Newspaper Page Text
[URSDAY, JULY 6, 1950.
— etk BN TLARY
Coming
Fvents
The descendants of John Pitt
man, who was a soldier in the
Revolutionary War and a pio
neer of Georgia, coming to Geor
gia from virginia prior to 1770,
are to hold their reunion July 16,
third Sunday, 1950, at Gordon’s
Chapel, Madison county, 6 miles
northeast of Athens mnear the
pittman cemetery. Time: 11:00 a.
m. Arrangements have been
made for comfortable accommo
dations and a basket dinner will
pe served. All branches of the
pittman family and their friends
are invited te “attend and to
pring & well-filled basket.
pUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR
A collection of cups owned by
Mrs. H. F. Wilkes is now being
shown in the Library. This col
lection includes cups from all
over the world.
A group of paintings by Miss
Mattie Lou Bradbury is now
peing shown in the library.
Library Story Hour is held
each Saturday in the Children’s
Room from 10 a. m. till 11 a. m.
Hours of opening: Monday
through Friday 9 a. m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Sun
daySp.m.tosp.m.
The McWhorter family = will
hold their 1950 reunion at Me
morial Spring, near Stephens, in
Oglethorpe county on Sunday,
July 9. Site of the reunion will
be the family cemetery. A bar
becue will be served during the
day.
Winterville Baptist Church
will have a Homecoming Rally
~unday, July 9. All members of
the church, former members and
friends are invited to the rally.
The morning service will .begin
at 10 a. m, Dinner will be serv
ed, picnic style, at 12:30. There
will be a brief affernoon ses
ston.
The Bookmobile of Athens
Regional Library will meet the
following schedule this week: .
Friday, A. M. — Princeton
School Grounds, Story Hour;
Whitehall P. 0., Whitehall
School Grounds, Story Hour;
Thomas Textile Co., Leogan’s;
P, M.—Gaines School Grounds,
Wehunt's Service Station, road
between Gaines and Winterville.
Allen R. Fleming jr., Unit
American Legion. Auxiliary will
hold a joint installation ser
vice with the Legion on Thurs
day July 6 at 8 p. m. at the Le
gion Log Cabin on Lumpkin St.
D. Weaver Bridges and Mrs.
J. M. Lewis will head the orga
nizations for the new year.
Joy Class of the Prince Ave
e Baptist Church will meet
Thursday, 8 p. m., at the home
of Mrs, Bill Adams, 895 Boule
vard.
Athens Woman’s Club will
meet at 4:30 on Thursday after
noon, July 6, at the home of
Mrs. J. W. Bailey. Reports on
the National Convention will be
given and Mrs. Lela R. Mize is
to give a talk on National De
fense, The installation of offi
cers will take place at this time.
Clarke County Womren Voters
will meet July 10 at 1 p. m, in
the Holman Hotel and will hear
a discussion of proposed legisla
tion in the next State General
Assembly, Taking part will be
State Senator-elect Robert G.
Stephens, Representative Chap
pelle Matthews and Representa
live-elect Grady Pittard. The
discussion will deal with gaso
line tax allocation, financing
the Minimum Foundation Pro
sram, complete tax revision,
broposed sales tax and the juve
tile court bill for the Athens-
Tiberton - Washington district.
Yeservations can be made by
klephoning Mrs. William J.
Russell at 1092-3,
Adult Class of the Johnson
Drive Baptist Chureh will hold
ihe regular monthiy meeting on
Friday, July 7, 8 p. m. in the
flome of Mr. and Mrs. L. E.
Mize, Johnson Drive Extension.
All members are urged to be
resent and visitors are wel
tome,
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi will have a chicken supper
W Saturday, July 22, at the
Water Works.
M. and M. Class of the First
Baptist Church will hold the re
gular monthly business meeting
o Tuesday, July 11, 8 p. m. at
the home of Martha Jennings,
119 s, Lumkin, All officers are
urged to he present,
g .
For 4 shrimp appetizer mix a
Garter oy of finely chopped
ke shrimp with the same
amount of finely diced celery or
SUeumber; adq {wo tablespoons of
Tayonnaise o creamy salad dress
-2 and two teaspoons of lemon
llice, Spread on small slices of
Slty rye bread op on melba toast.
y fill
For am;;;rstyb efelm
half g watermel};m tfhr?it an besn
Stooped t with a 1
melog)ne l(:;lls. cherries, orange
Cubes, Peacheg,
PIANO SALE
All new 51,9 used pianos string
inatruments and musical ae-
CBBories op sale. Please eome
i ang je4 US save you some
Money, Chick Piane Co., 274 N,
Jacksgp, St., Phone 2383,
First Methodist
New Circle Groups
The W. S. C. S. First Methodist
Church met Monday, July 3, for
their regular inspirational meet
ing. Mrs. T. W. Paschall presided
over the business session.
An interesting program was en
joyed. Mrs. John Bondurant gave
the devotional. Mrs, R. C. Single
ton brought a timelv and thought
ful message on Christianity in the
Philippine Islands.
Plans for sunport of local work
of the W. S. C.. S. were made
which included particular interest
in Camp Glisson.
Mrs. Paschall announces the fol-
Jow list of members cf the W. S.
C. S. This list is not complete as
some circles have not had a meet
ing since the new circles were or
ganized. It is hoped that all women
of the church will ‘oin a circle.
Circle Chairmen are all listed and
will wecome members.: Mrs. Car
ter Daniel is membership chair
man of the entire society.
Circle 1. Mrs. Guy Beckum.
Chairman: list to be announced
later.
Circle 2. Mrs. Leßoy = Broun,
Chairman; Mesdames L. M. Car
ter, M. G. Nicholson, Adams, Tom
Brown, Charles: Baugh, F. G,
Birchmore, Albert Broach, N. G.
Clements, Ivan Cartey, W. W. Ed
wards; A. C. Fears, A: G. Har
grove, Miss Bessie Garebold, Mes
dames M. R. Huff, C. W. Jones
Paul Keller, Miss Clara Lockhart,
Mesdames L. M. Leathers, J. A.
LeConte, Janie McCrary, Walker
Matthews, A. N. Parr, J. K. Pa
trick, T. W. Reed, L. M. Sheffer,
C. L. Upchurch
Civcle 3, Mrs. R. 7. Porter,
Chairman; Mesdames W. B. Har
rison, R. L. Russell, H. A, Comp
ton, Miss Ermine Stanton, Mes
dames D. P. Arnold, E. W. Car
roll, Tom Comer, G. M. Craig, C.
R. Daniel, Cody David, Henry Ell
iott, A. P. Farrar, Dan Hill, Percy
Huggins, John D. Kilburn, John
Mealor, Mack Mewborn, M. P.
Morris, V. J. Moss, Emily Phipps,
J. M. Pound, W. L. Prickett, D.
D. Quillian, - Lily Russell, S. V.
Sanford, R. W. Wiggins, E. M.
Wood. o .
Circle 4. Mrs. A. E. Terry, chair
man; Mesdames Tom Jones, Guy
Whelchel, A. B. Biscoe, Howard
Coggins, B. F. Witcher, H. B. Hig
ginbotham, A. D. Soar, R. L. Tur
ner, J. M. Lewis, Horace Mont
gomery, Miss Willie. Whitehead,
Mesdames J. F. Lay, Roy Bowden,
Grady Henson, John Mell, R. P.
Stephens, W. S. Beckwith, L. C.
Westbrook, D. L. Elliott, Miss
Bessie Payne, Mesdames J. E.
Wickliffe, Tom Dover, Norman
Bishop, C. S. Compton, J. Red
mon_d Lee, G. E. O’'Farrell.
Circle 5. Mrs. Nelson Hitchcock,
Chairman; Mesdames M. A. Birch
more, C. C. Wilson, Max Hubert,
C. M. Ridlehuber, Malcom Ains
worth, E. J. Crawford, W. A. Sut
ton, J. T. Middlebrooks, J. Smiley
Wolfe, John P. Bondurant, H. A.
Westervelt, Martin Van Winkle,
Grandison Caskey, jr.
Circle 6. Mrs. Jeff Bridges,
Chairman; Mesdames Hugh Hug
gins, J. M. Story, Harry Davis, D.
I. Earnest, W. H. Howell, L. O.
Price, G. A. Tucker, E. D. Alex
ander, W. C. Burkhart, Miss Ethel
Reese, Mesdames J. T. Weir, H. L.
Cofer, W. F. McLendon, H M.
Fullilove, J. E. Cook, L. E. Hem
rick, Paul Hartley, Broadus Coile,
C. A. Carson, J. W. Stone, Hershel
Carithers, W. D. Warren, S. A.
Hale, Miss Lilla Tuck, Mrs. R. w.
Rigdon. .
Circle 7. Mrs. George H. Boyd,
Chairman; Mesdames Pope Holi
day, W. O. Collins, Randle Weems,
J. A. Johnson, Miss Mary Lee Mar
tin, Mesdames J. C. Stiles, A. C.
Holliday, J. T. Ecker. O. 5. Har
rison, Cliff Henson, Walter Mar
tin, N. G. Slaughter, R. L. Patter
son, C. P. Mcßae, Herbert Out
law, Elbert Whitmire, A, L S
Bray, R. C. Wilson, Tryon Rousey,
Fred Moon, Henry Holliday, €.
M. McGahee, J. J. Prater, E. o,
Underwood, Vincent Matthews,
Frank Fowler, J. W. Jarrell, Eloise
Thurmond, Miss Mary Hunnicutt,
Miss Sarah Hunnicutt, Mesdames
Hamilton McWhorter, J. D. Brad
well.
Circle 8. Mrs. Edward B. Mar
tin, Chairman; Mesdames J. S.
Tate, D. Weaver Bridges, W
Bentley, F. Ford Millican, John
Alsbrooks, R. H. Bickerstaff, G. A.
Booth, A. R. Brown, Ernest C.
Crymes, W. W. Deßeaugrine, J.
R. Evans, Guy W. Firor, Carl Fow
ler, B. W. Gabrielson, F. W. Jor
‘dan, Geo. W. Joiner, Ben Mcßee,
J. Hugh Miller, J. G. Paine, Lewis
Patton, Willard Range, Roby Red
wine, Henry Reid, Geo F. Stroth
er,J.J. Thomas, E. P. West, Henry
West, Laurence H. Walker, H. F.
Wilkes, W. C. McNab, Harvey
Maupin, C. C. Johnson, L. H: Rey
nolds.
Circle 9. Mrs. Charles Mangle
burg, Chairman; Mesdames Wal
lace Sessions, B. W. Stovall, Eu
gene Odum, Carter Daniel, Katie
Griffeth, S. L. Van Landingham,
M. B. Wingfield, J. H. McGraw,
Adele Dahlberg, Drayton Kinard,
Tryon Huggins, W. H. Benson, M.
P. Hughs, Eugene Epting, Fain
Slaughter, John W. Thurmond, E.
S. Sell, Lamar Wood, Hoyt Rob
ertson.
Circle 10. Mrs. W. D. Crawford,
Chairman; Mesdames Charles Bell,
Donald J. Weddell, Pope Hill,
George Jones, L. W. R. Jackson,
J. Paul Williams, J. W. Simons, H.
L. Sligh, W. J. Mills, Wallace
Butts, Richard E. Smith, w. K.
Hartley, Clyde Fitzgerald, J. D.
Bolton, Nolan Richardson, R. B.
Weil, B. R. Bloodworth, R. F.
Florence, F. L. Prater, Fred Ham
ilton, J. W. Arnold.
Circle 11. Mrs. A. E. Patterson,
Chairman; Mesdames L. E. All
good, J. C. Bell, W. R. Brown, A.
Aldo Charles, J. W. Firor, Howard
S. Jordan, Horace Lund, W. A
Maddox, I. V. Sperry, Comer
Whitehead, J. D. Messer.
Circle 12. Mrs. James I. AiKins,
Chairman: Mesdames J. B. Alex
ander, James Bailey, Joe Betts,
Horace Bell, Ralph Bell, Edsel
Benson, B. R. Bloodworth, jr., Ed
Booth, H. G. Byrd, Henry J. Cars
well, Felton Christian, L. N
Christian, Earnest Coleman, O. B.
Copeland, Richard Covell, Ros
well L.vid, Howell Erwin, i
Nolan Coodyear, James A. Green,
jr., James Gates, J. D. Hawkins,
Henry, Sam Heys, Billy Howell
Doherty Joiner, Harold Loden,
Bob Maupin, T. J. Melton, Robert
C. Moore, M. H. Pittard, Olin
Price, John I, Renka, Jack w.
Rundle, Millard Seagraves, Gea /
Skene, M. C. Southwell, ‘Rdngfi
Stephens, E. D. Stoddard, William
Tate, Doyle Terry, H. H. Thomp
son, Dick Upchurch, J. W. Veatch,
Kenneth Waters, Troutman Wil
son, H. G. Callahan, Hershel Car
ithers, jr., A. O. Flanagan, jr.
WESLEYAN Service Guild —
Miss -Sybil Hale, Chairman; Mes
dames Marie Avera, Ruth Barron,
Mildred Beussee, Lee Bowden,
Miss Birdie Bondurant, Mesdames
Goldie Burchanan, Clyde Burch,
Dick Burch, Misses Reba Burk
halter, Eileen Center, Mesdames
Mozelle Chick, Sue Darden, Miss
Nannie Lee Dial, Mrs. Lena Elrod,
Misses Annie Felder, Ruth Fow
ler, Jessie Garebold, Rebecca Gen
try, Cecile Ginn, Emma Griffeth,
Claudia Haddock, Tommy Hailey,
Kitty Hall, Dorothy Harmer, Mrs.
Grace Hawkes, Misses Irma
Hicks, Larrie Hix, Mrs. Eugene
Huff, Miss Frances Jackson, Mes
dames Lois Kenney, L. R. Lanier,
Ruby Lovern, Bee McAnnally, J.
C. McClain, Misses Frances Mal
com, Annette Martin, Marian
Martin, Mesdames T. E. Myers,
Ernest Newton, Doris Porterfield,
Misses Helen Parker, Lucy Mae
Perry, Nelle Reese, Elizabeth Ri
ley, Mary Ruff, Allie Shaw, Rose
Smithson, Emalize Swain, Mes
dames Elise Simpson, A. H. Timm,
Janie Trousdale, Lqgjs Turner,
Misses Rose Thompson, Elizabeth
Todd, Carolyn Vance, Mrs. Ave
lyn Walker, Misg filice Zengler,
W
Mr. Harry Wolfe, of Sharon, Pa.,
and Mr. Leonard Wolfe of New
Kensington, Pa., are visiting their
brother, Mr. Lawrence E. Wolfe,
on Lumpkin Street.
SolN WS
Mr. and Mrs. Steve H. Wolfe
announce the birth of a son, at St.
Mary’s Heospital, July sth. The
baby has been named Steven Em
ory. 1
/ $ % &
The many friends of Mr. J. L.
Hunter, sr., will be sorry to learn
of his critical illness at St. Mary’s
Hospital.
* 3 @
Mrs. Grace Wood, Mr. John H.
Paul, Misses Ann and Eleanor
Shelnutt and Mrs. Ralph Shelnutt
spent their vacation at Bryson
City, N. C., with Mrs. B. G. Kuhne.
While there they attended the
Cherokee Drama, “Unto These
Hills,” and visited in Gattlinburg,
Tenn.
* * *
Friends of Mrs. J. H. Tolbert
will be pleased to know she is do
ing nieely following a major op
eration at St. Mary’s Hospital.
® % *
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A.
Greenhut, Mrs. B. Irvin Greenhut,
and Mrs. Elsie Mayer, of Pensa
cola, Fla.,, will arrive Friday to
spend the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Jacob B. Joel.
* £ #*
Mrs. H. H. Harrison and daugh
ter, Jackie are spending the sum
mer in Daytona Beach, Fla., at the
Pennsylvania Apartments.
* * *
Friends of Mrs. J. K. Patrick
will be sorry to learn of her illness
at the Athens General Hospital.
Gail Russell
Celebrated
/th Birthday
On Saturday, July first, Gail
Russell was honored at a party.
The ocassion marked her seventh
birthday.
Those present were Linda and
John Collier, David Adams, Lin
da Holcomb, Kenneth and Elaine
Arrendale, Jimmy and Gerry
Brookshire, Bonnie and Polly Mc-
Carthy, Teena and Ann Moon,
Jane Butler, Larry King, Kenneth
Whitehead, Robin and Donna
Hickman, Betty Sue Dove, Glenda
and June Benton, Sonfa Sanders,
Judy Hardeman, Emmy and Penny
Butler, of Statham.
Games were played and the
guestts sang, “Happy Birthday,
Gail”. Each guest received a fa
vor.
Mrs. Collier Russell, assisted by
Mrs. C. W. Eberhart, served the
guests ice cream and cake,
* * *
University Dri
Picnic On July 4
Members of the University
Drive Sewing Club and their fam
ilies enjoyed their nineteenth an
nual picnic on Tuesday, July 4,
in the lovely gardens of Mrs. J. T.
Wheeler. Approximately sixty peo
ple attended.
The club is twenty years old,
having been organized in June of
1930. On July 4th, 1932, a picnic
was held in the Wheeler garden,
establishing a delightful precedent,
which has become a traditional
observance of this national holi
day. .
Among the attractive younger
set who were a source of unending
delight on this year’s occasion
were Sally and Larry Benson, Lou
Henderson, Betsy Dußose, Duke
Brown, Ernie Coleman, Sylvia
Beer, Cynthia Price and Tommy
Callahan. Everyone sang “Happy
Birthday, Tommy,” who was four
years old this July 4th.
Bed pillows may be aired either
by hanging upon a clothesline or
by spreading upon a clean sheet
upon the ground. A shady spot
should be chosen, since ‘the sun's
heat tends to destroy the natural
oils in the feathers. Pillows should
be fluffed periodically during the
half-day that is necessary for
thorough drying.
Some types of turkeys, particu
larly the broad breasted bronze,
will weigh as high as 40 pounds
at full maturity.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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MAGIC CLIPS—AParis
jeweler offers these adornments
of rubies and diamonds, plati
num-mounted, but does not an
nounce how the novelty jewels
remain in position.
The Colbert Home Demonstra
tion Club met on June 29 at the
home of Mrs, J. S. Holcome. Mrs.
S. N. Benton was welcomed as a
new member,
The group made lamps and the
hostess served delicious refresh
ments.
The next meeting will be held
on July 27th at the home of Mrs.
G. W. McCurley, sr.
Publicity Chairman.
- B 3 »
Mofion Pict
About Magnefi
BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE
Asscoiated Press Science Editor
MURRAY HILL, N. J. — Mo
tion pictures taken through micro
scopes are showing strange new
things about magnetism at the
Bell Telephone Laboratoies here.
They show that the flat sur
face of a piece of silicon-iron is
really a map. It looks like a map
of the nations of Europe, for ex
ample.
Each boundary on this surface
is a magnetic nation, a unit of
magnetic forces, heparate from,
all others.
The boundaries on this mag
netic map move before your eyes.
You can see a magnetic nation
comparable to Germany, expand
its boundaries wuntil it engulfs
nearly all Europe.
Or you can see a huge, cross
continent style boundary, like
the western edge of Russia, start
moving straight across the en
tire face of the map, wiping out
nearly everything it moves across
—a real moving iron curtain.
Yeliow Particles Used
The moving lines are particles
of wet yellow iron oxide. Mag
netic forces gather them along
the edges between magnetic
boundaries, just like the lines a
pen would draw.
This is a pure science job: It has
no known uses. It is lone because
anything about magnetism may
become useful in communications.
The work is by Doctors H. J. Will
iams, W. Shockley, C. Kittel and
R. M. Bozorth.
The silicon-iron, despite having
these magnetic " fields all through
and over itself, is not a magnet.
It becomes an electromagnet only
when a current is turned on. When
that happens all the little nations
join to go totalitarian. Just one
big field swallows all the others.
Electrons are the Citizens
What does this? The tiny citizens
of each separatemagnetic domain
do it. They change their minds—
actually they change the direc
tions in which they were point
ing until every one points in the
same direction no matter what
country he belongs to.
The citizens in these magnetic
domains are electrons, the iniest
known particles of matter. They
all are spinning like tops, and in
any single country, all the elec
tronsi@re pointing their tops in the
same direction. The magnetism
comes from this co-ordinated spin
ning.
When you come to the boundary
of any of these little magnetic
countries, you find the electrons
in the adjoining country pointing
in a different direction. The dif
ferences are surprisingly life-like.
There are abeut as many differ
ences of direction among these
electrons as political beliefs among
the nations of the whole earth.
These boundary zones are about
a millionth of an inch wide. The
wet yellow particles are attracted
only to these zones.
A Transformer’s Secret
Next time you look at a trans
former — there may be one on a
power pole near you—visualize it
as a nation of living, spinning par
ticles, the electrons. In the trans
form>r these little citizens are
reversing, end for end, 600 times
a second. wg e
The earth is spinning just like
the electrons. And if someone
could come along with a big
enough electric current, the world
probably would reverse end for
end.
These movies will give you
man’s first view of memory in ac
tion. How close it is to human
memories is not known. But it is
a fact that magnetism and electri
cal potentials are an identified
part of your own personal memo
ry, and of all humarn memory like
wise.
Imnurities Cut Capers
Watch a big boundary move
across the iron face. Here and
&gfi gve tiny spots of impurities,
Surrounded by a yellow wet
patrticle fence. Each impurity has
its own domain, much smaller than
those of the nations. The impurity
territory is the size of Monaco
compared to“ France.
As the big line passes over one
of these impurity fer.ces, the little
fence hooks onto the big line.
Then the little fence stretches just
like a rubber band. If the big line
keeps going despite the pull, you
can see the “band” snap and see
the big line jump ahead.
But ultimately enough impurity
fences grab and pull to drag the
big line back to its former posi
tion. This property of magnets
is used sometimes ond is cnlled
magnetic memory.
“The Drunkard
{Bth Stage Year
BY 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, July 6.—(AP)—
On this day in 1933:
A hardy group of players open
ed an aged melodrama called “The
Drunkard” at a neighborhood
theater in Los Angeles.
Tonight “The Drunkard” stag
gers into its 18th year of contin
ual playing. The old boy is as
creaky as ever, but there seems to
pe no end to his raucous drink
ing.
“The Drunkard” was an old
preachment against gin which had
been presented by P. T. Barnum.
It was reswrected and played
strictly for laughs before a beer
guzzling and sandwich-munching
audience. The actors expected to
get two months’ work out of it, or
three at the most.
But audiences are still hissing
and cheering and have consumed
a reservoir-full of beer and
enough sandwiches to reach from
here to Juneau, Alaska. The show
has broken all the long-run rec
ords in the history of the Ameri
can theater.
Rusty Voice
One of the show's veterans is
Jan Duggan, who almost every
night for the past 17 years has
played the heroine’s mother in the
play and the “Bowery Nightin
gale” in the after-show. You nray
remember her in W. C. Fields pic
tures. Few can forget her slightly
musty gowns and her magnificent
ly rusty voice.
I asked her how she could stand
doing the same thing nightly for
ummer duit Ddale.
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A BRI A R AST AN O e
FRENCH STARLET—
Mille. Maggy Saragne leaves the
Eiffel Tower elevator in Paris
after winning a competition in
the Tower restaurant for the
“French Starlet. 1950.”
17 years.
“It's fun,” she laughed. “You
can't take it seriously. The audi
ence is the toughest in the world;
sometimes you have to shout to be
heard. But it’s a challenge to make
them quiet down and listen.”
Sometimes the actors try to
throw each other off by making
faces while their backs are to the
footlights. Jan Duggan has a
ready answer when this is done to
her. She crosses her eyes and the
culprit usually breaks up.
She plays her part now by habit
and instinet.
“It is murder to remember your
lines,” she said. “Unless you con
centrate hard, they will leave you
and you find yourself in a trance
on the stage.”
Part of the show’s success seems
to be that the players enjoy them
selves as much as the audience.
There’ll be plenty of potatoes,
eggs and onions around this sum
mer so use all three of these good
products in salads for hot weather
meals. Mix the potatoes and eggs
with a erisp raw vegetable such
as eucumber or celery for texture
contras*, then flavor with the
onion.
Henry W. Sweet
enry W. Swee
Heads Georgia
Ports Authorit
SAVANNAH, Ga., July 6—(AP)
—Georgia’s State Ports Authority
today was under the direction of
the man who helped build Ala
bama’s docks into a multi-million
dol'ar business.
Henry W. Sweet, former direc
tor of the Alabama State docks,
was appointed general manager of
the Georgia authority yesterday.
During the three years Sweet
headed the Alabama docks at Mo
bile he directed a $10,000,000 ex
pansion program. He aiso set up
offices in New York and Chicago,
in an effort to bring business to
Alabama.
Sweet is 48 years old. He was a
commissioner of Jefferson county
and was in the real estate and in
surance business ‘in Birmingham
before he took over as dock di
rector.
Sweet was fired from the post
by Governor James Folsom in a
political tiff, Notice of his dis
charge came while he was at Sa
vannah for a ports celebration.
Just a short while later, Gov. Her
man Talmadge of Georgia began
talking with him about the new
job.
Sweet continued to serve as
president of the Gulf Ports Asso
ciation and vice president of the
American Association of Port Au
thorities after his dismissal.
“I am indeed proud to be cho
sen on a basis of merit by a pro
gressive Southern State,” Sweet
said in a statement last night. “I
pledge my utmost to bring to the
ports of Georgia and her water
ways all which this fine state
rightfully deserves.”
Sweet will have headquarters
here. D. Leon Williams, who has
been acting general manager, will
remain as assistant general mana
ger with headquarters ir. Atlanta.
Youth Killed By
Companion While
Target Shooting
.. BRUNSWICK, Ga., July § —
(AP) — The 14-year old son of
Glynn county jailer Homer Brown
was killed accidentally yesterday
by a .22 caliber rifle fired by a
companion.
Police Chief O. E. Woods said
John Emmett Brown died shortly
after he was shot while target
PAGE THREE
shooting in the woods wil: 15-year
old Charles Chambers. he
Young Brown, the ehisf c<zid,
was struck oy & bullet from Cham
bers’ gun. Woods addad there
seemed no question tha% the shot
was fired accidentally.
No charges were placad against
Chambers pending a coroner’s in
quest.
, The Athens Country Club’s
Fourth of July Flag Tourney was
held at the club recently with
participation by both men and wo
men in the event,
For thé women who played a
nine hole handicap, Mrs, C. R.
Daniel took the honorz at the
tenth hole. Mrs. Quinton Lumpkin
ltook second with 'a half completed
tenth hole, and Mrs. Charles F.
Elder, jr., copped the third place
spot.
Nolan Richardson, sr., won the
men’s handicap of eightz2en holes
on the nineteenth hole. Knox Brac
kett defeated Roy Scozgins, 5-4,
for the club handicap tourney. F.
F. Millican took the second place
spot.in the men’s event.
The Feagle Duffers Cup was
won by R. H. Randolph.
Hal Crow and Jack Wyatt had
a tie, 76, for the Blind Bogey.
NO REST FOR CHINESE
STUDENTS
SAN FRANCISCO — (AP) —
That little red school house, win
ter sessions only, isn’t enough, the
Chinese Communists say. Peiping
radio says 5,000,000 peasant stu
dents in north China and Manchu
ria will go right on studying
through spring planting, summer
weeding, fall harvesting. They’ll
work, too.
Mutual aid teams will t3ke over
the chores part-time, giving each
student one or two hours daily to
“crack” the books.
A “scarecrow” that looks just
like an ow! has been developed to
keep ‘birds out of fruit and berry
patches.
The National Geographi: Society
says the skirt of the Gr2ezk nat
jonal costume takes 40 yards of
material.
Hard-boiled eggs shell easily
when held under cool running wa
ter.