Newspaper Page Text
sUNDAY, JULY 2, 1950.
falmadge Not Expected To Make
Anv Major Changes For 6 Months
ekl EE - - Ry
l ATLANTA, July I.— (AP) —Governor Herman Tal- |
Ladge Was expected today to hew to the status quo for the |
next SIX months while p¥anning a sweeping program for his
new four-year term.
[n the wake of Wednesday’s smashing political triumph, |
Taimadge said he plan’ned “no major developments imme- |
fiately.” :
¥ bservers and close friends of the Governor saw these |
hipcoming trends:
little chance for a much
boiked S ecial legislative session
¢ summer or fall. Caly a severe
' ial crisis would bring a
ecial session and that.isn't ex-
Indications are that the
iate would up the fiscal year to
gy with @ surprise surplus of
out $3,000,000 (M) in unspent
unds, enough o continue Tal
cadge’s eurrent expanded pro
ram for schools, pensions, roads
nd hospitals.
o -With four years ahead of him
.imadge no longer views a sales
ax as 8 political deathbed. But he
till is personally opposed to it.
ith eampaign leader Roy Harris,
rate Auditor B. E. Thrasher and
ihers openly for it, Talmadge
1y aecept 8 gales tax in January.
5-The minimum foundation
rogram for education may be
;mmed. The current price tag is
» additional $33,000,000 (M), ap
roximately. Talmadge may ini
(ate 2 new survey to fix a figure
wial Securify Number Must
s Given Employer For Record
1t takes more than one nail to
uild & house, and more than one
ick to construct a chemney.
och nail and brick has its own
aportant part to play in the erec
on and completion of the struc-
LG
And so it is with Old-Age and
rvivors Insurance under the
cial Security Act. Every dollar
to 8,000 earned in a calendar
ar in a “covered” job, adds to
e amount that may be payable to
e worker in his old age or to his
mily if he should die.
According to A. B. Cochran,
anager of the Athens, Georgia
fice of tha Social Security Ad
inistration, the Old-Age and
qvivors Insurance accounts of
veral hundred workers in this
ca will be “short” when the
me comes for them to elaim bene-
Georgia In Washington
WASHINGTON, July I—(AP)—
eorgia would receive approxi
ately $14,026,000 annually for
ighway Improvements in the next
vo fliscal years, beginning July 1,
51, under the federal aid high
ay bill now before the Senate.
Asimilar bill already has passed.
¢ House.
Senator Russell (D-Ga.) says
is i 8 tim way the Georgia fund
ould he broken down annually:
Primary roads, $5,419,000; ur
n roags, $1,433,000; secondary
ads, $5,489,000; and interstate |
ads (sirategic highways from a
andpoint of national defense),
685,000,
The smounts are the same as
ose in the House bill except for
condary roads, The total for
ese roads was upped from $150,«
0,000 to $200,000,00 by the Sene
¢ Roads Subcommittee with the
ded provision that these funds
smdso as to give priority in
ed‘ ing of ordinary country
ads,
The secondary road projects
ould Be sclested by the State
igiway Departments of the var
u sfites in cooperation with
unty and other local officlals
ponstble for road matters,
Great Achievement
Emest Christopher Harvey, Jr.,
(138 Hood Circle) Decatur, Ga.,
though nearly blind, will get his
gee from Emory University this
mmep,
Wounded In combat in the Navy
the Tast war, Harvey lost one
e, The other i practically blind,
tept for light perception.
Besides this, when he got out of
¢ service in October, 1944, near-
Sightless, his total education
;ls;s{ed of nine years of school
f}dt says the Veterans Adminis
v‘:LO.'l',. |
vespiie his blindness and lack
‘ }ormal education, the young
“jiflfl went successfully through
the-Job training, a junior col
°o Pre-law school and law
. o—all under the wvoeational
;:Mmation act for disabled vet
”l college grades were so high
" ¢ Was elected to one of the
osity’s honor societies.
L“ was not along during
[0 cars of _tl'::ining. By his side,
..° 88 his “reader,” was his
| lormerly the nurse who
e "‘\ol‘ Um while he was in a
Lo Jospital,
"¢ began on-the-job training
~;‘) Smber, 1945, with the At
-4 offlce of an insurance com-=
,"f‘w.{RC‘““ng he needed more
ooh, he entered Norman
[',_?;qFOl;q;o In March, 1948, and
:‘fie.d that June with honors,
i o 8 With the distinction of
fionsy 9 highest general edu
or ranas SV Elopment test score
7. eceived by veterans there.
,‘éi\ fall he entered Emory and
18 he declded upon & career,
€4'§‘ed so be a lawyer, He en-
T"]‘v: n?O:‘y’s law school,
ki ay Mr after he vecelves
t hig cg?gr‘ee he plans to hang
o a‘,”{l-m‘.’. In his office, still
so, 1S “eyes” will be his
The f Fish Tastes
" G 5h end wildlite service
m;"lffians have changed as
g I_Avl:srand dislikes in fish
(;rAin,tanc.:Deriod.
'omdfl?ta In 1048, the populace
ds of “};sfter; above all other
sterg "*'Ono;-)u' BIUt 10 years ago,
nning a poor fifth,
and then push for a whopping
school and comrege boost, but un
der that sum,
4—The Governor will investi
gate other sources of revenue be
fore signing a sales tax. One of
these is the Indiana plan of a gross
receipts tax. This is a levy on all
personal and business income,
without the usual deductions and
and exemptions. It embraces busi
ness firms and individuals in a
sort of combination sales and .in
come tax.
5 — Revenue Commissioner
Charles Redwine, one of the Gov
ernor’s staunchest friends and sup
porters and key officials, has told
friends he would like to retire
for his health. Talmadge may per
suade him to stay.
6—Rumors of other changes in
the official family are likely to
fade. These unconfirmed reports
have involved Parks Director
Newton Moye, veterans service
Director Billy Barrett, and game
fits. “Why? Because they did not
make certain their employers had
a record of their Social Security
account number.
Cochran pointed out that every
employer covered by Social Se
curity having one or more em
ployees is required to report the
earnings of each to the Collector
of Internal Revenue at Atlanta,
Georgia at the end of each calen
dar. If the Social Security. number
of a wage earner is omitted from
this report then he gets no credit
for his wages. “To prevent loss of
benefits or perhaps no payments
at all”, Cochran said, “the worker
should give his employer his So
cial Security number the first day
he reports for duty on a new job.
It makes no difference if the job
is full or part time, or how old
the worker may be.
Next to oysters, Atlantans now
prefer rosefish fillets and mullet.
At Savannah, the residents bked
croaker best in 1936 and still do.
But mullet and bottom fish are
now the second and third selec
tions, while in 1936 king whiting
and oysters ran two and three.
The fish and wildlife service
make a survey every 10 years to
learn the nation’s taste in seafood.
The Civil Service Commission
reports that as of Dec. 31, there
were 15,009 federal workers in At
lanta and 1, 17 in Savannah. At
lanta stood 18th among the na
tion’s cities in number of federal
employes.
Georgia congressmen with
birthdays this month: Rep. Prince
Preston will be 42 July 5; Rep.
Don Wheeler will be 35 July 11
and Rep. Sidney Camp will be
58 July 26.
Rep. Sidney Camp, a member of
the House Ways and Means Com
mittee, believes the new tax bill
is a “very good” one. He told a
reporter the bill would offer relief
in excise taxes “where most need
ed” and that the legislation gen
erally will aid both large and small
businesses.
Camp has servel on the com
mittee since 1943 and isnow sixth
ranking democrat.
(Continued from Page One.)
member of the Episcopal church
of Athens, serving the church in
the capacity of treasurer.
Other officers elected at the
meeting to serve with the mnew
chairman were Mrs, George D.
Thomas, chairman emeritus; T. H.
Milner, jr., vice-chairman; Leroy
Michael, secretary; and J. W.
Henry, treasurer.
Board Members
New Board of Director members
were also elected at the meeting
to replace those whese terms have
expired. The new members are J.
E. Wickliffe, C. E, Smith, Mrs.
Hunter Harris, Dr. Linton Ger
dine, William Tate, Walter Dan
ner, E. C. Crymes, Frank King,
Sam Hale, Mrs. Leroy Hart, Mrs,
Robert Winter, Rev. J. Earl Gil
breath, Mrs. E. R. Hodgson, W.
R. Antley, B. R. Bleodworth, jr.,
Dr. J. C. Rogers, Mrs. W. W.
Davidson, Henry Rosenthal, Miss
Mary Woods, and Miss Rebecca
Fowler, g .
The activities chairmen for the
coming year are Sam Hale, disas
ter; B. M. Gabrielson, water safe
ty; Mrs. Mary Dawson and Mrs.
J. E. Wickliffe, co-chairmen of
canteen; Mrs. L. C. Hart, hos
pital service; Miss Marguerite
Hodgson, motor service; Dr. Lin
ton Gerdine, blood program; Miss
Rebecca Fowler, junior red cross.
Mrs. Robert McWhaorter and
Mrs. Howard McWhorter, co
chairmen of nurses aide; Mrs. Bob
Cunn and Mrs, Cuyler Trussell,
co-chairmen of gray ladies; Mrs.
C. R. Daniel, production; and Miss
Otie Vincent and Mrs, Dan Du
pree, co-chairmen knitting.
Mrs. Sallie T. Orr will serve as
executive secretary and home
service and Mrs. Margaret B, Amis
%s nursing service and administra
on,
The average Chinese farm
grosses SSO per year, representing
the work of six persons.
and Fish Commissioner J. C, Cal
houn. Talmadge reportedly is plan
ning no changes now,
T—Talk of a possible court suit
to challenge Talmadge’s eligibility
for another term may grow, but
nothing concrete wus reported,
B—The Governor is not expect=
ed to push too insistently for his
proposed constitutional amend
ment allocating all gasoline and
auto tag revenue to roads. Thrash
er, Harris and legislative leaders
are opening against it. The com
promise may be legislative appro
praition of about the same amount.
$17,000,000 (M) has been proposed
by Thrasher—for roads, with ng
hand-tying constitutional alloca
tion, .
9—Other large funds will be
sought for welfare pensions and
other payments, a sore problem;
smaller amounts may be raised for
health, with no major increase for
other services.
10—An anti-masking bill, aimed
at the Ku Klux Klan, may slip
through. It received a majority in
the house this year, but after its
1949 defeat it needed a two-thirds
vote to pass. A majority will do
the trick next time. -
Talmadge has told friends he
expects to make the state hum
during the next four years with a
broad improvement in state ser
vices, lifting Georgia much high
er in its ranking with other states.
Officers
(Continued from Page One)
(4) E. B, Cook, (Capt.), J. F.
Hadawy (Co-Capt.-),F.8. Berry
man, Hoke Boggs, D. L. Branyon,
Henry Cobb, A. O. Duncan, L. W,
Eberhart, H. B. Franklin, G. O.
Hancock, sr., H. H. Horton, R. W,
Johnson, Cecil Maddox, W. J. Mal
colm, J. E. McDaniel, J. L. Pend
iey, Feed Robbins, Hubert Rylee,
J. C. Wilkinson, Al Wilson.
(5) Harry Brown, (Capt.), C.
D. Tolbeft (Co-Capt.), O. L. Bon
ner, Alex Bowen, J. G. Bryant,
John Coffee, W. L. Edwards, J. P.
Gaines, Roy Gill, George Hancock,
W. P. Horton, H. H. Killingsworth,
A. G. Malcom, W. K. McGarity,
Jones Purcell, J. E. Rainey, W. A.
Sams, sr., Guv W. Smith, ¥. H.
Williams, W. C. Wingfield.
(6) Fred Leathers, Capt.), A.
W. Wier, (Co-Capt., G. A. Booth,
R. T. Bradberry, R. P. Bush, A. B.
Cook, Eugene Epting, O. D. Hall,
Eston Harden, A. F. Haygood, M.
D. Jones, Hillyer .King, H. H.
Mann, John H. Mitchell, W. T.
Ray, Marion Reed, Joe Shepherd,
J. Aubrey Smith, H. P. Williams,
Sam Wood.
(7) Lamar Lewis, jr., (Capt.)
John B. Smith (Co-Capt.), Floyd
Adams, E. M. Brackett, Charles
Carter, H. L. Cofer, H. C. Corne
lison, G. H. Firor, E. O. Harrison,
H. B. Henderson, Morton Hodgson,
F. P. King, C. T. Martin, Howard
McCants, Grover Moon, W. G.
Sailers, Harry Spearing, O. M.
Spears, W. T. Spratlin, P. G. Will
ims.
(8) H. B. Hammond (Capt.) J.
B. Williams (Co-Capt.), W. R.
Alexander, Geo. A. Brien, Clar
ence Chandler, W. R. Cooper, H.
L. Cornelison, Carl Free, Robert
Harrison, Golden Hinton, F. G.
Honea, James J. Lenior, D. E.
Massey, A. H. Mathews, H. M.
Morris, Harold Salye, J. B. Tan
‘ner, Ralph Tolbert, M. E. Tucker,
‘Sam Wingfield.
(9) J. E.. Gates (Capt.), J. B
Bolton (Co-Capt.), Fred Ayers,
Chas. J. Bryant, A. C. Cohen, King
Crawford, T. K. Crawford, Ernest
Garrett, Vane G. Hawkins, L. E.
Hopper, J. H. Hubert, Lamar Lew
is, sr., C. E. Maxwell, L. H. Mess
er, J. H. Nunnally, J. Schwenk,
C. O. Turner, .J. H. Thompson,
Sam E. Woods, Walker Word.
(10) F. H. Mendenhall (Capt.)
W. C. Noel (Co-Capt.), Howard
T. Abney, J. A. Anderson, G. D.
Bailey, S. H. Butler, C. M. Crews,
J. R. Cullens, J. A. David, V. J.
Glover, O. W. Haygood, Garland
Hulme, C. W. Jackson, H. w.
Long, jr., Hugh Mills, jr., J. Harry
Mitchell, J. E. Patman, b
Smith, W. C, Thompson, Don
| Weddell. .
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CHURCH STEEPLE BLOWN U P—The steeple
of St. George'’s Protestant Church is blown up by an East Berlin
demolition squad after Communists declared it 2 safety hazard.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Bingham, Utah—Miss Bonnie Bithel, the Liberty Belle, points out to
Leon J. Markham (left), National Sales Director of the U. S. Savings
Bonds Division, her Siate’s 1950 Declaration of Independence. Gover
nor J. Bracken Lee(right), affixes his signature as 2 token of his ap
proval of the current Savings Bonds Independence Drive. This scene
occurred as one of the highlights of Utah’s participation in the cam
paign, Governor Lee told Sales Director Markham that he is a regular
Savings Bonds buyer because the savings bond program is one of the
best ways to stabilize the national economy.
Recreation News
The Recreation and Parks Department has reported the
paving of the “Loop” road and parking areas at Memorial
Park, which completes the hard-surfacing of all roads to,
asndatond. THE DR MO, .¢ o 0 b i
Also surfaced is a parking area
which will accommodate fifty ve
hicles.
The morning swim program at
both the NLegion and Riverside
Park pools are enjoying great suc
cess, In fact, an additional class
will be added soon at Riverside
to take care of the great demand
for swim instructions.
There have been some advance
ments in the Legion learn-to-swim
program, here they are:
Promoted to Turtle class from
Intermediates — Billy Carter, Da
vid Field, Alston Steiner, David
Sachs and Sherry Gabrielsen.
Promoted to Frog class from
Beginners — Bill Childers, Jim
Smith, Tommy Irby, Ray Single
ton, Tommy Wallace, David Sail
ors, Buzzy Craig, Carson Cham
bliss. Johnny Falkner, Emmet
Langley, Harvey Cash, Billy Mar
but, Richard Marbut, Bobby Lang
ley, Ray Danner, Ronnie Anderson,
Ronnie Perkins, Jack Sasser, Ja
nice Covell, Becky Birchmore,
Patsy Hogan, Norma Elder, Cyn-
(Continued from Page One)
for all with whom she came in
contact, always mindful of their
desires and of what would make
them¢ happy. Her very presence
;veas an inspiration to all who knew
T.
As a mother and grandmother
she was unexcelled, always loving
and unselfishly considering her
loved ones. She will be greatly
missed by her loved ones and
friends.
Pallbearers are Leslie Markham,
Wilbourne Markham, David Dun=-
combe, Lynn Ed Markham, Wel~
don Markham, and Claude Will
iams, all nephews of Mrs. Hearn.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
L. P. Suddath, jr.; three grand
children, L. P. “Sunny” Suddath
11, Abbie Anita Suddath and
George Hearn Suddath, all of Ath
ens; two brothers J. R. Sturdivant,
Meridian, Miss., and G. W, Stur=
divant, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; two sis
ters, Mrs. C. L. Markham, Mont
gomery, Ala., and Mrs. G. H. Mill
ard, Williamson, W Va.
Chinese farms, small and irregu
lar, are better suited to hand than
machine cultivation.
thia Harris, Patsy Gates, Nan Dan
ner, Connie Paul, Lynn Hadaway.
Barbara Bentley, Betty Timms,
Mary Katherine Thompson, Dotty
Strudel and Rosemary Abney.
The Memorial Park recreation
house was the setting last Thurs
day night for a dance and picnie
by the young married couples club.
This organization meets once a
month, and has been doing so since
the first of the year..
Beginning Wednesday night, the
new Teen-Age Softball League
will begin play. The games will be
played four nights a week, Tues
day through Friday, alternating
between Dudley Field and the
Lyndon House field. For full de
tails, read the Banner-Herald
Sports section.
In the Municipal Softball Lea
gue, there will be no games
scheduled for Tuesday, July 4. The
league resumes play the following
evening on the sth,
The recreation pregram at Dud
ley Field has completed its first
week of activities, with John
Moyer as director.
Living Room
pen
A state-wide living room im
provement contest for Georgia
farm women began Saturday and
runs for a full year.
Local home demonstration
agents will have charge of the
contest in the wvarious counties,
and the agents will supply score
cards and rules and regulations
for the contest, announced Miss
Willie Vie Dowdy, home improve=
ment specialist for Georgia Agri
cultural Extension here.
1949 Competition
In 1949, a similar living room
contest was conducted with ap
proximately 900 farm women in
60 counties participating. Rich’s
Incorporated, of Atlanta, sponsor
ed the contest last year and will
be the sponsor again for the 1950-
51 contest.
Miss Dowdy ealled attention to
the fact that the improvement in
the living rooms in the contest
is just one phase of the firm re
suits coming out of it. She reports
that, according to statements from
more than 100 georgia home de
monstration agents, the 1949 con
test stimulated the making of 20-
000 pieces of homemade furniture,
painting 6,000 homes, installing
better lighting in 8,000 homes and
improved screening in 6,800 homes.
Valuable prizes are to be given
to six district winners and the
state winner in the contest, and
various county organizations in the
groups are offering prizes to coun
ty winners. ;
GREETING AT AYRPORT
IS MONEY SAVER ;
PHOENIX, Ariz— (AP)— Be
cause a big greeting was written
for Miss America, the City of
Phoenix has saved itself about
$2,500 a year. It was last fall when
Jacaue Mercer of Litchfield Park,
Ariz., won the beauty title at At
lantic City and her home state
planned a gala reception.
Along the airport runway
townspeople wrote a big “Welcome
Jacque” sign she could see as the
plane came in for a landing. As
the reception was only a one-day
affair, an inexpensive water mix
ed casein base paint was used.
Officials at the airport waited for
it to wash away. They waited, and
waited and waited. For weeks
planes coming to Phoenix saw
“Welcome Jacque” in big letters.
Finally the greeting was oblitera
ted with flat black paint.
But the sign had proved the
Tess expensive paint could be used
as runway markers, and the pivil
Aeronautics Administration ap
proved, said Airport Manager Wal
ter, Fulkerson. So th 2 city, which
maintains the airport, will save
about $2,500 en its paint bill each
year.
INKS OUT A HOBBY
BLOOMINGTON, Ill.—(AP)—
Ten years ago a friend gave Mrs.
Loren Lewis an inkwell — and a
hobby. Mrs. Lewis began to col
lect them. Now she has three
shelves filled with inkwells made
of brass, copper, iron, wood, por=-
celain, china, silver, ebony and
glass. Y
Congress Adjournmept , Hopes
Dimmed By Korean Developments
WASHINGTON, July 1. — (AP) — Congress moved a
mass of major legislation this week, but foreign develop
ments dimmed hopes for August 1 adjournment.
Bills cutting excise taxes and providing military help for
friendly nations moved nearer enactment, and an increase
in funds for the farm price support program went to the
President. A measure extending and broadening the draft
act'was passed and signed into law. e .
Major bills still tied up included
$29,000,000,000 appropriation bill
and civil rights (FEPC) legislation,
Legislative progress was such
that the House hung up a “no*
business” sign at the end of the
week and, many members headedl
home for Fourth of July speeches.
They will return on July 10. }
While the target date for final
adjournment of both branches re
mains at August 1, congressional
leaders privately doubt if they can
hit it. Some of them believe it will
be closer to September 1. If the
international situation gets worse,
‘ Congress probably won’t adjourn
at all, but will recess for the elec~
tions. -
The House rammed through a
bill lopping $1,000,000,000 off fed
eral revenues from excise taxes
but balancing the cut mainly by
hiking big business taxes. The
Senate Finance Committee will
take a look at it next week,
USO TALENT
SHOWS HERE
ON CHASEST.
The Ozark Medicine Show for
the past week has been giving free
shows at 8 p. m. nightly and have
been drawing well attended gath
erings. The free show features for
mer World War II USO talent.
Among the featured artists is
“Miss Virginia,” an acrobatic and
ballet performer who has been en
thusiastically received by her au
dience. Miss Virginia Sullivan has
made numerous Physical Culture
appearances throughout the
schools and colleges of the coun-
S
ersons who attend the free
showing of the Ozark Medicine
Shows, opposite Chase Street
School, are under no obligation to
make purchases and are extended
a cordial welcome from the man
agement to attend each and every
performance during the week be
ginning July 3rd.
B
Patterson Rites
To Be Held
\ .
Monday Morning
Mrs. Grace Kirk Patterson, 58,
died at her residence in Hull Sat
urday at 4 o’clock following an ill
ness of six months.
Funeral services will be conduc
ted from Hull Baptist Church
Monday morning at 11 o’clock,
Rev. A. E. Logan of Hull Baptist
Church officiating. Interment will
be in Colbert cemetery, Dan Dot
son, Hoyt Morris, Grant Carter,
Joe Patton, Paul Mann, and Euel
Strickland serving as pall-bearers.
A member of Hull Baptist
Church, Mrs. Patterson was a na
tive of Madison county. She was
well known and loved in her com=
munity.
Surviving are her husband,
Homer Patterson, Hull; four dau
ghters, Miss Mattie Patterson, Mrs.
James Ashley, both of Hull, Mrs.
Jack Wood, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla,,
and Mrs. John Nunnally, Athens;
two sons, Coile Patterson, and Joe
Patterson, both of Hull; one sister,
Mrs. Charlie Benton, Hull; twe
brothers, Clarence Kirk, and Mar
vin Kirk, both of Atlanta 2nd five
grandchildren.
ISRAEL PLANS PLACE
NAMED TRUMAN
TIBERIAS, Israel— (AP) —A
new immigrants’ settlement in
northern Israel is to be named in
honor of President Truman.
The settlement may be estab
lished by the end of 1950. Zionist
organization officials said it would
be named for the American Pres
vdent in recognition of his friend
ship and work in behalf of the
Jewish state,
Baby chick out;)ut in the U. S.
increased 22 per cent in 1949 over
1948,
U. S. broiling chicken produc
tion set a record in 1949.
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FINGERED FROGC_A South African f.gered frog,
imported for Jaboratory rescarch, stands above srother frog and
reaches for foed in Fish and Wildlife Aguarium at Washingten,
The Senate passed and dumped
into the House's lap a bill author=
izing a $1,222,500,000 program of
military aid for friendly nations.
House passage is a foregone con
clusion.
Both chambers completed action
on a bill increasing by $2,600,000,-
000 the commodity credit corpora
tion’s borrowing authority to keep
the farm price support program in
operation.
Congress rushed to the President,
and he quickly signed, a stop-gap
measure financing federal agencies
during July because their regular
money for the fiscal year starting
July 1 is tied up in the $29,000,~
000,000 appropriation bill. The
jatter measure passed the House
May 10 and is due to emerge soon
from the Senate Appropriations
Committee.
The civil rights bill has been
snagged in the Senate since the
House passed it February 23.
Blotter 9% &8
BY ED THILENIUS
CHAIR CAPER SOLVED
City Detectives Hardy and Mec-
Kinnon have solved the case of
missing chairs from Stegeman
Hall, Chief Clarence Roberts re
ported last night,
Chief Roberts said University
officials had reported 16 folding
chairs were missing from the hall
and asked his department for as
sistance in finding them. The de
tectives found four of the chairs at
a U-Drive-It place where they had
been traded in.
The trade was traced to a Uni
versity student, Howard Brown,
who upon questioning admitted
the theft, Chief Roberts said. Two
other students, Gerald Levy and
Philip Slotin were also linked with
the case.
All three have posted bonds
Well-Dressed Mother Wears Her Son
In A Front Seat She Built Herself
| BY NEA Service
SAN FRANCISCO— (NEA) -
Mrs. Roger Mills always dresses
well. For one thing, she often
wears the youngest of her three
sons.
Little Raymond Mills sits hap
pily in his mother’s home-made
carrier, which balances him in
front of her but distribues the
pull of his weight above the small
of her back. He's content and his
mother is comfortable. Her hands
are free for other work, yet she
never neglects her baby.
The idea has been so successful,
in fact, that Mrs. Mills has started
a company to sell the gadgets,
Doctors have endorsed the car
rier, which has been called the
“MoMper.”
The portable seat is the result
of Mrs. Mills’ nursing training and ‘
a post-graduation stint in China.
But the one biggest mother of this
invention was a hill in front of
the Mills’ home:. Going up and
down the long flight of stairs,
shepherding three young boys,
made her stop and think if there
wasn't an easier .waz to ecommute.
She remembered her days in
the Shanghai Country Hospital in
1937, during the early days of the
Japanese war.
“Everything was in a panic,”
Mrs. Mills remembers, “but the
children, strapped to their moth
ers, were islands of serenity.”
American medical men in
World War IT were impressed by
the same thing. They thought that
the mental well-being of Oriental
children, who spent their baby
hood under battle conditions,
could be traced to the basic se
curity offered by the constant
presence of their mothers.
Remember the Chinese
mothers—and that flight of stairs
—Mrs. Mills began sewing. Some
strips of grey cotton and rayon
The status of other major leg
islation at the end of the week:
Rent control: Extended wuntil
December 31, 1950, with cities hav
ing authority to retain federal con
trols for another six months.
Social security: Bill broadening
coverage has passed both chambers
and is being rewritten by Senate-
House conferees.
Foreign economic assistance: A
$13,120,550,000 program of econo
mic help for noncommunist coun=
tries has been enacted but the
money to finance it has not been
provided, President plans provide
for addition of the cash by the
Senate when it gets around to the
omnibus appropriation bill.
Displaced persons law: Both
chambers have passed, and the
President has signed, a bill ex
tending the displaced persons law
and permitting additional foreign
refugees to enter this ecountry.
Postal rate increases: Bill re
pealing them has been cnacted in
to law.
Statehood for Alaska and Hawalf:
Voted by House; pending in Sen=
ate.
Federal ald to educatiom: Voted
by Senate; shelved by House Labor
and Education Committee, with
slim chances for revival,
after warrants were taken out by
University officials charging lar
ceny from the house.
MOONSHINE RAIDS
Detectives Hardy and McKin
non, in two separate raids, confis
cated 10 gallons of moonshine yes
terday.
Lela Jones, colored, was arres
ted for possessing seven gallons of
non-tax paid whiskey and turned
over to the county.
Later in the day, the two offi
cers discovered three gallons of
moonshine, hidden in a gulley be
hind the Calloway building at the
corner of Hancock and Pope
streets.
No arrests were made in the
case,
tackle twill—the type that goes
iinto football pants—were pieced
together.
kS - ®
The back, which takes the
weights looks like a vest. A wide
strap fits over the other portion
of the mother’s shoulders. Two
‘more straps form a kind of sling
around her waist. A seat fits into
the sling and is locked into posi
tion to fit the child.
The part of the seat the baby
straddles is made purposely nar
row, so his legs won’t be foreced
apart. Diapers provide plenty of
padding. The device is being made
in three sizes for the mothers; one
seat size for the babies is adequate,
because it can be made larger as
the baby grows.
Mills, the husbard and father,
is a salesman who saw the mar
keting possibilities of his wife's
prainchild. His mother helped fi
nance the venture. Little Ray
mond’s two older brothers, Roger
Lee, 6 1-2, and Ralph, 4 1-2, hike
the carrier because it frees their
mother’s hands so she can play
with them.
And Raymond himself? He’s
happy with hisefree ride,
Funeral Notice
PATTERSON. — The friends and
relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Patterson, Hull, Ga.; Miss Mat
tie Patterson, Mr. and Mrs
James Ashley, Hull, Ga.; Mr
and Mrs. John Nunnally, Ath
ens; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wood,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Mr. and
Mrs. Coile Patterson, Hull, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Patterson, Hull,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Ben
ton, Hull, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs
Clarence Kirk, Atlanta, Ga.; and
Mr. and Mrs, Marvin Kirk, At
lanta, Ga., are invited to attend
the funeral of Mrs. Homer Pat
terson, Monday morning, July 3,
1950, at eleven (11:00) o’clock
from the Hull Baptist Church.
Rev. A. E. Logan, pastor of the
Hull Baptist Church, will offi
ciate, Mr. Dan Dotson, Mr. Hoyt
Morris, Mr. Grant Carter, Mr.
Joe Patton, Mr. Paul Mann and
Mr. Euel Strickland will serve
as pallbearers and will please
meet at the Hull Baptist Churck
at 10:45 o’clock. Interment will
be in Colbert cemetery. Bern
stein Funeral Home.
HEARN. — The relatives and
friends of Mrs. G. B. Hearn of
Athens; Mr. and Mrs, L. P. Sud
dath, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. C.
L. Markham, Montgomery, Ala.;
Mrs. G. H. Millardtz Williamson,
W. Va.; Mr, and Mrs. J. R. Stur
divant, Meridian, Miss.; Mr. G.
W. Sturdivant, Tuscaloosg, Ala;;
Mr. L. P. (Sunny) Suddath; Miss
Abbie Suddath, and Mr. George
Hearn Suddath of Athens, are
invited to attend the funerai of
Mrs. G. B. Hearn, this Sunday
afternoon, July 2, 1950, from
the First Baptist Church at four
o’clock. Dr. Howard P. Giddens,
pastor of the church, will offi
ciate, Mr. Leslie Markham, Mr.
Lynn Ed Markham, Mr. Wil
bourne Markham, Mr. Weldon
Markham, Mr. David Duncombe
and Mr. Claude Williams, ne
phews of Mrs. Hearn, will serve
as pallbearers.. Interment will
be in Oconee Hill cemetery.
Bridges Funeral Home. <
PAGE NINE