Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
House-To-House
Search On For
Trio At Calhoun
CALHOUN, Ga., June 2.—(AP)
~—A house-to-house search of a
15-sguare mile area was conduct
ed today by police seeking two
men and a woman who staged a
Wt from Tennessee
into yesterday.
L‘g;ouh Patro]l Sergeant F, G.
ford said the trio is believed
survounded in a heavily wooded
area four miles east of here. All
toads have been blocked off, and
police are proceeding on the
m the fufitives_ may have
n yrefuge in one of the farm
hontes in the section.
One of the most intensive man
hunts in this section’s history was
conducted yesterday, Patrolmren
from Georg:a and Tennessee with
bloodhounds and airplanes were
thrb? into the search, which con
tinu thm«g::\lt the night.
The chase began yesterday when
Tennessee Patrol Lieutenant Dan
n_s*Garland halted the trio’s car
near Ooltewah, Tenn., 12 miles
frofn Chattanooga. Garland had
réceived reports they were driving
while drunk.
Ultra-violet electric lights are
pvailable for installation in chick
en houses to cut down disease
germs,
Funeral Notice
WEATHERLY.—The relatives and
friends of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh A,
Weatherly of Dothan, Ala.; Miss
lc\;qpraldine Weatherly, Dothan;
iss Mildred Weatherly, Bir
tmntham. Ala;; Mr, Hugh Wea=
%}!r ¢, Dothan; Mr. and Mrs
erbert Welhlet‘ly. Birming
ham; Mrs, R. M. Todd, Mr. and
Mrs, Lester Oldham, Mrs, L. C,
Arnett, Mr. and Mrs. James
Saye, Mr. and Mrs. Graham
Overton, Mr, and Mrs. A, C.
Eidson, all of Athens; Mr. and
firfi ,fiob Terry, Marietta, Ga.;
¥, and Mrs. Robert Weatherly,
Mr, and Mrs. Chester Weatheflg,
mt‘h of Athens, and the grand
stms, and nieces and nephews,
are invited to attend the funeral
of Mr. Hugh A. Weatherly,
Sunday afternoon, June 4, 1950,
the Young Harris Menor
ial Methodist Church at two
o'clock, Rev. G. M. ws‘fiivey, pas=
tor of the church, officiate,
Pallbearers will be announced
ter. Interment will be in Oco-
Hill cemetery. Bridges Fun-
Home.
SO PAST..PURE.DEPENDABLE
St. Joseph aspirlN
WORLDS LARGEST SELLER AT 10¢
ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN
! Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORE
| Athens’ Most Complete
| Drug Store.
: Your Vote and Influence
Will Be Appreciated
~ CLYDE M. BASHAM
General Election June 5, 1950.
Candidate For City Attorney
City of Athens
i ‘ :
Lesser Of Two Evils
Atlanta’s Maor says of the JITNEY CABS when he ordered the
“The Committée has paid heed to the increasing public démand
for a responsible service = The JITNEYS WILL NOT MEET
THE DEMANDS OF THE PEOPLE BUT AT LEAST THEY
ARE THE LESSER OF TWO EVILS.
Your Mayor saw fit to ordeér our service back on the streets
when the employees struck—BUT the Mayor DID NOT ordér the
JITNEY CABS back on the streets when they struck a féew months
ago.
BECAUSE YOUR BUS TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM 1S CONSID
ERED A PUBLIC UTILITY VITAL TO THE LIFE OF ATHENS! !
As an essential PUBLIC UTILITY, your BUS Transpxtdtion sys
tem MUST BE-PROTECTED against unfair compéfition of she JIT
NEY CAB by placing them in the Taxicab business with taximeters
for protection of the public. -
PROTECT YOUR BUS Transportation system by having your
Mayor and Council regulate the Jitneys with taximeters at the
Council meeting on 6 JUNE.
. ATHENS CITY LINES, INC. & EMPLOYEES
-
Swim Passes On
-
Sale Last Time
Passes to the -morning swim
program at Legion Pool were on
sale for the last time today in
Athens m schools. After today
school dren may buy their
season passes at the pool on Lump
kin street.
Passes cost only SI.OO each, and
entitle the owner to participate in
the season-long program at the
pool.
The morning swim program
opens on J% lasting from
10:30 until 12 morning.
Macon Resident
Kills Wife, Self
MACON, Ga., June 2.—~(AP)—
After expressing a wish to “die
before 6 o'clock,” Gus Wing.
prominent Macon business man,
tatael(l( wounded his wife and then
killed himeelf,
Detectives summoned to the
Wing house by Joe Walters Sims,
negro, who ecared and cooked for
the couple, said they found Mrs.
Wing, 68, in bed, shot in the ab
domen. She told them that her
husband shot her,
Wing was found on the floor of
an ad{omlng bedroom, dead. The
detectives sald he had shot hime
self in the neck and still held the
double barrell shotgun with which
he had shot his wife and himself,
Sims told the officers that Wing
remarked yesterday morning when
he returned from a trip to the
hospital that he “wished he would
die before 6 o’clock.,” The negro
added that he also heard Wing say
he wished Mws, Wing would die
before he did.
Coroner Lester Chapman listed
the deaths a 8 “murder-suicide.”
(Continued from Page Oire.)
expenses.
No Disaster loan funds will be
advanced to refinance debts pres
ently owed by peach growers. The
loans may not be used to pur
chaseé improve, or refinance real
estate,
All Disaster loans must be se
eured and will bear interest at the
rate of 3 per cent on unpaid prin
cipal from the date of the ad
vances.
These Disaster loans are pro
vided to take care of an emergen
ey situation among peach grow
ers and it is expected, therefore,
that funds will be advanced to
meet only the minimum credit
needs of the growers during the
coming year. Growers who receive
Disaster loans will be encouraged
and assisted to return to their us
u&l‘ eredit sources as soon as pos
sible.
Senate
{Continned From Page One)
sources — added to information
from local law enforcement agen
cies—the committee hopes to piece
together the story of big-time un
derworld operations.
COURTESY CARS off the sfreets.
WHY?
Phi Befa Kappa
To Inifiate 38
This Afternoon
Thirty-eight University of Geor~
gia students will be Initiated into
Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary
society, this afternoon at 5 o'clock
at the Kappa Delta house on Prince
Avenue.
Initiation ceremonies will be
conducted by Dean George H.
Boyd, president of the Georgia
chapter,
A buffet supper will be served
immediately afterward. Mrs.
Adele Dahlberg, Kappa Delta
housemother, will be in charge.
Faculty members and Athenians
who are members of Phi Beta
Kappa are invited to attend.
Initiates
Students to be initiated are:
Graduate: Robert Kent Butz,
Collins, Col.
Bachelor of Arts: Carl Raymond
Anderson, Athens; Robert C. Bal
four 11T, Thomasville; Mary Eliza
beth Burford, Brunswick; Joseph
Cassin, Salem, Mass.; Catherine
Chance, Athens; Barbara Durward,
Atlanta; Marion Mildred Mattison,
Atlanta; Mary Earle Parker,
Brunswick; Esther Parrish, Augus=
ta; Barbara E. Pause, Atlanta;
Joan Boone Syfan, Atlanta,
Bachelor of Science: Harry W.
Faulkner, Covington; Robert Jack
son Gibson, Atlanta; Frank Demp
sey Guillebeau, Lineolnton; Na
thaniel W. Hill, Maeon; Hoke
Smith Nash, Athens; Robert Lane
Pearce, Moulirie; Joseph Riley
Btruby, Macon.
Bacheélor of Fine Arts: Ellen
Ruth Garrison, Cornelia; Edward
Arthur Johnson, Chicago, Ill;
Charles Budington Snead, Atlanta.
Bachelor of Arts in Journalism:
Arthur B. Darwin, York, S. C;
Carolyn Goodman, Athens; Flor
ence Boykin Griffln._ Atlarnita; Dor=-
othy J. Kibler, Dublin; William W,
McClure, Rossville; Sara R. More
land, East Point; Beverly Alyce
'Moore, Miami, Fla.
Bachelor of Business Adminis
tration: Ludwin Lawrence Barba
to, Jersey City, N. J.; Charles Law
Early, Augusta; James Robinson
Gilmore, Athens; Charies M. Hol
land, Rock Hill, S. C.; William
Henry Newcom, Sullivan, Ky.;
;Willlam Benjamin Witcher, Ath
ens.
Bachelor of Laws: John Renee
Hawkins, Macon; Charles S. Mot~
tola, Newnan.
From the Class of 1947: Laura
Holmes, Adel:
Weatherly
(Continued from Page One.)
Berr{lman, Chief W. C. Thompson
and Henry MeLeroy. Bridges Fun
eral Home is in charge of arrange
ments.
Surviving Mr. Weatherly is his
wife, Mrs. Jessie Lipham Weather
ly, Dothan; two daughters, Miss
Geraldine Weatherly, Dothan, and
Miss Mildred Weatherly, Birming
ham; two sons, Hugh D. Weather=
ly, Dothan, and Herbert Weatherly,
Birmingham; seven sisters, Mrs.
Bob Terry, Marietta, and Mrs. R.
M. Todd, Mrs. L. A. Arnett, Mrs.
Lester Oldham, Mrs. James Saye,
Mrs. Graham Overton and Mrs. A.
C. Edison, all of Athens; two
brothers, Robert and Chester
Weatherly, both of Athens, oné
grandson an@ several nieces and
nephews.
A native of Athens, he made
his home here until Tive years ago
when he moved to Dothan, follow
ing hig trade as a plum‘:ger and
steam fitter. He was with the
Tiller Plumbing Company and An
derson Plumbing Company here
before moving to Dothan, He was
a member of the Baptist church
and had many friends here.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Graduates are pouring out of the nation’s colleges in ever increasing numbers, this year's erop being
an estimated record 450,000, Today there are about 4,500,000 living college graduates; some edu
cators predict that 20 years from now there will be 10,000,000 to 15,000,000. One result is increased
competition for jobs among graduates, with more and more beginning jobs requiring college degrees.
(Continued from Page One)
a sawmill in Danielsville yesterday. General hospital attendants
reported nis condition as good.
The condition of George Dickerson was reported as apparently
good at St, Mary’s Hospital today. He was injured when a car in
which he was riding and a truck driven by Henry Griffeth side
swiped each other Wednesday night.
Driving the car was Neil Dickerson, George Dickerson is suf
fering from & fractured pelvis and still under observation, pending
determination of other injuries. :
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(L™ 8524
Wi 1248
BY SUE BURNETT
Here's a pair of crisp aprons to
keep you looking lovely whether
entertaining or doing kitchen
chores, Trim with colorful ric rae
and add the gay little tulip that’s
made from scraps.
Pattern No. 8524 is a sew-rite
perforated pattern in sizes 12, 14,
16, 18, 26; 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and
48. Size 14, bib apron, 23 yards
of 86 or 39-inch; half aprom, 1%
yards,
For this pattern, send 25 ectnts,
in COINS, vour name, address,
gize desiyed, and the PATTERN
NUMBER to Sue Burnett (The
Banner-Herald), 1150 Avenue
Americas, New York 19, N. Y.
Send 25 c¢ents new for the
Spring &nd Summer FASHION.
48 papes of new styles, fabric
news, special features. Free pat
tern printed inside the book.
SRENCH SWISS EASE
ASSPORT RULES
PARIS — (AP) — The govern
ments of France and Switzerland
have concluded an agreement un
der which French citizéns may vis
it Switzerlind and the Swiss may
visit Frénce without the formality
of passports or visas.. Under the
new regulations a valid national
identity card is sufficient for visits
not excéeding three months.
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INSIDE TRlLßY—Trilby, a circus elephant appearing at Gary,
Ind., shows everything down to Her tonsils as she opens wide to
let trainer Frank' Noel check her gum after extraction of a flve
pound tooth. Willi belp of 2000,000 units of genicillin, the gum
is henling nicely.
Walches Given
Two Local High
School Graduates
The time—2:4o p. m.—is lucky
for two 1950 high sehool %;uduates.
Witining nluiewel watches be
tause a special clock stopped at
2:40 after running for 13 days
were Geraldine Ruark, University
High graduate, and Jerry Davis,
Athens High graduate,
Bush Jewelers put a large clock
in their window 13 days ago and
laced names of graduates from
goth high schools around the sides
with girls in one circle and boys
in the other.
Yesterday afternoon at 2:40 the
hands pointed to the names of
Miss Ruark and Mr. Davis. Miss
Ruark is the daughter of Mr, and
Mrs. C. A. Ruark, 10 Myrtle Court.
Mr. Davis’ parents are Mr. and
Mrg L. A. Davis, 925 Boulevard.
Watches given away are 21-
jewel Bulova Excellency.
Home Reported
Razed By Fire
Firemen went to the intersection
of Peter and Arch streets this
morning where an automobile was
afire. The blaze was extinguished
readily and no damage was in
curred.
It was reported to the Banner-
Herald today that the home of Mrs.
James Reynolds on the Daniels
ville Road was destroyed by fire
at midnight Sunday. The house,
furniture and clothing were lost,
Talmadge
(Continued from Page One)
governorship in 1949,
At Americus last night, Thomp
son leveled another charge of
“broken promises” at Talmadge
and accused him of failing to ful
fill a 1948 campaign pledge to de
velop Geofgia’'s ports. e
The former governor said Tal
madge deliberately killed a bill
in the 1949 legislatur%ethat would
have enabléd the state ports au
thority to issué revenue certifi
cates for the development of ports
at Savannah and Brunswick. .
. Thompson also _echarged ‘that
altaßle "Lapent SBO6OOO for D
8. government proper{y for port
facilities at Savanhah when it
m?ht have been obtained from the
g?l ,e'f‘él goverhthent at no cost at
m&g&’ggfimfi CALLED
TEL AVIIV, Istael— (AP) —All
Rathjng on the beaches, 6f Tel
viv_— Israel’s “Riviera” capital
—hdlgh been b‘afihg_d by public
health authorities. They said the
order, was issued because of the
polluted. and . upfi-gienig state of
the Mediterranean’s waters.
Emory-Al-Oxford
Awards Honor
To Athens Youth
OXFORD, Gag.—At the recent
banquet of the Emory-at-Oxford
Glee Club, Director W. B. Ken
nedy awarded James Newton
Thompson a Glee Club key, the
highest award offered to members
of that group.
Jimmy is the son of Mr. and
Mrs, James Thompson of Athens.
A member of the freshman class,
he entered Emory=at-Oxford from
the Athens High Schoecl. Here he
is a nmrember of Athletic Company
B, The Glee Club, the Ministerial
Club, and Christian Fellowship.
He is the recently elected assist
ant business manager of the Glee
Club. Upoh graduation here Jim
my plans to study theology at
Emory University.
Thompson Student
Club Annhounces
Red And Black Poll
Gubernatorial Candidate M. E.
Thompson defeated Governor
Herman E. Talmadge nearly 2-1 in
a surprise straw ballot on the
University of Georgia campus May
20, it was declared today by the
Student Thompson Club. The poll
of students, taken by the Red and
Black, the ecampus newspaper,
was held Monday without any ad
vance notice, it was said.
The former acting governor re
ceived a total of 508 votes, com=
pared to 267 for the incumbent
' governor, C, O. “Fat” Baker re
ceived 36 votes, Pat Avery 13, and
Mrs. J. W, Jenkins 9. There were
21 write-in votes out of a total of
854 cast, it was declared.
~ Thompson carried all three cam
pus divisions of the TUniversity.
On Ag Hill Campus he received
124 votes compared to 101 for
Talmadge. He carried™iain Cam
pus by a vote of 338 to 156, and
Coordinate Campus by 46 to 10.
Heads of the campus Thompson
and Talmadge clubs issued state
ments praising and attacking the
5 e
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OSBRI RO
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SPEAKING
FROM
Newian, Ga.
June 3, 3:30 t 6 4:00 PM
On the following stations:
WGPC Albafi‘v
gSBA : Atlan f
4§ Augusta
wgn‘iw éagaas ~
WGIG Brunswick
WGRA Cairo
WGCAA Cedartown
&gg_ : Cdluf;’ibu's
Wi ouglas
WML'? gugfm
wl%g Hartwell
WBGR jesup
Wfl&z Macon
WMVG Milledgeville
WRCA Rome
WSAV Savannah
WSFT T?\'ofiiésfofi
WKTG Thomasville
wé!!'f,; Toccoz
Valdosta
WAYX __ Waiycross , |
SRy TR
IS T
LA LU LR
straw poll. Jack Goodman, Co
lumbus, chairman of the Thomp
son Club, stated that'it showed the’
students are in favor of “clean and
honest governmynt.” James Bent
ley, Thomaston, hyad of the Tal
madge club, insistea that most of
Talnradge's student sypporters did
not bother to vote in the p°oll.
MOVIES ARE BRYTER THAN EVER
e ————_ . T TT—
i D > PHONE 44
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= TGN
Y ATLANTA HIGHWAY Y '
~ Last Time Tonite —— Satarday — -
B ROY ROGERS
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GEORGE SEATON - WILLIAM PERLBERG e
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