
Atlanta Cracker baseball game;
then returned home.
Accompanying the youths were
“Sambo” Sanders, traffic officer
who heads the patrol program, J.
B. Carter and Ed Hansford, other
officers.
Making the trip with the local
youths were over 200 school pa
trolmen from this vicinity. In
charge of the group was Cpl. Joe
Lowe, of Safety Education Divi
sion of Georgia State Patrol,
because you lived in the city.
They’d have you milk the cow
from the wrong side, so she’d kick
or butt at you. Or at night they'd
take you on a snipe hunt, leaving
you standing for hours alone,
holding an empty gunny sack be
hind a lighted candle and waiting
for the mythical birds to {flit
across the light and into the bag,
Remember the Ilonesome walk
back to the house through the
scarey darkness,7 knowing you'd
been tricked again? And somehow
there just weren't any city tricks
you could play on them.
Timeless Pranks
I suppose these timeless pranks
are being played on city boys
right now in a thousand rural
communities across America. But
they don’t ruin June. Nothing can
ruin June for a boy. It’s his month
to be free—free to swim and hike
and run through the woods like a
deer out of prison.
Somehow June isn't quite so
wonderful when you grow up, is
it? There are no summer vaca
tiong in the school of experience,
and you can’t play hooky just be
cause June rolls around, It kind of
embarrasses you—llike meeting an
old sweetheart,
Grownups chiefly use June as a
month to marry in, But there’s a
limit to that, too. A man can’t go
barefoot or go marrying each June,
as no wife would put up with that
kind of ‘nonsense, year after year.
But, all in all, @ middle-aged
'man can still get some pleais:re
out of the month. His case isn’t
exactly desperate.
He can still enjoy the sunseis,
he can look at the girls in their
summer dresses, he can . walk
through the fields and hear the
crickets and watch a bee inter
view a clover . . . and be home
sick for the Junes of his child
hood, when his heart spilled over
vl/_ith the pure wonder of being
alive,
PATROL TRIP