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PAGE FOUR
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/ ATHENS BANNER HERALD
ESRABLISHED 1832
m.:.nhonlm Except Saturday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
i at the Post Office at Athens, Ga. a 8 second class mail matter,
e A o 5 Sttt A A S AR,
B. BRASWELL ... .. Sves sees sess Ses GAEs asss @nvise wsas ooss.« EDITOR and PUBLISRER
EC. LUMPKIN and DAN MAGILL .... «o¢ coco seesos coccos ssen.s oess.. ASSOCIATE EDITORS
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
As it is written in the book
of the words of Esaias the
prophet, saying The voice of
one crying in the wilderness,
Prepare ye the way of the
Lord, make his paths straight.—St. Luke 3:4.
. Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A, F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel,
Cuts in Post Office Service
. o . .
Will Remain, Say Officials
BY DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
(First of Two Dispatches)
WASHINGTON.— (NEA) —Post Office officials
sav that U, 8. citizens had better resign themselves
to having the postman only ring once a day from
now om because they think the new cuts in service
are here to stay. That is, unless Congress forces
Postmaster General Jesse M, Donaldson to cancel
his economy order.
Furthermore, they say, taxpayers had better stop
talzing for granted all the services which the Post
O'iice has been furnishing at cut-rate prices lo
t 2se many years. They think that maybe the time
I'"s come for some brand new rules on how Uncle
£ should play post office with the population,
‘“he problem of the Post Office running in the
r | has been steadily getting worse. This year the
p-stal deficit is expected to set an all-time high of
$515,000,000. That's about one-tenth of the total
federal deficit for this year. And that’s why every
body who has anything to do with it thinks the
time has arrived to do something in the direction
of black ink, ;
The Post Office is one of the world’s biggest bus
inesses, There are over 500,000 employes. The gross
intake ig about $1,500,000,000. Over 43,000,000,000
pieces of mail weighing about 11,000,000,000 pounds
a2re handled yearly., And 900,000,000 other special
services are rendered annually, such as selling
1 oney orders and the handling of $3,000,000,000 of
1 ostal savings for 4,000,000 persons,
. 7IE BIGGER IT GETS, THE MORE IT LOSES
Since 1852 the postal service has been getting
faacier agd going further in the red. After cutting
t e letter rate to 3 cents that year, free city deliv
ery wag started in 1863. Special delivery was begun
in 1885, rural free delivery was launched in 1896
and parcel post instituted in 1918, The addition of
other special services included registered mail in
1855, money orders in 1867 and insurance and C. O.
D. in 1913,
Since 1852 the Post Office has been in the black
only during 13 years. Practically all of thenr were
war years. During the last war the great increase in
overseas air mail accounted for most of the profit,
whick by 1945 had reached $168,000,000 per year.
That surplus in operating expenses was due mostly
to the fact that the services carried the mail free
for the Post Office.
Then came 1946, the first post-war year, and the
profit turned into a deficit of $129,000,000, It has
been going up ever since for many reasons.
- Only a part of the blame for the postal deficit
can be reasonably put on Post Office officials.
There's not much you can do about making a busi
ness pay when you don’t have any . control over
salaries of employes, costs of transportation or the
rates you charge for your service. There is probably
plenty that is inefficient about the postal service as
it operates today, but that’s only part of the whole
picture.
Since the war, for instance, Congress raised gov
ernment salaries about $740,000,000 a year for pos
tal workers. The cost of air mail — an item con
trolled by the Department of Commerce—has about
doubled since the war,
Railroad rates for hauling mail were increased
about 25 percent, an item controlled by the Inter
state Commerce Commission.
ONLY TWO SERVICES PAY THEIR WAY
To offset these increased costs of handling the
mail Congress upped rates on some services which
were only designed to bring in about $125,000,000 a
year.
Only first-class mail and postal savings pay for
themselves, In 1949 first-class mail netted $82,-
065,000, postal savings made $2,413,000.
The biggest loser of all was second-class mail—
newspapers and magazines-—last year. It cost the
taxpayers $117,675,000. Other efficient money-losing
postal services included third-class mail—circulars
—which lost $129,053,000; fourth-class mail—parcel
post—which lost $104,881,000; government and con
} gressional mail which cost $47,7743,000 and money
prders which cost $28,410,000.
. In all the years of the growing postal deficit,
i there has been no deficit in the number of suggest
g ions and plans for curing it. Any number of bills
| !ave been introduced which would make a drastic
| ralse in this or that postal rate ag a cure. The Hoo
| ver Commission made many suggestions for im
| proving the over-all efficiency of the service.
t Buit against almost every one of these suggestions
. thewe has been heavy pressure from the groups
which would be most affected by the change, So
todmy, there is still no clear-cut federal policy on
the zelationship of the Post Office to those who
benefit from its service. But that's what postal
rdfin woutld like to have now, once and for
i . et e
3 Foo many important Republicans now seem to
regard the people as dupes who have been suborn
ed by tax money.—Historian Herger Agar.
One ltem in Arms Aid Plan
2
Seems Unnecessarily Vague
So long as Russia goes on probing for weak spots
everywhere on the globe, the United States can’t
safely avoid extending military help to free peoples
who need it.
We recognized this reality last year when Con
gress voted $1,314,000,000 for arms aid to Europe
and the Far East. Now President Truman has re
quested a slightly smaller sum, $1,222,500,000, to
continue the program another year,
There’s not much doubt that Congress will again
approve substantial arms assistance, though vigor
ous isolationist efforts will be made to block or at
least reduce it. Arming our friends may not pre
vent a new war, but it will nrake it more remote.
Mr, Truman’s plan calls for $1,000,000,000 in aid
to North Atlantic treaty countries, $120,000,000 for
Greece and Turkey; $27,500,000 for Iran, Southern
Korea and the Philippines, and $75,000,000 for the
“general area of China.”
The last feature seems unnecessarily vague, if not
downright evasive. Mainland China is in Communist
hands and the difficulties of getting help to the
very active guerrilla forces are extreme. Moreover,
there’s no sign we intend to offer all-out aid to em
battled Nationalist.armies on Formosa, which may
soon feel the weight of Red attack,
Practically speaking, the requested $75,000,000
must be marked largely for Southeast Asia, where
Communist elements are fighting a hot war in
Indo-China and Malaya that could carry the whole
region into the Russian fold.
The U. S. has already promised military aid to
Indo-China out of existing funds voted for the
‘‘general area of China.” But informed guesses have
set this original help at $15,000,000, and it is as
sumed considerably more will be needed there to
fend off the Reds.
Why not say the new $75,000,000 is for South
east Asia? That whole area is looking hopefully to
this country for an indication that we are whele
heartedly behind the southern Asiatics in their re
sistance to communism, A bold statement that they
have our material backing would exert a tonic
effect upon them, ;
Possibly Mr, Truman used the phrase “general
area of China” because he wants to appease law
makers who are still highly disturbed at China’s
fall. But surely any congressman who reads the
papers realizes that China is lost for some time to
conmre and Southeast Asia is the real battlefront now.
California Primary Results Put
Warren in Natior‘:al Spotlight
Governor Earl Warren’s tremendous vote-getting
performance in the California primary once more
stamps him as a man with a bright future. Because
he piled up nearly twice as many votes as James
Roosevelt, the Democratic nominee, he must be
rated a distinct favorite for re-election to a third
term as governor this fall.
And if Warren does capture this prize again, he
will establish himself as a big factor in the 1952
Republican presidential race, whether or not he
chooses to be a candidate.
By 1952 California’s huge population gains will
be translated into more than half a dozen new seats
in Congress, which mean in turn that its delegations
to party nominating conventions will be swelled by
perhaps 14 to 16. It will pack almost as much
weight as New York and Pennsylvania,
Should the victorious Warren decide to run for
president, he would, of course, conmand this
strength for himself and would likely have the
Washington, Oregon and perhaps other western
delegations in his camp as well.
Though such a beginning would be no guarantee
of his nomination, it would put him in a very
strong bargaining spot. Warren’s voice would have
to be reckoned with in the final GOP choice. This
would be true, indeed, even if he controlled only
his own big delegation.
A Warren triumph this November would have
the same import for the Republican future as would
a victory for Governor James Duff’s hand-picked
successor in Pennsylvania,
Warren has been a progressive~ governor who
must be classed with the liberal wing of his party.
The same holds for Duff. Together these two could
go a long way toward blocking the 1952 nomination
of any man they felt did not reflect their own pro
gressive sentiments,
Warren’s primrary showing thus strengthens the
hand of GOP liberals continuing a trend that has
been unmistakable throughout the primary ballot
ing of 1950.
His fall opponent, Jimmy Roosevelt, will be no
push-over. For a time it looked. as if Warren might
repeat his feat of 1946 and capture both GOP and
Democratic nominations for governor — which is
possible under California’s cross-filing system. But
Roosevelt, fortified by an intense street-corner
campaign, proved too strong for that.
Roosevelt undoubtedly will wage a fall campaign
with similar energy. But he will have a few handi
caps, President Truman hasn’t forgotten that
Jimnry wanted General Eisenhower for the 1948
Democratic presidential nomination. And many
leading Democrats within California are not en
thusiastic over their nominee.
On top of those drawbacks is the powerful evi
dence of Warren’s hold on Californians of both
parties, Roosevelt has a big task cut out for him.
The price of survival is military preparedness.—
Former Air Secretary W. Stuart Symington.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Judy Garland Will Start Work g
When Her Medicos Give 0. K.
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)—Exclu
sively Yours: Judy Garland’s
search for health has moved to
San Francisgo, where she’s under
the care of specialists. Judy’s last
session with the medicos sent her
into “Summer Stock” feeling—and
looking—like a new gal. Three M-
G-M musicals, including “Show
Boat,” now await the green light
from her doctors.
* & %
Esther Williams’' big musical
number in “Pagan Love Song” will
feature the hula—performed in the
water. Quick, Jeeves, my diving
bell.
® & %
Stanley Kramer broke up movie
precedents with “Champion” and
“Home of the Brave.” Now he'll
break you up with “The Men,” sto
ry of Birmingham Hospital’s para
plegics. The film gives Holly
wood a new star, Marlon Brando,
and gives to Kramer full title to
the claim that “Movies Are Better
Than Ever.” This is the best.
President Truman has ordered
the closing of Birmingham Hospi~
tal. “The Men” may change his
mind.
L I »
Glenn Langan’s wife has moved
out of their home and the separa- ‘
tion is official. She’s now teaching
in a children’s school . . . Ida Lu
pino and Howard Duff have been
pulling the wool over Hollywood’s
eyes by dating away from the gau
dier places. They were in a dark
booth at the Villa Nova — their
third date in one week ... June
Haver’s grandmother is seriously
ill in Las Vegas . .. Ed Gardner’s
pals say he’s serious about that
AT THE
MOVIES
PALACE— t
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “No Man of
Her Own,” starring Barbara Stan
wyck, John Lund. Did’ja Know.
News.
Wed.-Thurs. - Fri.-Sat. — “Love
That Brute.” starring Paul Dou
glas, Jean Peters. Pony Express
Days. Texas Tom. News.
GEORGIA—
Tues. - Wed. — “Barkley’s of
Broadway,” starring Ginger Rog
ers, Fred Astaire. Pluto’s-Heart
throb. 2
-Thurs. = Fri, — “Mule Train,”
starring Gene Autry, Pat But
tram, Shiela Ryan. Self Made
Maids. News, o
Sat. — “Pistol Packin’ Mama,”
starring Ruth Terry, Robert Liv
ington. King Cole Trio. Barnyard
Skiing. Miner’s Daughter.
STRAND—
Mon.-Tues. — “Post Office In
vestigator,” starring Warren Dou
glas, Jeff Donnell. Shoot the Bas
ket. Leo Reisman — Orch, Beach
nut.
Wed.-Thurs. — “Canadian Pa
cific (Double Feature) starring
Randolph Scott, Jane Wyatt. “Tar
zan’s Triumph,” starring Johnny
Weissmuller, Frances Gifford.
Adv. of Sir Galahad — Chapter
18.
Fri.-Sat. — “Satan’s Cradle,”
starring Duncan Renaldo, Leo
Carrillo. For Pete’s Sake. Radar
Patrol vs Spy King — Chapter 10.
RITZ—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “Ambush,”
starring Robert Taylor, John Ho
diak, Arlene Dahl. Aquatic House
party. Tarts & Flowers. ;
Wed. - Thurs. — “My Foolish
Heart,” starring Dana Andrews,
Susan Hayward. Fappy Holiday
Fifth Column Mouse.
Fri.-Sat. — “Strange Gamble.”
French Fried Frolic. Cody of the
Pony Express — Chapter 11.
DRIVE-IN—
Mon.-Tues. — “Prince of Foxes,”
starring Tyrone Power. Orson
Welles, Wanda Hendrix. Slide,
Donald, Slide.
Wed. - Thurs. — “You’re My
Everything,” starring Anne Bax
ter, Dan Daily. Scarlet Pumper
nickel. News.
Fri. — “House of Strangers,”
starring Edw. D. Robinson, Rich-~
ard Conte. Susan Hayward. Beach
Peach.
Sat. — “Cheyenne Takes Over,”
starring “Lash” Laßue, Fuzzy St.
John, Nancy Gates. Sports Top
Performers. Put Some Money in
the Pot.
NOXZEMA’S
Wonderful Relief for Poison Ivy, Foison
Oak. Scores of people findvglox-lvy,
made by the makers of famous Noxzema
Skin Cream, l')ringsf quick relief (c;‘:]l;;
3 v Lasier lot 6ok Nowtts fom
your druggist today. 39¢ and 73¢.
ot T i e T A A.ell PIS
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for ‘Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-11:22 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:45 p. m.~—Air Conditioned,
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and
West—
-5:50 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:25 a. m.—(Local).
457 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily) 12:35 p.m.
Leaves Athens (Daily) 4:15 p.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
From Lula and Commerce
Arrive 9:00 a. m. :
East and West
Leave Athens 9:00 a. m.
‘GEORGIA RAILROAD
Week Day Only
Train No. 50 Departs 7:00 p. m.
Train No. 51 Arrives 9:00 a. m
. Mixed Trains.
movie he'll produce in Puerto Rieo.
The picture is a murder mystery,
“The Man With My Face,” and
will have a $300,000 budget.
Modesty
Red Skelton plays himself, his
father and his grandfather in
“Watch the Birdie” and explains:
“When I'm in a three-way shot,
T upstage papa and underplay
‘ grandpa so the bum in the middle
can’t steal the scene.”
| 2 o® #
- Jack Oakie and Victoria Horne,
who have had Hollywood playing
a guessing game about their long
romance, will be married this year.
Victoria denied the rumors that
they were secretly hitched and
told me:
“I can tell you that we'll be Mr.
and Mrs. before the year is over.
We had planned to marry this
coming July 4 but decided to make
it a littie later.”
‘Blonde Viectoria plays a man=
chaser in “Harvey.” When she
started her scenes, there was a
little Jane Russell trouble.
“Henry Koster, the director,
made me assume a different pos
ture so that my —er — talent
wouldn’t be so prominent,” Vie
toria said. -
Jack Paar, who just landed a
big airshow after three years on
the shelf, quips: “I just turned 30.
This is the year of comebacks —
Gloria Swanson, Mae Murray and
now me.”
Well-Received
Wire to director Irving Rapper
from Gertrude Lawrence follow=
ing the preview of “The Glass
Menagerie”: “I'm still dazed by
the reception of my performance.”
. . . John Carroll got a pained look
in his face when T asked him about
a possible reconciliation with his
ex-wife Lucille Ryman. - ¢
“If somebody can talk her into
it, I’ll re-marry her,” he said.
“Right now she won’t have me.”
!John is cutting his operatic bari
tone down to a crooner’s whisper
in “Hit Parade of 1951.”
*& » J
Producer Jack Cummings’ crack
after seeing rushes of Jane Pow
ell’s corset dance in “The Tender
- Hours.” “No matter how you slice
(it it’s still Salome.
‘ * #. 0%
~ Leif Erikson jumped from “Stel
-1a” at Fox to “Dallas” at Warners.
“Stella Dallas”? . .. Dorothy Dan
dridge says it this way at Larry
Potter’s: “Diamonds are a girl’s
best friend—but a mink coat is
thicker than water.,” . . . Gale
Storm, getting ready for a Broad
way invasion, will take a play,
“People Are Crazy,” on the road
for a series of one nighters .. .
Ann Dvorak and husband Igor De-
& ,
SAY MOTORISTS FROM COAST TO COAST
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BIGGER VALUE! How convenient te BIGGER VALUZ! Dodge seats
have a luggage compartment that's are “kneelevel” to give real
really big! Plenty of extra usable space. support te your legs.
Your present car Mmay never cgain be
5 worth what we’ll give NOW!
\‘\'/‘E'.“ 5 We have more buyers for used cars
N\ g ) than ever. So, today we’re back again
;{fi\ with the best oppbrtunity for you to
‘make a good deal on your present car.
Dont delay—act now, let’s trade!
J. SWANTON IVY, INC. 154 W. Hanca%& Ave.
e v g BT TR i
ga are dén;lgi B: or.& rumors
Maureen O'Hara was busting
with wim‘yo&fldp over the direc
tion she . from. hubby Will
Price in “Tripoli.”
“I didn’t know whether T was
oing to get embarrassed, :nad or
fust tearful when I started the
picture,” she said. “But I forgot
that Will was my husband when
we got going. I just had the feel
ing that I was working with a
great talent and I sat there with
my mouth open.”
Even John Ford, Maureen whis
pers, has marked her husband
(:own as Hollywood’s coming direc
tor.
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B s A R Be e R e
Paul Gessner tells why banks give good service.
*l own a small restaurant,”
says Paul Gessner, “and I got it
started with a little money I had,
and a small loan from my bank.
“Ever since I got the loan, I’'ve
been dealing with the same bank.
I keep my deposits there because
it’s much safer than my cash
box. Having mioney in the bank
makes it easy for me to pay my
bills by check and helps my credit
with suppliers and wholesalers.
*“The banker who arranged the
loan talks over my business with
me every once in a while, and
helps me out a lot.
“One time I asked him why the
/|
~ Wisconsin dairymen specialize
in the sale of fluid milk, while
their neighbors in lowa and Min
nesota sell butterfat, .
Fish are the principal source of
animal protein for the Jaganese
people, providing about 85 per
cent of their total supply of such
Texas led in sales of “farm but
ter” in 1949, with 5,200,000 pounds.
Production of manufacturing
grade milk fits in with other farm
operations and furnishes a steady
year-round income.
big interest in me. He said be
cause I’m one of their many cue
tomers, and if he didn’t treat me
like one, plenty of other good
banks would.
“That’s why I like my bank.
They’re in a competitive business
just like my own. We've both got
to give good service to keep our
customers.””
This is another in @& series of
workaday stories about people and
their banks as told tothe « « + « &
This is one in a series of stories
of people as told to the...
CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK
( Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. )
YOU COULD PAY SIOOO MORE
and still not maich Dodge for roominess and ruggedness
Here’s VALUE you can see—VALUE
you can feel as you drive—VALUE
you notice in your pocketbook!
Dodge sleck, well-bred beanty fs
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sign OUTSIDE gives yom an easier
handling car—a car that’s easier to
park and garage. Yet iNsioE there’s
a world of roominess—extra head
GYRO-MATIC
LOWEST-PRICED
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TRANSMISSION
FREES YOU FROM SHIFTING
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TUESDAY, YONE 13, 1950.
i 777‘“‘“
Arkansas produces about 9( R
cent of the nation’s bauxite :&
also contains the only diamong
mine in the United States,
B —————
Tallest known fenrs exist in the
Hawaiian Islands, where they
grow toaheigt of 30 to 40 feet
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H Mrs, Elder
Mrs. Thelma Elder, 708 Bryon
Street, S. E,, Atlanta, Georgia, ;.
26 years old and the mothey of
three small children. For g ti,
she thought that her duties sy -
mother and housewife werg just
' too much for her to handle, She
felt so bad that she did not feel
like doing anything, Then, she
heard the blessed mews ahoyt
HADACOL and life again seemg
worth living,
Mrs. Elder was suffering from
a deficiency of Vitaming 81, p)
Niacin and Iron, which HADA.
COL contains.
~ Here is her statement: «,
stomach had been bothering me
‘and I did not have any encrgy.
‘My back bothered me and 1 gjg
not feel like doing anything,
There were itmes when I did not
have any appetite, I started tak.
ing HADACOL and it has done me
80 much good. I have been taking
it for several months and ny
stomach is doing fine, I feel good,
and have lots of energy and my
back is all right. I surely do praise
HADACOL—it has done so muc},
good for me.”
Hundreds of Doctors
. « « have prescribed HADACOI,
for their patients, have requesteq
quantities of HADACOL for their
own clinical use and for their
own families. The fact that HAD
ACOL is scientifically formulated,
compounded with rrecious Vita
mins and Minerals (in liquid
form), help to account for its in
creasing acceptance by doctors,
Make up your mind to take
HADACOL regularly. Refuse sub
stitutes. Insist on the genuine,
There is only one HADACOL.
You can't lose & cent, because it's
sold on a strict money-back guar
antee. You'll feel great with the
first few bottles you take . .. or
your money back. Only $1.25 for
Trial size. Large Family or Hos
pital size, $3.50.
(c¢) 1950, The Leßlanc Corpora
tion, (adv.)
room, shoulder room, leg room, too.
Stop in at your nearby Dodge deal:
er’s and check Dodge vAaLuE for
yourself. Experience the flashing
pick-up of the big, high-compres
sion “Get-Away” Engine—the super
smoothness of Dodge gyrol Fluid
Dirive. Welll losws it te you which
ear gives most for your money.
. NEW BIGGER VAuE
Just a few dollars more
shan the lowest-priced cars|