Newspaper Page Text
[ITURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1950,
Athenian Ends
Tour Of Duty
NEW ORLEANS, June 17—Lt,
g) William A. Stafford, USNR,
n of Mrs. Ruth P, Stafford, 102
loverhurst Circle, Athens, Ga,,
ill end annual training duty here
his morning after two weeks at
.a and two days on a Caribbean
land.
He is among 500 naval reservists
ho. for the last two weeks, have
en getting practical experience
hoard busy ships in New Orleans
.sed Destroyer Division 121,
The five destroyers left here
ne 5 to rendezvous with aircraft
4 submarine units at Guantano
o Bay, Cuba. Thrainees kept
e 2.200-ton destroyers booming
Lile executing the Navy’s latest
i deadliest “hunter-killer” man
vers, .
A brief pause came when the
hips visited Ciudad Trujillo, Do
inican Reruliic, 1* 4 Sunday and
londay. Heavy' dril.s were re
imed on Tuesday when they left
e Dominican capitol. .
Reservists will disembark heres
his morning and start for homes
11 over the country,
The U. S. Agriculture Depart
nent says frozen orange juice
narketed in the 1948-’49 season
vould make a block 60 feet wide,
ive feet deep and a mile long.
.
Funeral Notice
SERDINE. — Funeral services for
Dr. John Gerdine of Jersey, Ga.,
will be held Friday afternoon,
June 16th, at 2:30 o’clock at the
Methodist Church in Jersey, Ga.
Interment Oconee Hill cemetery
in Athens, Ga., at 4:30 o’clock.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Ola Mobley Gerdine; children,
Master Sergeant John Gerdine,
4r., Austin, Texas; Miss Jose
phine Gerdine, Jersey, Ga.; bro
ther, Dr, Linton Gerdine, Ath
ens, Ga.; sisters, Miss Mary Ger
¢ine and Mrs. E. E. Lampkin,
Athens, Ga. The remains will be
placed in state at the church at
1:30 o'clock. The remains will
be at the funeral home of The
E. L. Almand Co., in Monroe,
Ga., until 1 o’clock Friday.
[ILLER. — The relatives -and
friends of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Luther Miller of 150 King Ave
nue; Mr, and Mrs. Robert L.
Keener of Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
R.. D. Miller, Birmingham, Ala.;
Mr. and Mrs., J. H. Miller,
Miami Springs, Fla.; Mr. and
Mrs. R. L. Miller, Jr., Wilson, N,
{.; and Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Miller, Chattanooga, Tenn., are
invited to attend the funeral of
Mr. Robert Luther Miller, Fri
day afternoon, June 16th, 1950,
at five-thirty (5:30) p. m. from
the First Baptist Church. Dr. E.
1.. Hill and Rev. Howard P.
Giddens will officiate. The re
mains will lie in state in the
church one hour prior to the
service, Interment Oconee Hill
cemetery. McDorman Funeral
Home, 220 Prince Avenue.
ITTMAN, — The relatives and
friends of Mr. Senica Andrew
Pittman, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Cooper, Sr., and Mr, and Mrs. J.
L. Hunter of Athens, are invited
to attend the funeral of Mr.
Senica Andrew Pittman, Sunday
afternoon, June 18, 1950, fromr
the Center Methodist Church at
three o'clock. Rev. A. O. Hood,
pastor of the Holiness Church,
will officiate. Mr. J. L. Hunter,
Mr. W, A. Cooper, Sr., Mr. J. A.
Langford, Mr. Fred Hamilton,
Mr. Russell Daniel and Mr, A.
O. Flanigan will serve as pall
bearers, Bridges Funeral Home.
GALLANT-BELK CO
. e
acial Sal
Special Sale
NYLONS (/"
15 Gauge, 51 Denier hos- oo v. 4& |
iery in all the new shades. : g}‘
Our regular 1.35 value in £y : J
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first quality. £l s
2
Pr.
GALLANT-BELK CO
b
Athens’ Leading Departrment Store.
The Best Is The Cheapest
Freshest And Poast
Money Can Buy. SERVE BENSON'S
(Continued from Page One)
shek has ousted his three brothers
in-law from the Board of Direc
tors of the Central Bank of China,
The presidential directive fired T.
Yoad T L Soong, brothers of
Madame Chiang, and Pr. . B
Kung, husband of Madame Chi
ang’s sister. A new board of di
rectors of the Nationalists’ leading
state bank has been created.
In Hong Kong, observers said
the Chinese Communists have
moved 200,000 troops from the In
dochina border to the east coast
opposite Formosa, indicating an
imvasion attempt may be immi
nent,
Miller
(Continued from Page One)
person and made the unusual re
cord of attending Sunday School
for 945 consecutive Sundays—
slightly more than eighteen years
—without missing a Sunday.
For sixteen years Mr. Miller
gave efficient and faithful service
as engineer of the county-owned
Athens General Hospital. He was
devoted to that institution, as he
was to his church and family, and
he gave his duties at the hospital
the same care and thoroughness
that characterized his connection
with the railroad and Sunday
School, and, indeed, all other in
terests he held.
He was a good citizen in the
true meaning of that term, angd
realized ‘that with the privileges nf
citizenship and also went certain
duties and responsibilities and
these he carried out faithfully. He
was always ready to give his ef
forts to any worthwhile movement
designed for the betterment of his
community and he was the type of
citizen this community can ill af
ford to lose.
Counterfeit
(Continued from Page One)
has connections with a second
criminal group which distributes
the bad money across the nation.
Commissioner Anslinger said his
narcotics agents had broken up a
New York-North Carolina ring
which was “flooding North Caro
lina” with hypodermic tubes filled
with heroin.
Producer Testifies
The Kefauver Committee got
testimony yesterday from a movie
producer, Frank Seltzer, that
gambling interests blocked the
filming of sequences in Las Vegas,
Nev., for a picture “exposing the
race wire service-bookie racket.”
He said threats and hampering
pressure were involved. -
Also in the field of gambling
operations, Life Magazine said in
its current issue that U. S. book
makers are making an annual pro
fit of s6,ooo,ooo,ooo—more than the
combined’ profits of -the nation’s
100 largest manufacturing com
panies. &
The magazine said this country
today is ‘“the gamblingest nation
that ever existed,” wagering a to
tal of almost $30,000,000,000 a year.
MILITARY BASE
MANILA, June 15—(AP)—U. S.
military installations valued at
$8,500,000 were given today to the
Philippine government. They con
sisted of utilities, barracks and
other buildings at the Fort .Mc-
Kinley and Nichols Field military
reservations.
Demand Less As
Auction Market
Here Yesterday
Livestock receipts at the local
auction market yesterday includ
ed 168 cattle, 41 calves, and 125
hogs. Demand was not as good as
one week ago and the trade was
not nearly so active as that of a
week ago. Prices in general ruled
fully 50 cents to SI.OO lower than
last week. Hog prices worked ful
ly 50 cents yower.
Several medium slaughter
steers and heifers brought $22.50
to $25.00 common rangcd from
$20.00 to $21.75, and canner and
cutter steers and heifers sold at
$16.00 to $19.60.
A few individual good and
choice slaughter calves brought
$26.00 to $29.00, medium ranged
from $23.00 to $26.50, common
sold at $19.00 to $24.25, and culls
brought $16.00 to $20.00.
Common and odd head medium
beef cows ranged from $18.4C to
$20.00, cutter cows sold at $16.30
to $18.50, and canner cows brought
$13.59 to $16.60. Common, sausage
bulls ranged from $19.00 to $21.40,
while canner and cutter bulls
brought $15.00° to $19.40.
Common and medium stocker
steers and heifers ranged from
$19.00 to $21.75, and inferior of
ferings brought $15.50 to $18.70.
A few inferior baby calves sold at
$16.25 to $25.50. Common stocker
cows ranged from $16.00 to $17.60,
and inferior cows brought $13.70
to $15.90. .
Medium to choice 180 to 140
slaughter barrows and gilts sold
at $19.00 to $20.00, 160 to 180
pounds at $18.50 to $19.50, 140 to
160 pounds at SIB.OO to $19.10, less
than 140 pounds at SIB.OO down,
240 to 300 pounds $18.50 to $19.50,
and over 300 pounds at $18.75 and
less. Medium and good 200 to 400
pounds sows ranged mostly at
$15.00 to $16.75.
(Continued from Page One.)
about it.”
When asked about (“Fat” Ba
ker), Thompson said “any vote
cast for him is a half vote for my
opponent (Talmadge).
Last night’s speaker was unable
to fill speaking appointments at
Danielsville and Carnesville yes
terday because of a “worn out”
throat; however, after substitutes
brought a message at both places
Thompson answered questions
from the audiences. During his
campaign there have been a total
of 537 Thompson appearances, he
said.
(Continued from Page One.)
said the “wool hat boys” owe no
allegiance to Herman, who is not
a true disciple of his father.
The speakers were Pope and
Randall Evans, former speaker of
the: House from MecDuffie county.
Talmadge, meanwhile, contin
ued his drive for votes in north
Georgia. He told his listeners what
his administration “has done for
schools and roads since he has
been in office. He said more
teachers are on the payrolls than
ever before, and that they
have been given a 10 per cent sal
ary increase. And he promised to
finance the Minimum Foundation
program for education if returned
to office. .
' | THE BANNERHERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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CALIFORNIA’'S READY—It's a long time until the 1950 “Miss
America” contest at Atlantic City, N. J, in September, but Califor
nia is all set with this year’s contestant. “Miss California” is .
Joanne Durant, 21, of San Diego, seen receiving her trophy from
{one Pederson, last year’s title winner. Seated at right is “Miss !
0s Angeles,” runner-up, and “Miss Oakland,” third prize-winrc: |
Pittman Services
Toße Conducted °
Seneca Andrew Pittman, uncle
of Mrs. J. L. Hunter, Athens, and
W. A. Cooper, sr., Lexington Road,
died unexpectedly in Atlanta Wed
nesday from a heart attack. Mr.
Pittman was 62 yeears old.
Services are to. be conducted
Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock
from the Methodist church in Cen
ter, Rev. A. O. Hood, Holiness min
ister, officiating.
Burial will follow in the Center
cemetery, Bridges Funeral Home
in charge of arrangements. Pall
bearers will be J. L. Hunter, W. A.
Cooper, jr., J. A. Langford, Fred
Hamilton, Russell Daniel and A. O.
Flanigan.
Mr. Pittman was a native of
Jackson county and had lived in
Atlanta for the past thirty years.
He was the son of the late W. C.
Pittman and Mrs. Ludie Ida Coop
er Pittman. He was a member of
the Methodist church and had
many friends in this section who
will regret to learn of his death.
19 Million People
In America
n AmMerica
Change Residence
NEW YORK, N. Y. — A restless,
mobile America is portrayed by
Metropolitan Life Insurance Com
pany statisticians who mnote that
19,000,000 of our adult population
changed residence during the
year ending in April 1949, and an
even larger number during the
precading year.
About one out of every five
adults moved in each of these two
years, and from April 1940 to
April 1947 substantially more than
half of the adult population sought
and found new homes.
. “Traditionally a mobile people
neither the disappearance of the
frontiers nor the shortage of hous
ing has made the typical Ameri
can stay put,” the statisticians ob
serve.
Greatest mobility was shown
among men and women under age
35. A greater proportion of these
young adults moved from one
state to another than from one
county to another in the same
state. Figures are based upon sam
ple survey by the Bureau of the
Census.
Although the statisticians see
signs that the peak has passed,
they predict that the mobility of
the people will continue at a high
level during the next few years,
due to new home construction,
the continued attraction of large
numbers of people to the Far
West, and — as in the past—eco
nomic developments in the various
regions.
“Altogether, it is to be expected
that the American people will con
tinue to exercise the freedom they
always have enjoyed of settling
where they can make better and
happier lives for themselves,” the
statissicians philosophize.
Miller Rises To
Be On Friday
Services for Larry Wayne Miller
will be held Friday afternoon at 3
oclock from Whitehall Baptist
Church with Rev. Van Miller, Toc
coa, and Rev, Mr. Henley, White
hall, officiating.
Burial will be in Whitehall cem
etery, Clyde McDorman Funeral
Home in charge of arrangements.
The little three-months old boy
died at his home in Whitehall
Wednesday. He is survived by his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Mller; sister, Brenda Joyce Miller;
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Miller, all of Whitehall.
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Dr. Jan Herman van Royen
(above), Ambassador to Canada,
has been appointed by Queen
Juliana as the Netherlands Am
bassador to the United States.
(Ceatinued from Page One)
life. He attended the public
schools of Savannah and Atlanta,
and afterward studied at Davidson i
College and Georgia Tech, where |
he was graduated in 1924 with the |
degree of Bachelor of Science in
Commerce. He alsco studied en
gineering at the Georgia Tech
Evening School and took a special
course in public utility manage
ment at Harvard Unversity,
From 1942 to 1946 Mr. Ham
mond served with the Army Corps
of Engineers and the Army Air
Forces, being released from serv
ice after the war with the rank of
major. He now holds the rank of
major in the Air Force Reserve.
Mr. Hammond is a deacon of the
First Presbyterian Church of Ath
ens, and a member of the Rotary
Club and the Chamber of Com
merce. He is immediate past pres- |
ident of the Presbyterian Men of
the Athens Presbytery and secre
tary-treasurer of the Presbyterian
Men’s Council of Georgia.
Bill Jeffrey, soccer coach, and
Charlie Speidel, wrestling mentor, ‘
are the only coaches remaining |
from the Penn Staff of 20 years
ago. Both have fielded 24 teams.
Bennie Aldridge, Oklahoma A
& M halfback recently signed by
the New York football Yanks, 1s
married to the queen of the let
termen’s club at the school.
The anableps, a fish of tropical
America, has two pupils in each
eye, Each pupils functions sepa
rately, enabling it to see above
and below water at the same time.
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ENVOY ARRIVES~—
Dr. Luis Esteves Fernandes
(above), newly-appointed Por
tuguese Ambassador to United
States, smiles on arrival in New
York enrcute to Washington.
U. . Newspapers
BY GAYNOR MADDOX *
NEW YORK., — (NEA) — The
American press is the third mem
ber of the team of science and in
dustry that is helping solve the
world’s critical food problems.,
That is the studied opinion of
top men in scientific research and
industry — men like Dr. Karl T.
Compton, chairman of Massachu
setts Institute of Technology.
Fairfield Osborn, president of the
Conservation Foundation and au
thor of “Our Plundered Planet”;
Dr. Charles Glenn King, scientific
director of the Nutrition Founda
tion, and L. A. van Bomel, presi
dent of the National Dairy Pro
ducts Corp.
Their praise for the work U, S.
newspapers have done in bringing
the public “into partnership with
science” came during an exclu
sive four-man interview with
NEA. It took place at Oakdale, N.
Y., where what was once a mil
lionaire’s palatial Long Island es
tate has been turned into the vast
new National Dairy Research lab
oratories,
Deserves Thanks
~ “There are many counts on
which the press deserves' the
thanks of scientists,” Dr. Comp
ton said, “but particularly, I think,
because science writers and food
‘columnists have been so great a
force in breaking down tradjtion
al food prejudices.”
The public “partnership with
science,” Dr, Compton added, has
‘been achieved through the news
papers, which have informed the
‘ people “of the results of scientific
i research in terms of what it means
to them and their families in bet
ter living. As a result the road
has been opened to greater and
greater advances in human living
and the utilization of the resour
ces that science is daily meaking
available to the world.”
- Osborn, famed as a fighter for
conservation of natural resources
to prevent possible world-wide
famine, is convinced that the
press, not government, is the most
influential friend any movement
for human betterment can have.
“I happen to be an American,”
Osborn explained. “And I know
that any national improvement in
health or nutrition or diet, or
more important, any improvement
in the basis of our renewable re
sources, cannot be brought about
unless the American people as a
whole want it, It cannot be done
by government. Hence, the strong
est ally any movement in the
United States could have is the
free press.”
Improve Habits
Keeping press channels open is
vastly important to scientists seek
ing ways to improve national food
habits, said Dr. King of the Nutri
tion Foundation, who is also on the
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CASUAL JEWELRY
—This quadruple-strand neck
lace in featherweight pastel
colored metal, and double-link
bracelet can be worn with a
bathing suit even in the water.
faculty of Columbia University,
He believes milk is our first line
of nutritional defense,
“Every American is a free citi
zen. He can choose to eat what he
likes, whether it is good for him
or not,” Dr. King pointed out.
“Unless he is given diet education
and a pattern of practical eating
through our newspaper food col
umns, he, as*a free citizen with a
bewildering assortment of foods to
choose from, can go crazy.”
Advertising cannot compete
with the disinterested press in
public health education, according
to van Bomel, an industrialist who
advocates that industry spend
large sums for scientific research.
He was the most active force be
hind creation of the Qakdale lab
oratories, where 127 scientists and
103 assistants are working on the
problems of producing better and
cheaper milk, plus wide utiliza
tion of milk by-products.
“After a man’s education at
school, the press continues his ed
ucation,” van Bomel said. “We
know by experience that the
press, through its science and food
editors, has done more for health
education and particularly for
milk use education in the United
States than all our advertising put
together.”
Tackling Notre Dame’s Johnny
Lujack on the first play of the
1946 game was the greatest foot
ball thrill for Earl Banks, guard
with the football Yanks, who then
was with lowa. :
PAGE FIVE
Training On
Foreign Soils
ATLANTA, G@Ga, June 1§ —
Georgia veterans of World War 11
who are eligible for training or are
in.training under Public Law 346
(The G. 1. Bill of Rights) may
elect to take their training (if it
is institutional in nature) in any
one of 13 foreign countries, Will
iam K, Barrett, director of the
State Department of Veterans
Service revealed today.
The countries are: Belgium,
Denmark, England, Erie (South
Ireland), North Ireland, France,
Italy, Mexico, Netherlands, Scot
land, Sweden, Switzerland, and
Wales.
Barrett stated that students now
in training in the United States
may (and that meny will) elect to
study abroad during the summer,
returning to their studies in the
United States this fall.
All veterans qualified for this
training may take it in a foreign
country without having their rec
ords transferred from the Region=
al Office of the Veterans Adminis=-
tration, he said. k
According to Barrett, Georgia
veterans who are interested in tak
ing all orp art of their educational
training in a foreign country
‘should write to: Veterans Admin
istration Foreign Operation Di
vision, Munitions Building, Wash
ington 25, D. C.,, and request &
booklet entitled “Education Over
seas.” He invited interested vete
rans to call at their loeal Veterans
‘Service Office where additional
information on this plan will be
provided, and a request written
for the booklet. The local VSO is
located at 283% E. Broad Street.
Manager of the office is Raymond
E. Lester.
SEA-SQUIRTS HAVE
VANADIUM
L.OS ANGELES — (A?) — Sea
squirts take some of the small
amounts of vanadium in sea water
and concentrate it in their own
bodies. This is the conclusion of
the Scripps Institution of Ocean
ography. Vanadium could be re
covered from sea squirts but it
would have to be very valuable to
make the process profitable, the
institution believes.
All five of the world’s leading
money-winning race horses-—Cita
tion, Stymie, Armed, Assault and
Whirlaway—performed at Hialeah
during their careers.
Rip Engle is the 14th head coach
in 64 years of intercollegiate foot
ball at Penn State.
Penn State’s new football aide,
Joe Paterno, played at Brown
University for four years under the
new Lion eoach, Rip Engle.