Newspaper Page Text
. Korean Action Sfirs Verbal
Tirade From Non-Communisf Rome
By JOHN RODERICK
LONDON, July 14 — (AP) —
From Scandinavia to the Mediter
ranean, non-Communist Western
Europeans reacted with the same
g:u'ase today to the American set
ck in Xorea. It was "give them
time.”
Outside those circles obedient
to Moscow, the feeling among
both press and public was that,
despite heavy adds, the American
Gl's would pull out of the hole.
There were, however, some
doubts and some criticisms.
In Norway and Finland, both
neighbors of Russia, the man in
the street wondered out loud
whether the needed reinforcements
of men and material would be too
little and too late. Some Finns
found the state of U. S. prepared=
/mess in the Pacific a chilling eye~
jopener. They were impressed
‘with the apparent military ability
of the North Koreans.
Everywhere, in conversation and
in the press, the fact most under=
_rred was the enormity of the
fodds against which the Americans
weré fighting.
i Almost the only sharp non
{Communist criticism of Amerioa's
orean effort came from Rome's
oderate, pro-government Il Mo~
mento.
} “The fact alone that America
| to half mobilize to oppose a
mi-barbarian state, a country
at is the last (least powerful) of
e Soviet satellites, will mean for
rica a loss of prestige which
late and painfully secured vie=
will not be able to regain,”
“At wrote.
# During the past five years, 11
Momento went on, while Presi
ent Truman and his various Sec~
taries of State were “deafening
the world with speeches and
tatements overflowing with boast-
Hfullness,” Russia was building
~ tanks.
' “And today,” it added, “even the
memory of those speeches has
; vanished while those armored cars
' are conquering Korea and are
| about to hurl the Americans into
the sea.”
g Another View
' Il Momento’s conservative com=
_petitor, Il Tempo, which also sup~
‘ports the Christian Democrat gov
eriment, took another view:
“Don’t be impatient,” it said.
“The communists have enjoyed all
the advantages of aggression in
cluding surprise and even using
80-ton Soviet tanks. In the end
we shall see MacArthur's army
coming back.”
The non-Communist press in
France, while sympathizing with
the Americans, has made little
comment.
The London Daily Ealtgress
warned that the news from Korea
might continue bad for another 90
days but predicted eventual vic-
(Continued From Page One)
the Korean situation, contemplate
pushing on northward past the
38th parallel which Russia and the
Western powers fixed as a boun
dary when Russia refused to allow
a Korean-wide election?
Again, Mr. Truman said that
decision will be made when it
became necessary.
If the decision proves to be for
continuing on northward; more
military expenditures must be
mdde,
Mr. Truman says the govern
ment has under consideration the
calling in of reserves, specialists
and the National Guard.
He already has authorized a
draft call of 20,000 men. A second
call this fall is considered a defi
nite possibility.
Solution Sought
in Death Of
Ice E i '
ce Executive |
DOUGLAS, Ga., July 14—-(AP)
~-State, county and city officers
sought a solution today to the
death of Robert Tally, ice com
fany executive, whose body was
ound sprawled across his desk,
a 2 bullet through the head and a
deer rifle nearby.
E. 8. Tally found his 39-year
old son dead when he walked into
the oftice of the Douglas Ice Com
pany yesterday. The two were the
operators of the firm.
A coroner’s jury found the fatal
wound was inflicted by persons
unknown. City officers, Sheriff
Clyde Goodwin and Sgt. J. L.
| Wolte of the Georgia Bureau of
! Investigation were unable to de
; termine & motive for the death at
first inspection.
The rifle and the death bullet
m sent to the GBl's Atlanta
; atory to determine whether
! they match up.
SATURDAY BENSON'S RETAIL
CANASTA FUDGE CAKE .. .. .. ......8%
FADY BALTIMORE .. .. .. .. ... ...... B
OATMEAL 15¢ ICE BOX
SUGAR Per Doz. FRUIT
BENSON'S RETAIL BAKERY
¢« . NEXT TO GA. THEATRE.
’tory.
“Korea is no Dunkerque,” it de-
I clared. “It is a pitched pattle be
tween a handful of ill-equipped
American troops, some of them
battle-green, and a well-trained,
numerically superior aggressor.”
The whole free world, it added,
will benefit from America's “new,
grim alertness.”
Another leading London news
paper, The Liberal News Chroni
cle, warned ““This is our fight
too.”
West German editorials empha
| sized that the Americans were out
numbered and outgunned.
Said the Brunswick Zeitung:
“1t would be premature to in
terpret the early tactical losses as
" a true indication of the power of
the free peoples which will be
demonstrated in coming days and
weeks.”
~ “The five letters ‘Korea’ may
one day symbolize the choice of
all free peoples:
“To surrender everything that
makes life worth living and sub
| mit to the basest, most cruel tyr
’ anny in world history—or to fol
low the example now fit in the
distant land of the morning calm
by those ill-trained, ill-equipped
American boys.”
Home Accidents
Take Big Toll
InU.S. Lives
NEW YORK, N. Y.—Home acci
dents currently claim about 30,000
lives yearly in the United States,
more than double the combined
total from poliomyelitis, appendi
citis, the principal childhood di
seases, and the dieseases inciden~
tal to childbearing, according to
the statisticians of the Metropoli
tan Life Insurance Company.
Non-fatal home accidents re
sulting in more or less serious in
jury total approximately 4,500,000
annually,
Despite the magnitude of the
existing yearly toll, encouraging
progress during the past 15 years
in reducing the frequency of latali
home accidents is reported by the
statisticians. During this time
among the company’s industrial
policyholders the death rate from
this cause has fallen from 13.6
to 6.1 per 100,000, a drop of 40
percent.
The decrease in mortality has
been more pronounced for adults
than for children, and somewhat
greater for women than for men. ‘
An important contributing fac
tor in brfi?xlng about the decrease
has been the modernization of the
American home, making it a safer
place in which to live and work,
of which good examples are the
marked improvements in lighting,
cooking, and heating equipment.
As a result, the death rate from
burns and scalds among girls and
women is now less than half of
what it was only 15 years ago.
“Not withstanding the encour=
aging downward trend for fatal
accidents in and about the home,
these mishaps still constitute one
of the major sources of preventa
ble mortality,” the statisticians
point out. “Further substantial
savings in life and limb should be
effected if the safety education ef
forts now being put' forth by a
number of agencies gain the
wholehearted cooperation of the
public.”
Allen-Moorehead
Case Postponed
Nine cases were heard in Re
corder’s Court by Judge Olin Price
today, the foremost of which con
cerned the A. D. Allen-Sonny
Moorehead case.
The case, involving charges of
shooting at another and carrying
a pistol without a license was
postponed until the 28th of July.
This is the, second postponment
of the case.
Other cases today concerned
mostly speeding and reckless
driving charges with a majority of
defendants being fined $15.75.
Sir Isaac Newton proposed a
steam jet-propelled vehicle in the
17th Century.
Read
The Béanner-Herald
Want Ade.
Ala. Paper Asks
Use of A-Bombs
TUSCALOOSA, Ala., July 14—
(AP)~—The Tuscaloosa News to
day editorially, called upon Presi
dent Truman to consider “drop
ping atomic bombs on Moscow”
if the Russians do not heed a pro
per warning anad put an end to
war-making,
Asserting Communism seeks to
make capitalistic nations “bleed
themselves to death,” the News
declared:
“It doesn’t make sense to plan a
course of ‘little war’ after ‘little
war,” neither does it make sense
to an American to sit at home and
let the Communists bite off hunks
of the world that are just right
for chewing, while we await their
pleasure for the right time to start
chewing on us.
“What, then, is the answer?
“A lot of plain Americans have
been thinking. They know that
the best way to stop smoke is to
put out a fire, These same Amer
icans know that the international
fire is in Moscow, even if the
smoke issues in Korea and may
rise later in Formosa, Iraqg, Iran
or some other faraway place.
Georgia Briefs
" ATLANTA, July 14—(AP) —
‘ Red Rock Bottlers, Inc., has charg
‘ed the Red Rock Cola -Company
‘and the Red Rock Company with
trying to force it out of business
in violation of the anti-trust laws.
It asked $2,100,000 in triple dam
ages in a suit filed yesterday in
U. S. District Court. against the
two companies. The bottler firm
claimed a major share in develo
oping the Red Rock Cola business
from one small plant in Atlanta in
1939 to a present total of 187
plants in the United States, 25 in
Canada and six in Latin America.
ALMA, Ga., July 14— (AP) —
The State Democratic Convention
in Macon next month probably
will be asked to decide between
Dorsey Dean and Andre Tuten as
the State Senate nominee from the
46th District, Tuten won a plurali
ty but not a majority in the June
28 primary and Wean won over
whelmingly in a run-off primary
ordered by Bacon County Demo
cratic committee. Tuten was de
clared the nominee by the Dis
trict Committee and Dean by the
County Committee.
ATLANTA, July 14—(AP)-—
New contracts signed here between
contractors and building trades
unions give carpenters a raise
from $1.85 to $2 an hour on Sep
tember 1. Cement finishers were
increased from $2.10 to $2.20,
plumbers from $2.50 to $2.60 and
iron workers got a raise of 121
cents.
QUITMAN, Ga., July 14—(AP)
~—A run-~off primary showed J. C.
Padgett a winner by nine votes
over Turner Brice for Brooks
county commissioner—l,426 votes
to 1,417, Brice, however, asked and
was granted a recount by the
County Executive Committee.
ATLANTA, July 14— (AP) —
The Jekyll Island Authority may
consider leasing lots at the resort
at a meeting on the igland July 22,
The authority, headed by State
Senator Braxton Blalock, has done
little toward developing the state
park since it was created by the
legislature. Blalock said it hopes
to take some action at its July
meeting. The date was changed
from July 15.
AUGUSTA, Ga., July 14—(AP)
—Mayor W, D. Jennings announc
ed that he definitely will be a
candidate for re-election mnext
year.
ATLANTA, July 14 —(AP) —
P. D Breckenridge of Columbus,
Ga., succeeds B, E. Pelham of El
laville, Ga., as president of the
Southern Pulpwood Dealers Con
servation Association. He was elec
ted yesterday along with G. Dewey
Williams of Augusta, Ga,, vice
president, and Leo Mooredian,
Hapeville, Ga., secretary-treas
user.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla, July 14
—(AP)—Two Jacksonville men
were indicted by a federal grand
jury yesterday on charges of kid
naping a Georgian aid transport
inglv him to Florida last May 4.
he indictment charged Burrell
C. Hudson, jr., and George L. Wise,
jr., abducted John W. Bowen at
a filling station one mile north of
the state line on Georgia highway
76 and drove him to Lovett, They
are being held in the county jail
here under $25,000 bond.
Many efforts to build steam
cars were made in England in the
18th Century, one having legs in
stead of wheels.
The Hawaiian volcano Mauna
Loa has not caused any known
deaths in modern times.
:“4.“.:;“. ‘! bidi;. bias i 1 Edki: i
| b pAER-dbRALD ek, arorbitdil) I]l
Senator Taft Opposes Idea o Give
Truman Economic Confrol Power
BY JACK BELL
WASHINGTON, July 14—(AP)
—Any idea of giving President
Truman standby authority to im
pose economic controls ran into
flat opposition from Senator Taft
(R-Qhio) today. A
Taft, who heads the Senate Re
publican policy committee, told a
reporter he is willing to work with
the administration in preparing a
bill for congressional action, if
controls become necessary becatse
of the Korean war. o
“But I am opposed .to the idea
of giving the President blank
check or standby authority to put
controls into operation,” he said.
“I think Congress ought to be on
the job and approve any measures
that are necessary in the light of
the situation that exists at the
time.” -
~ Mr. Truman indicated at his
news conference yesterday he has
no immediate plan for asking for
emergency powers to deal with
the allocation of materials, con
version of industry or price-wage
controls.
He said, however, that every
phase of possible industrial mo
bilization efforts is under consid
eration. He added that at the
proper time, necessary steps would
be taken. Calling in of the National
Guard, reservists and specialists is
under consideration.
The President’s advisers were
reported divided on the best course
of action, with one group contend
ing that he ought to ask immedi
ately for standby authority and
another arguing that the country
can absorb the needed military
outlays and still keep business go
ing as usual.
Lawmakers generally welcomed
Mr. Truman’s statement yesterday
that there is no food shortage or
rationing in sight and that there
is no need for hoarding.
The President refused to dis
Still Time To Plant Emergency
Grain, Forage Crops— Agronomist
‘“ln a good portion es the state,
dry weather has seriously injured
corn and forage crops and in some
places, corn will make very little
grain or forage,” E. D. Alexander,
Extension Service agronomist,
predicted today, but he added an
encouraging note in pointing out
that emergency crops may still be
planted.
“There are a few crops that can
be planted in an emergency as late
as July 15 with a fair chance of
success,” he said. “They are grain
sorghum, brown top millet, cattail
millet, soybeans and cowpeas.”
Grain sorghum is handled about
like corn. It should be planted on
well prepared, good land, with
300 to 400 opnds of 4-8-6 or 4-8-8
fertilizer applied at planting. One
of the good varieties, such as Mar
tin Combine Milo, Plainsman, or
Dwarf Hegari, should be planted
in 36 to 42 inch rows. If the soil
is in good condition, five to six
pounds of seed per acre is enough.
Cultivate the crop two or three
times to control weeds and grass.
Apply 100 to 150 pounds of nitrate
of soda or its equivalent when
plants are about 18 inches tall.
Grain sorghum can be used for
grain or silage.
Grazing or Hay v
Brown top millet can be sowed,
broadcast or drilled. It should be
planted on good land that has been
prepared well, fertilized with 300
L tices |
egal Notices
To Whom 1t May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that W.
C. Thornton, Jr., Horace E. Bell
and G. H. Bell, doing business un
der the firm name of Arrow Loan
& Insurance Company, have dis
solved their partnership. The said
Horace E. Bell and G. H. Bell re
tire and the said W. C. Thornton,
Jr., will continue business under
the firm name of Arrow Loan &
Insurance Company.
' The new firm will pay and col
lect all bills.
The continued liberal patronage
of the public is solicited.
} This 14th day of July, 1950.
| : W. C. THORNTON, JR.
| HORACE E. BELL.
. GEORGE H. BELL.
Jy 14-21.
GEORGIA, Clarke County:
Personally appeared before the
undersigned officer, W, C. Thorn«
ton, Jr., who says on oath that
Horace E, Bell, G. H. Bell and W.
C. Thornton, Jr., heretofore trad
ing under the nameé of Arrow Loan
& Insurance Company, have dis
solved their partnership and that
said W. C. Thornton, Jr,, shall con«
tinue in business trading under
the name of Arrow Loan & Insur
ance Contpany, and that he is now
the owner thereof and his address
!is 1701, College Avenue, Athens,
| Georgia.
| W. €. THORNTON, JR.
| Sworn to and subscribed before
l me, this 14th day of July, 1950.
SELMA P. WILLIAMS,
| Notary Public,
| Clarke County, Georgia.
| Jy 14-21.
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
MOORE, MR. GUS. — The rela
tives and friends of Mr. Gus
Moore, Athens, Ga.; Mr. Benja
min Moore, Chicago, Ill.; Mrs.
Cornelia Powell, Athens, Ga.;
Mrs. Mattie Williams, Memphis,
Tenn.; Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Flan
igan and family, Athens, Ga.;
Mrs. Delia Bishop, Atlanta, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Patton,
Mrs. Plennie Barnett, Mrs. Daisy
Mack and family, Mrs. Annie
Durham and fanrly, Mr. Jeff
Barnett, all of Athens, Ga.; and
many other relatives and
friends, are invited to attend
the funeral of Mr. Gus Moore,
Sunday, July 16, 1950, at 3:00 p.
m. from the Ebenezer Baptist
Church. Rev. C. J. Gresham,
Rev. E. D. Thomas and other
ministers will officiate. Inter
ment Gospel Pilgrim cemetery.
-Magk and Payne Funeral
Home
cuss the supply of general con
sumer goods. That was something
he didn’t have the facts on, he said,
He did say that higher food ptices
can be blamed on profiteering
Mr. Truman left open the ques
tion now whether he will have a
report on the Korean situation to
the lawmakers. He did say that he
will keep the American people ful
ly informed. * W
With Congress awaiting an ex
pected ' presidential request for
more military funds, there were
these other developments:
1. Leaders indicated a presiden
tial plea for $89,000,000 to start a
“campaign of truth” against Soviet
propaganda will get quick.action,
despite the Senate’s rejection yes
terday of a $4,000,000 increase in
Voice of America Funds.
2. The Senate-House Atomic
committee indicated it expects the
United States to develop a hydro
gen bomb 100 times as powerful as
the A-bomb dropped on Japan.
There was no hint that the A
bombs will be used in Korean
fighting.
3. Democrats turned a cold
shoulder on an indirect suggestion
by Senator Lodge (R-Mass) that
Congress investigate the state of
American military preparedness
and Secretary of Defense Johnson'’s
activities in this connection. Chair
man Tydings (D-Md) of the Sen
ate Armed Service committee dis
missed the proposal without com
ment.
4. Backed by President Truman’s
assertion that he has no tax plans
at all nows, the Senate Finance
Committee officially laid away in
mothballs a House-approved ex
cise tax cutting bill.
5. The Air Force arranged to
charter 63 four-engined transport
planes from Commercial Air Lines
to operate an air lift to the Rar
East. Presumably, it would oper
ate chiefly from west coast points.
to 400 pounds of 4-8-6 or 4-8-8
fertilizer at planting and the seed
should be covered about one inch
deep. It will require about 20 to
25 pounds of seed per acre. The
crop can be used for grazing or
hay.
Cattail millet should be planted
on good land prepared about as
for corn. The soil should be well
pulverized. Plant in 24 to 30 inch
rows, using 300 to 400 pounds for
4-8-6 or 4-8-8 fertilizer. Seed
should not be allowed to come in
direct contact with the fertilizer.
About 20 to 25 pounds of seed per
acre are required. The crop is well
adapted to grazing. After the crop
has been grazed down, a side
dressing of 100 pounds of nitrate
of soda or its equivalent and a cul
tivation will stimulate growth.
~ Soybeans should be planted on
‘good land that has been prepared
‘well, For best results, plant in 30
to 36 inch rows, fertilize with 300
to 400 pounds of 4-8-6 or 4-8-8
fertilizer, use 40 so 60 pounds of
seed per acre and plant seed one
and one-half to two inches deep.
The crop should be cultivated
about twice to give it a start on
weeds and grass. Soybeans can be
| used_for hay, grazing or seed.
i OLD Crop
. Cowpeas is an old crop and can
be used in many ways. It makes
good hay and can be grazed in an
emergency. Since quick growth is
*necessary when planted late, the
erop should be planted on good
land that has been prepared well.
1f fertilizer has not been applied
to an earlier crop this year, supply
300 to 400 pounds of 4-8-6 or 4-8-8
fertilizer when the seeds are plant
ed. Since seeds are scarce, plant in
25 to 30 inch rows and cultivate
one or two times.
The fastest time for a mile made
by a trotter was Greyhound’s 1.55
1.4 ectablished in 1938.
g )l v v
rormal Floral Planting 1s
¢
Charming Garden Accent
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""‘3:“—‘—l | e ? 2-ZINNIA LILLIPUT, I+-A,LYSSUM,
‘:_—7:, e Lo, - PNK VIOLET QUEEN
This view would be wel
A garden accent, or focal point,
while a necessary factor in good
design, need not be impressive,
elaborate, or expensive. It should
stand out in contrast with its back
ground, yet be in harmony with its
surroundings.
Against a shrubbery border, a
formal paved area, centered with
a bird bath, and edged with a bor
der of annuals, will make a charm
ing focal point, especially as the
terminus of a view from a window,
terrace or porch. It might be large
enough for a few garden seats,
shaded by a garden umbrella, which
would allow the sunshine full ac
cess to the flowers,
As in the case with all formal
garden arrangements, the simpler
the design, the better. The form
and color of the flowers will then
get full attention. There are many
combinations of annual flowers
which can be used in such a plant
'ing. White, pink and violet are sug
gested in the illustration. Cosmos
sensation while, in the back row,
NAVY ACCEPTS
VOLUNTEER
ENLISTMENTS
Volunteer enlistments are being
accepted for a minimum of 6
months with a guarantee of 12
months active duty, according to
Lt. Cmdr. Rayner Hancock, of the
Macon office of Navy recruiting.
Men in certain reserve ratings
can apply at the nearest Navy re
cruiting station for volunteer du
ty. All men holding petty officer
ratings up to and including First
Class Petty Officer, and Seaman
or Fireman and already in one of
the Reserve classes, may volunteer
for one year of active duty, in
their present rating. Men holding
Chief Petty Officer ratings in so
nar, radar, electronics, communi=
cations, yoeman, personnelman,
-mineman, and fire control can vol
unteer to serve in a Chief rating
for a similar period. The duty as
signment will be primarily sea or
overseas billets.
Former enlisted men who are
not already in the Reserve and de
sire to volunteer for this duty can
be enlisted in the Naval Reserye,
V 6, in their rate of discharge. This
will make them eligible for volun
teer duty under the present set
up.
For full information wisit or
write the Navy Recruiting Station,
Post Office Building, Athens.
Phone 2651,
Churches
(Continued from Page One)
conciliation.”
As a general principle applica
ble to the Korean situation, the
committee unanimously endorsed
this statement:
“Such methods of modern war
fare as the use of atomic and bac
teriological weapons and oblitera
tion bombing involve employment
of force and a destruction of life
on so terrible a scale as to imperil
the very basis on which law and
civilization can exist.
“It is imperative that they be
banned by international agree
ment and we welconre every sin
cere proposal to this end.”
The statement was presented by
Charles P. -Taft of Cincinnati,
Ohio, chairman of a sub-commit
tee which phrased it and a rep
resentative of the Protestant Epis
copal Church to the annual meet
ing of the central committee.
U. S. Tells
(Continued from Page One)
anti-communist fight in other sec
tors of Asia. MR e
British forces are battling Com
munists in Malaya and have been
for several years. They also are
standing guard over the British
crown colony of Hong Kong on
the border of Communist China.
France has the equivalent of about
10 divisions in action or on guard
against the Communists in Indo
china.
Britain and seevral other coun
tries have already placed naval
forces _under MacArthur’s com
mand. France is expected to send
a naval unit in the immediate fu
ture.
From a strictly military point of
view, officials said, the transpor
tation and supply difficulties in
volved in putting international
forces in the field and maintaining
them there are far greater than
the difficulties involved in joint
naval and air operations.
Friendly foreign armies use
weapons, tactics and in most cases
languages different from those of
the United States. In some in
stances they would probably have
to be reequipped and even par=-
tially retrained in order to fight
effectively in Korea.
eome from any window,
will grow four to six feet tall, bear
ing its large pure white single flow
ers from July until killing frost in
the fall. Dwarf white petunias bor
dering the sides of the paved area
will grow in bushes 18 inches high,
and they will bloom throughout the
summer. Violet alyssum, planted
as a ribbon of purv'e at the base
of the white flowers, will remain in
bloom long after the early frosts.
For another attractive color
planting use Cosmes yellow flare
for the background, yellow Lilliput
zinnias at the sides, and a yellow
dwar{ marigold in fronf. Alyssem
Violet Queen would provide ‘a vig
let base for the yellcw flowers and
all would flower freely until win
ter's arrival. By using annuals an
all-summer decorafign is assured,
and each year the celor combina
tion can be changed if desired. For
early spring effect tulips and daf
fodils could be planted, to be re
placed by annuals after tuey have
blgomed. ’
U. S.
{Continued from Page One)
first division, which spearheaded
the long drive of more than 150
miles from the border to the Kum.
General MacArthur’s commun
ique said the First Division, de
scribed as North Korea’s finest,
was so badly mauled by U. S.
ground troops and air blows that
it has been replaced in the line by
the sixth division.
Flank Movements
| The communique still showed
‘ concern over the sweeping east
ward movement by two Red divis
ions. They threaten to cut off the
Kum and Taejon from its supplies
coming up from Pusan, southeeast
Boxt- - e :
It said the Reds still were driv
ing toward Hamchang and An
dong. These cities are 55 and 75
miles east of Tacjon and about 60
miles north of Taegu on the high
way from Pusan to the front.
Hamchang is only 32 miles north
of Kumchon, another road point.
A spokesman at advanced head
quarters said, however, that the
South Korean army had generally
stabilized this eastern sector of the
front. It apparently was based on
information later than that in the
communique. . b
Allied warplanes kept up their
ceaseless hammering of invader
ground forces back of the front
Thursday. A Far East Air Force
communique listed nine enemy
tanks destroyed, 12 damaged, 45
trucks destroyed and 58 damaged.
The U. S. air communique said
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{ FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1954,
Thursday’s mass B-29 strike hj
Wonsan, eastern seaport 80 milc.
north of the 38th parallel. Nea:!
50 superforis bombed the targc
by radar. The North Korean py.
ongyang radio broadeast that “i.-
discriminate bombing” had cause
many casualties in schoolg§ and
hospitals,
Gen. Hoyt 8. Vandenberg, Ai
Firce Chief of Staff, said the spee
with which the U. S. mounted it
big superfort strike “should giv
food for thought to those in th:
world who would violate by mili
tary aggression the peace and in
dependence of others.”
Bray Returned
To State Prison
Roy Lee Bray, of Athens, wh:
escaped from the state prison a
Buford earlier in the week ha
been returned tp that institutior
after surrending to his lawyer Joe
‘Webb.
. Bray was serving time for burg
lary of a Crawford grocery stor
when he made his break shortl,
before dawn,
a®
R LT
ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN
Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complete
Brug Sbere.
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