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PAGE EIGHT
e "
. ATHENS BAN\ER HERALD
S L ESMBLISHED 1832
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Heaven and earth shall
pass away, but my words
\ shail not pass away.
A But of the day and hour
knoweth no man, no not the
angels of heaven, but my Father only.—St. Mat
thews 24:35-36.
BB eet et ee o e A i e e
Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A, F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel,
B ———————————— I
Indiana’s "American Guard’
| .
- Movement Stirs Controversy
[ BY PETER EDSON
f NEA Washington Correspondent
ANDERSON, Ind.—(NEA)—This smokestack city
in Central Indiana is the home of “The American
Guard”—one of the most controversial political re
form movements in recent years,
The American Guard has been danmed by the
CIO as a native American fascist movement which
might spread all over the United States. So far it is
confined to Madison county.
The American Guard has been damned by local
Democratic leaders as a Republican off-shoot of the
Chamber of Commerce. Yet the Guard leaders say
it is gtrietly bi-partisan and that it has been com
pletely divorced from the Chamber of Commerce,
The American Guard movement is a little more
than a year old, Two Anderson lawyers — C, O.
Davisson, Republican, and Walter Bagot, Democrat,
drew up its constitution and by-laws in April, 1949.
This formal action had followed several months
of preliminary discussion by Anderson business
men, First the two had met at lunch and discussed
the forming of a bi-partisan good government
movement, The two drew in five other Democrats
and five Republicans. These 12 got 12 more. The
committee of 24 did the organizing.
One of the 24—who prefers to remain anonymous
—suggested the name American Guard. He had
served in the National Guard, and had been a stu
dent of martial law and use of the National Guard
as the final defensa of law and order, His thought
was that the American Guard would protect Amer
ican freedoms,
It was perhaps an unfortunate choice of name,
Before the war, there had been an attempt to or
ganize an American Guard as a shirt organization
with strong pro-Nazi leanings, It disappeared, but
critics of the Anderson American Guard movement
were quick to point out that the first user of the
name had been fascistic,
The Anderson American Guard held its first
meeting last August and opened for business in
October, Its first and present executive director is
Charles Harbaugh.
He is a clean-cut, dark-haired young Hoosier. He
was born in Lafayette and was graduated from
Purdue in 1936. He coached in public schools. He
was in the Army from 1941 to 1945.
On discharge he went into Chamber of Commerce
work, and had been secretary of the Anderson
Chamber of Commerce for three years when he was
offered the job of organizing ihe American Guard.
He quit the Chamber of Conrmerce and went to
work for the Guard at SI,OOO a month.
LABOR AND TAX BILLS
SPARKED MOVEMENT
The real impetus for organizing the American
Guard in Anderson was the attempt to put through
the Indiana State Legislature in 1949, a series of
taxation and labor laws which the business com
munity viewed with considerable alarm.
Few of these proposed bills were passed, since the
State Senate was Republican-controlled, and it
killed many of the measures introduced in the Dem
ocratic-controlled House,
Behind this, however, wgs a long series of events
in city government which had stood the town on its
ear, The municipally-owned power plant had been
allowed to run down, Mayor Lester McDonald pro
posed a $6,000,000 bond issue to build a new power
plant, The city already had a tax rate of $6.40 per
sloo—one of the highest in the state — and there
was tax-payer protest.
It was claimed that a lesser expenditure to in
crease distribution facilities, plus purchase of cur
rent frony private utilities, would make the. bond
issue unnecessary.
The Anderson public school system had been
through long storm and strife. A Citizens Commit
tee had tried to clean up the situation, but its rec
ommendationii had been thrown out by the mayor.
The whole fracas had wound up in law suits still
unresolved. :
Also, an effort had been made to put over a local
Fair Employment Practices Commission by city or
dinance, after a similar measure had failed in state
legislature.
Anderson labor is highly organized. CIO United
Auto Workers were in the two biggest plants—
Delco and Guide Lanp divisions of General Motors,
And in their political action work they had achiev
ed statewide dominance in the Democratic Party
organization,
The Anderson Chamber of Commerce claimed
that because of bad electric power, high power
rates, bad school system and considerable labor and
political trouble, new industries were avoiding the
Anderson and Madison county area.
All this, as well as the controversy over the 1949
State Legislature’s program, is what led to the Am
erican Guard. Its leaders felt that what they needed
Wag political reform, via the Democratic process.
5. We have got to get into the black and begin to do
it now. — Edwin G. Nourse, former presidential
': €economic adviser,
MacArthur Knows Medicine
That Cools Off Red Fever
At various times in his long career as a soldier,
General Douglas MacArthur has been the object of
criticism. The general more than once has been
charged with being autocratic, with treading on
basic huran rights.
This isn’t the place to weigh the justice of these
accusations, They may or may not be well-founded,
But certain it is that MacArthur is a man who
knows how to handle Communists, His methods
seem remarkably suited to that annoying but nec
essary task.,
As allied commander in occupied Japan he is
currently engaged in giving the Communists there
some pointed instruction in how not to behave.
On Memorial Day Jap Reds sparked the first
violence against American occupation troops since
the war ended. Men were beaten, kicked and stoned,
MacArthur promptly ordered a military trial for
eight Communists accused of these acts, and they
were convicted,
Reds in Japan called for a general strike in pro- |
test against the trial but it flopped. Nevertheless it
was apparent the Communists were bent on pur
suing a more militant program of trouble-making
than heretofore, :
The general did not view this as a time to walk
softly. He ordered that all 24 members of the Com
munist Central Committee in Japan be expelled !
from public office, Later he purged 17 key men on
the party’s newspaper, Red Flag.
One of the 17 was a member of an eight-man
group the Reds had picked up to supplant the 24-
member Central Committee, Thus MacArthur kept
the Communists from regaining their balance.
To the Japanese government acting under con-|
trol of allied authority, he handed down an edict
directing that it cooperate in executing his ban.
His lefter to Prime Minister Yoshida was blunt.
He called the paper a mouthpiece for the most vio~
lent elements in the Communist Party, adding that
it was guilty of false and inflammatory appeals in’
its effort to provoke defiance of the constituted
government, i ¥
Measures so severe as MacArthur’s could not be
excused were the Communists a legitimate political
party in a nation we are trying to teach the ways
of democracy. But the Reds are essentially a branch
of the Russian government — a weapon of Soviet
foreign policy.
As such, they are a destructive element on the
hopeful Japanese scene. Following the global Soviet
patterh, they are promoters of unrest and enemies
of healthy economic revival,
Risky as it may be in the explosive Far East,
MacArthur's way is a language that Red gangsters
everywhere can understand. The methods of dem
ocracy they simply corrupt and distort to under
mine democracy. They don't deserve its rights and
privileges. They do deserve what MacArthur is
giving them.
.
We Have No Choice
President Truman's signature on the $3,121,450,-
000 Marshall Plan authorization for 1950-51 reminds
us that this bold recovery programr is moving rap
idly toward completion. When the 1951-52 measure
has been voted, that will be the last.
The government already has made it abundantly
clear that aid to Europe and other areas cannot end
in 1952. Our help will still be needed in some degree
in many countries, That will probably be true so
long as Russia’'s cold war against the ge‘ world
continues, "
The free world’s dependence upon us is beyond
question, Unless we wish to face Russia without
friends, we must back up our allies with economic
and military substance,
We'll be much better off if this fact is acknowl
edged by all Americans rather than debated by
wishful thinkers who would like to escape this trou
bled world. We have enough to do figuring out a
sensible sequel to the Marshall Plan, without frit
tering our energies in pointless debate over plain
facts.
Long Time Coming
Americans can be thankful that at last a liber
alized displaced persons measure is assured. Under
legislation finally approved by Congress and con
sidered certain of President Truman's signature,
another 135,000 Eurcpean DP’s may be admitted to
the United States.
Present law allows entry of 205,000 and we have
already given haven to more than 150,000 of these.
Furthernrore, language in the existing law that
seemed to reflect religious and racial bias has been
modified.
1f the President signs, new entrants to the U. S.
may be selected from a broader range of national
and religious groups.
The final passage of the new DP bill was a vic
tory for the many elements in American society
which wanted it. And it was a defeat for Senator
McCarran of Nevada, whose blind obstructionism
stalled for almost a year and a half a worthy meas
ure that ought to have been enacted by the spring
of 1949, i
Perhaps it is a grim jest of fate that the atomic
bomb, which caused unparelleled destruction in
Japan, has placed in our hands a new tool for dis
covering the basic principles of growth in food ani
mals and plants.—Dr. Alden H. Emery, executive
secretary, American Chemical Society. i
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Balfic Swept By Mass Red Purge
On Coast Where U. S. Plane Fell
COPENHAGEN, Denmark -
(UNEA) — Mass expulsion and
purges of Baltic nations on an un
precedented scale are reported to
bhe sweeping the Russian-annexed
republics of Lithuania. Latvia and
Estonia on the strategic Baltic
coast where.a U, 8. Navy plane
recently was lost mysteriously.
Within recent weeks the entire
government and Politburo of Es
tonia—including the President of
the Supreme Soviet, Eduard Pell,
and the Minister of Security, Boris
Kumm, has been arrested by the
MVD.
Baltic delegates to the Inter
national Socialist Congress, which
met here recently, estimate that
close to 600,000 Lithuanians, 250,-
000 Latvians and 200,000 Estonians
—more than 1,000,000 persons in
all—have been deported by the
MVD since the winter of 1949.
A number of these managed to
escape and contact underground
forces active in the interior of their
countries and also along the Dan
ish and Swedish coasts. They
brought information that the ma
jority of the deportees were sent
into forced labor in the gold mines
‘of Kolyma, Siberia, and in secret
armament plants in the Urals.
At the same time, the purge of
top Communists charged with Ti
toism” and “bourgeois national
ism” continues unabated. It has
now been extended to include
“cosmopolitan” (pro-Western ar
tists, writers and teachers as well
as recalcitrant peasants opposed to
forced land collectivization.
Clear Coast
The Kremlin apparently is de
termined to clear the entire stra
tegic Baltic coast of what it be
lieves to be a potential anti-So
viet fifth column. To achieve this,
Moscow is now engaged in what
actually amounts to a large-scale
shifting of populations.
From the Latvian port of Libau
to Stettin in Soviet-occupied Ger
many, underground sources here
report, the Russians are engaged in
feverish military preparations. A
special Baltic Red Army has re
cently been formed under the com
mand of Colonel-General Bagra
mian, with headquarters at Libau.
The Baltiski port in Estonia,
where the Red Army is said to
| have submarine pens and rocket
QORCHES
AT
_ .
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).
4:57 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
Weak Day Only
Train No. 50 Departs 7:00 p. m.
Train No. 51 Arrives 9:00 a. m.
Mixed Trains.
launching sites, has recently been |
rebuilt and made into an impreg
nable fortress with the aid of
slave labor. It was in this general
area that the unarmed U. S. Navy
Privateer plane was believed shot
down by the Russians last April,
Despite the MVD'’s widespread
terror, Moscow is encountering
strong opposition—frequently even
armed resistance—on the part of
the Balts.
Dense Forests
In dense forests and marshy re
gions scores of men and even wo
men are engaged in guerrilla skir
mishes with MVD troops. For the
moment, these anti-Red partisans
hope to save as many people as
possible from deportation. They
also act to protect the local popula~
tions from excessive plundering
by Red Army soldiers and to aid
in the escape of those black-listed
by the MVD.
The fact that, despite the vigi
lance of the MVD, Baltic nationals
continue to escape by sea testifies
to the ingenuity and competence of
their underground organizations
and also of the widespread support
they receive from the local popula
tion. Sometimes these escapes are
even made with the help and con
nivance of individual MVD agents,
my informants assert. But the
Soviet blockade of the Baltic is
being tightened. Even Swedish and
Danish fishing vessels no longer
are immune from illegal seizure in
international waters.
Baltic representatives here cau
tioned me not to overestimate the
size and strength of the resistance
movements or their ability to sur
vive without outside aid.
It is nevertheless regarded as
significant that —since Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia have been in
corporated into the U. S. S. R. —
HEAR HONORABLE
H. HICKS FORT
(Of Columbus)
Judge Superior Court, Chat
tahoochee Circuit; one of Geor
gia’s ablest speakers.
SPEAK
In Behalf of
Governor
TONIGHT
Thursday, June 15th
6:45 P. M.
Over These Stations:
BB asinn i Al
WUBEE ... ivisiiavsass iißibany
BERIL . viveiiiiiiea Ahee
WRBW ... ...ioio. .. Buvats
WMGR ........... Bainbridge
WGIG ............ Brunswick
WORA ... i Aalee
WIBE ....%....... Carcelltoh
WGAA ............ Cedartown
WRBL ............. Columbus
WD e Dl
OWD . eiiae B
WG ... .cioiooo. Douglas
WSGC ............. Elberton
WDUN ............ Gainesville
WBEY ... Jicivei Fartwell
TROM .. vcoiiiiii.. Baw
WSAV ............. Savannah
WIJAT .... ....... Swainsboro
BT ity Toceoa
WGAY .o vesnisiiiie Yatdonls
WO . ccieiiien e T
WRLD ........... West Point
Note changes in time over the
following stations:
WBHF ........... Cartersville
15 - 7:30.P. ML
WHAE ... ...... ... . s
10:00 - 19:15 P. M.
VOTE FOR
" June 28th.
the Kremlin is now faced with
armed resistance inside the Soviet
borders.
After reaching a peak of 47 bil
lion passenger miles in 1920, U. S.
railroad passenger mileage de
clined, but rose again in World
War II to a peak of 98 billion pas
senger miles,
About four cents out of the aver
age U, S, consumer’s dollar goes
for medical care. .
ANDERSON PLUMBING (0.
Combined With
arnounces the opening of a new appliance depart
ment consisting of a complete line of HOTPOINT
ranges, refrigerators, washing machines, dish
washers, water heaters, etc.
See our display room at Anderson Plumbing Com
pany, located at 925 West Broad Street, where
parking is free, or call 1116 or 1716 and have one
of our trained salesmen call on you at your con
venience. .
HOTPOINT appliances are sold, installed and
serviced by our own skilled staff. Convenient
terms to fit your budget can be arranged.
.
Lock these Flintkote Staple-Lox
5 ’
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fi Roofing applied on 28x36 foot house
as low as $4.79 per month.
No money down. Payments begin 30 days after
completion of work.
Choose from our many colors and protect your
home from wind, rain and fire with Flintkote
Fire Proof Composition Shingles.
Phone 1946 Athens, Ga.
W3Bl ‘“PHALT LA
Now Beginning
Georgia’s 4-H club summer
camping season goes inte full
speed this week and next with four
state camps operating full time
and numerous county camps being
held at irregular intervals,
L, R. Dunson, assistant state
4-H club leader, stated that Mon
roe county ogened .he camping
season June 5 at Indian Springs
Camp near Jackson. Boys from
Barrow, Jackson and Coweta
counties opened the Chatham
County Camp on Tybee Island
June 12, Johnson, Jenkins, Eman
uel and Upson County girls will
inaugurate the camping season at
Camp Fulton, Atlanta, June 19 and
4-H'ers from Bulloch, Screven
and Effingham counties will bhe
the first to use Camp Wahsega
near Dahlonega when they report
for a week June 19,
The complete list of counties, in
addition to those already mention
ed to visit the four state camps fol
lows: Camp Wahsega — June 26-
30, Terrell, Lee., July 3-7, Crisp,
Dooly; July 10-14, Newton, Fock
dale; July 17-21, Cherokee; July
24-28, Cobb; July 31-Aug, 4, Con
servation Camp; Aug, 7-11, Bacon,
Ware, Brantley; Aug. 14 - 18,
‘Greene, Tift.
Camp Fulton — June 26-30,
Wilkipson, Twiggs ,” Webster,
Crawford, Taylor, Macon; July 3-7,
Early, Calhoun, Camden, Dou~
gherty, Clay; July 10-14, Polk,
Haralson, Heard, Meriwether,
Harris; July 17-21, Gordon, Floyd,
Banks, Stephens, Forsyth; July
'24-28, Talbot, Stewart, Baker,
' Randolph, Sumter, Musogee,
’Mitchell; July 31- Aug. 4, Worth,
Spalding, Telfair, Irwin, Ben Hill;
Aug. 7 -11, Fulton and DeKalb
boys; Aug. 14-17, Tattnall, Cook,
Turner, Atkinson, Pulaski.
Chatham County 4-H Club
Camp — June 19-23, Warren,
Glascock, Burke; June 26-30,
LOVE TO
DAD
Your Best Cake
Buy for Dad Is
BENSON?’S
THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1950,
a . 8.7, Wilkes, Co
ie g "né El
rson
M e, '!th‘ Jaly 24-
28, Walton; Aug. 7-11, Oconce
Putnam; Aug. 14-18, Oglethorpe,
Lincoln.
Indian Spring — June 17-13
Oconee; June 19-23, Lamar; Ju,('
26-30, DeKalb; July 8-7, Catoos:
gnd Whitfield; July 10-14, Murray;
uly 17-21, Hall; July 24-28, Gil
mer, Pickens, Fannin; Aug, 7- 10,
Bibb; Aug. 14-19, Candler.
A CHEESY TRICK
CHICAGO— (AP) — A man
walked into Thomas Stoddard’s
grocery and ordered some cheese,
While Stoddard was in the back
of the store slicing the cheese, he
heard the cash register ring and
saw another man run out the
front door. “Let me catch him for
you,” the cheese customer said.
He left, without the cheese, and
didn’t return. ;
. Btoddard’s total loss: one sale
and SIOO in cash,
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR. STATE REPRESENTATIVE
I hereby announce my candi
dacy for re-election as Clarke
County Representative subject to
the cules and regulations of the
June 28th Demecratie Primary.
Your support and influence will
be greatly appreciated,
CHAPPELLE MATTHEWS,
]
Where's George!
7
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C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
“Give Mom a real freat this
year,” advises George, “Make
her a gift of a car of her very
own — a reconditioned Used
Car from C. A. Trussell Motor
Co.”
1948 FORD DELUXE TUDOR
SEDAN—Excellent light
green finish, good tires,
radio, heater, plastic seat
covers, and exceptionally
clean inside and out—
: 1145.00
1948 MERCURY CONVERTI
BLE COUPE—Beautiful
sparkling ‘{;Jaroon finish,
good W. S. W. tires, radio,
heater, fair top--with mo
tor in top mechanical con
dition—
sll9s.oo
1947 MERCURY CLUB COUPE
—Nice biege {finish, new
tires, heater, new seat
covers, very clean inside
and out—Motor has just
been worked over—
slo9s.oo
1947 FORD FORDOR SEDAN
—New black baked ena
mel finish, new W. S. W.
tires, new seat covers, mo
tor has just heen over
hauled—A real buy—!!
$1095.00
1946 MERCURY TUDOR SE
DAN—Good green finish,
excellent tires, radio,
heater, seat covers, back
up lights, plenty of service
yet to go—.
$1095.00
1946 MERCURY TUDOR S¥-
DAN—Dark green finish,
W. S. W. tires, radio, beat
er, spotless interior,
mechanically 0. K.—
$995 00
1946 CHEVROLET 4 DONR
SEDAN-=-Good black fin
ish, radio, heater, plasti~
seat covers, extra good
rubber, tops in prefor
mance—
sß7s.oo
1940 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR S¥-
DAN — Original] dark
green finish. New W. S.
W. tires, heater, new seat |
covers.—Easy terms—Ex
tra clean—!!
$995.00
1948 DODGYF. PICK UP TRUCK
—Good black and red fin
fsh—tires in good shave—
cab 1s clean—and ready to
be driven away—
sß7s.oo
1940 FORD PICK UP TRUCK
—New red baked enamel
paint fob—oood rubber,
cab in excellent shave—
with plenty of service
left—
-5495.00
38 Other Used Cars and
Trucks to select from!!
Credit and Terms
handled in our offices.
(. A TRUSSELL
1
Motor Co.
“Established 1918
Pulaski at Broad
" Phone 1097