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PAGE FOUR
; THENS BANNER HERALD
Sh il R Arl l S AN 4
ESVABLISHED 1832 :
Published Every Evening Except Saturday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
(10. Entered at the Post Office at Athens, Ga. as second class mail matfer,
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Seeing then that we have a
great high priest, that is pass
\ ed into the heavens, Jesus,
) the Son of God, let us hold
fast our profession,
' For we have not an high priest which cannof
be touched with the feeling of our infirmities,
but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet
without sin.—Hebrews 4:14-15,
s e
Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A. F, Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel,
*
UN Gains lfs Greatest Stature
Taking Positive Korean Action
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON.— (NEA) —Future action by the
United Nations in dealing with the North Korean
actression offers interesting possibilities for speu
da..on .
the first place, it must be fully recognized that
for the first time in thé world’s history 56 nations—
out ‘of 59 UN members—have agreed on sanctions
2~ ainst an aggressor, The 56 have agreed to furnish
¢.ch aid as they can to put down this North Korean
i sion of South Korea,
he most optimistie interpretation of this action
‘s that it may mrark the beginning of the end for
+ oviet initiative in world-wide aggression, If these
rst sanctions can be made to stick, it may mean
712 t the United Nations will henceforth be able to
1a e the initiative in maintaining peace.
““he big question now is, can this bloc of 56 peace=
1o . .ng nations be made to stick together?
One of the chief objectives of Moscow propaganda
has been to break up this combination. The effort
has been to separate the other anti-Communist
powers from the United States. It has been an effort
tq sell the idea that the United States provoked the
South Koreans into an attack on the North Koreans,
So far, nobody outside the Iron Curtain has bought
this line,
SMALL NATIONS NEED UN
Yugoslavia's action in abstaining from voting
on the U. S. resolutions against North Korea in Se«
curity Council was something of a surprise, If Yu
roslavia had been under attack from, say Bulgaria,
there would have been no such.
Egypt's delegate gave as his excyse for not vot
ing for the resolutions that he could not get instruc
tions fronr his government. There was also believed
to be some feeling that the UN had not given the
Arab countries protection against Israel,
If any of the Arab countries ever were attacked
by an aggressor, however, their greatest protection
would be through the precedent set by UN resolu
tions against North Korea.
As Pakistan’s Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan
put it, if North Korea's aggression is not put down,
no small nation can ever again feel safe. This is the
great unifying force.
British and Indian attempts to mediate the Ko
rean crisis and persuade the Russians to withdraw
their support of the North Koreans are individual
nation feelers. Any final settlement must be made
by the United Nations.
When the Security Council is called itnto session
later on, it is anticipated that the Russians will pre
sent a resolution charging the South Koreans with
aggression and blasting the “United States imperial
ist warmongers of Wall Street” in usual fashion,
A WEAK UN IS RUSSIA’S GOAL
Such a resolution would require seven out of the
11 member votes for approval. It doesn’t stand a
chance. Even if it did, it could be vetoed by the
United States, making the Russians take some of
their own nredicine. °
If action by the Security Council should become
stalemated, it is always possible to call a special
session of the General Assembly. That is the way
the UN has met a number of its difficult problems.
in the past,
The possibility of Russian withdrawal from the
UN is not now considered likely, One reason is that
the Communists need the United Nations. They need
it as a sounding board for their propaganda outside
the Iron Curtain, :
The Communists need a weak United Nations,
however, not a strong one. That is why they may be
counted on to continue trying to disrupt and ham
string its operations.
As for what will happen after the North Koreans
withdraw or are forced back of the 38th parallel, no
official in Washington will commit himself, Presi
dent Truman dodged the question at his last press
conference. The objective now is merely to force
the aggressors back of the line,
But a close reading of the UN resolutions reveals
that the UN Commission for Korea is directed to
make recommendations on further steps the world
organigation should take to restore peace.
. This is believed to leave to leave the way open
soy additional action north of the 38th parallel, if
that is deemed necessary.
There is no such thing as falling in love.—Ralph
O Eckert, California family relations expert.
¥ you fail o love at first sight, you'd better be
ohrelul of second slzht.—Aotm; Van Heflin,
e secret of most happy marriages is the consid
eration each partner has for the other’s happiness.—
Mre. Laurits Melchlor, wife of the opera star.
Mere marriages are wrecked by faulty person
slity than any other single factor.—Dr. Paul Pope
;? director of the American Institute of Family
lationg.
People Want Truth About War,
Even When the News Is Bad
In any war, the problem of security inevitably
leads to conflict between the military and the front
line correspondents trying to report the fighting as
they see it.
This Korean war presents special difficulties.
Officially it isn’t a war, as there’s no censorship.
And events have moved so swiftly there’s been no
chance ‘to give the field correspondents positive
guidance through regular briefings on the broad
picture of the campaign,
Add to these factors the extremely confused and
fluid fighting that has nrarked the war so far, and
you have the ingredients for trouble, It has already
developed. General MacArthur, Far East comman
der, severely criticized U. S, war correspondents for
exaggerated and distorted accounts of the battle.
Following this, his press relations officer banned
two prominent news agency correspondents from the
Korean front,
The officer conceded the factual truth of their
dispatches but complained the stories *made the
Army look bad” and “gave aid and comfort to the
enemy.” MacArthur lifted the ban on the corres
pondents a couple of days later,
But in the light of all the circumstances, the
mmplaints seem unduly harsh, MacArthur appears
to have had a just complaint, for instance, against
the newsman who'reported a “lost battalion” wiped
out. The mran in the field took the word of excited
Gl's agd when actual casualties were counted they
totaled only 21.
U. S. newsmen have gone to the Korean fighting
front at the risk of their lives to tell the American
people what really is happening, At this writing
two are dead and several have been wounded,
Admittedly front-line reporters see and hear only
what is within their narrow range. They grap iso
lated fragments of the full story, Since by definition
war is confusion, these accounts are seldom likely
to be neat and ordered.
Nevertheless the flesh and blood meaning of war
can’t be gained by people at home in any other way.
Its horror, its danger, its frequent futility are not
spelled out in cautiously worded official communi
ques, written far from the sound and smell of the
battlefield, g
The communiques are necessary to provide the
detached, rounded, calmer view of the fighting. The
front-line accounts should be fitted into that wider
framre by all of us at home.
Sometimes the field reports, taken together, tell
the overall story more quickly and realistically than
do the guarded communiques, Occasional exaggera=-
tions excepted, this has frequently been the case in
the Korean war. MacArthur's steady optimism up
to now has proved unwarranted.
Harg decisions and possibly heavy sacrifices lay
ahead for the American people. They'can act wisely
only if they know all the truth that is compatible
with genuine military security, What we know of
the truth today is largely what our war correspond
ents have told us, at great peril to themselyes. A
general whiplashing by the military is hardly a fair
reward for this service.
Let's Face It Calmly
Once again infantile paralysis is striking at the
American people,
The new attack by this ruthless disease follows
on the heels of the worst polio epidemie in history
last year, when 42,375 people were stricken.
At this writing no one can predict what may
happen before summer runs its course and infantile
paralysis incidence declines,
But there is something that CAN be predicted,
something that can be seen happening right now.
Remember those dimes and dollars you gave to
the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis
during the March of Dimes?
That was way back in January. Not much polio
then, thank heavens., Yet you gave your dimes and
dollars generously, Why? To help some kids, that’s
why. Then you forgot about it.
Now you may remember, and thanks your lucky
stars. Why? Because those dimres, those dollars you
and millions of other Americans gave to the March
of Dimes now are on the front line fighting polio
« » . battling away with a fury to match that disease
of the enemy.
Today—thanks to public support of the National
Foundation’s programs of epidemic aid, patient care,
professional education and research, we need not
cringe before the threat of polio epidemics, Should
they strike our community—or any other section of
the country — we know that everything humanly
possible will be done to minimize the ravages of the
disease. Boys and girls who only a few years back
wouldn’t have stood a chance against polio can be
helped toward recovery. Fathers and mothers to
whonr—aside from all filial affection—polio repre
sents a financial catastrophe, know that costly bills
they cannot afford will be met by their local chap
ters of the National Foundation.
Why? .
Again we say—remember last January’s March
of Dimes and rejoice because you helped.
In New Jersey we can't afiord to take federal
funds. We don’t want federal funds. -— Governor
Alfred Driscoll (D.), New Jersey.
If the Chancellor askß me if I would agree to a
supranational authority which had power to tell
Britain not to cut any prore coal or make any more
steel but to grow tomatoes, I would say “No.’—
Winston Churchill, .
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
San Francicso Area Reflects
New U. S. Sense Of Urgency
SAN FRANCISCO ~— America’s
new sense of urgency is plainly
visible here as it builds up power
in Korea over a 7,000-mile supply
lin;at that extends from this stirring
port.
San Francisco’s big port and
transcontinental railhead is again
flexing its muscies as a shipping
and debarkation area in a war
effort. By the nature of things,
this until-now unemployment
ridden and lethargic waterfront is
probably plunged more directly
and immediately into the Korean
support effort than any region out
side of Washington.
A natural military supply fun
nel into the Pacific, San Francis
co’s 75-mile bay already is the
center of accelerated activity.
There is the rapid revision of pass
enger ship sailings, the arrival of
military supplies, navy departures
for task force development, and—
most important of all at this stage
—the rehabilitation of a small
wartime supply fleet,
~ Rise In Activity Seen
Shipping circles here expect a
steady 'upward curve of activity
during the coming months as the
monsoon season and steady North
Korean-gains bring forecasts of at
least six to nine months of fight
ing.
More than this, American sup
ply bases and stockpiles in Japan
and the Far East are known to be
of limited size.
For every soldier in the forward
area, 10 to 12 tons of initial equip
ment are needed. An additional
ton must be supplied for every
succeeding month,
To supply one overseas divi
sion and its equipment, as many as
25 10,000-ton ships are required.
To make the 7;000-mile trip from
San Francisco to Korea, ideally,
takes 24 days. All this means
work and a sense of urgency for
West Coast ports.
Mothbail Ships Reactivated
To set the stage, the 27,000~-ton
aircraft carrier Boxer, her flight
deck bristling with tough-looking
blue-black Mustang fighters, slid
under the Golden Gate Bridge for
the Western Paci.ic, July 14.
Strings of flat cars loaded with
military truck and guns are clank
ing into the vast army Pacific sup
ply base at Oakland.- The Bethle
hem Steel shipyard suddenly went
on a three-shift, seven-day work
week July 13 and hired 500 men
to bolster its regular 250 to make
shipshape freighters just out of
mothballs.
This last is part of the major
West Coast war activity of the mo
ment—the activitation of 16 Vic
tory-type freighters ordered out
of storage to get military supplies
to Korea as soon as possible.
They will be moved from As
toria, Ore.,, and Olympia, Wash.,
as well as from the 350-ship re
serve that rocks in silent rows in
upper San Francisco Bay. @
On the Pacific Coast the United \
States Maritime Commission has
about 400 cargo ships in its over
all World War II reserve. Lloyd
Fleming, Pacifiec Coast director of
the federal maritime administra
tion, says he hopes' to have some
of the 16 freighters “with steam
up and on berth to load” within
a week after work began.
Airline Adds Pilots
The navy has an estimated 1,100
combat and auxjliary vessels on
the coast. It already has ordered
two carriers, two tankers, an am
munition ship; and a cargo ship
back to duty from plastie cocoons,
oil, and dehumidifying apparatus.
Merchy g2t ships are not as well=
preserved as navy ships. To re
medy. this Senator Warren G.
Magnuson (D.) of Washington has
introduced a $25,000,000 bill for
immediate repair”of 134 merchant
men.
This spate of Korean-impelled
activity came as San Francisto
was preparing to launch an all
out offensive to procure more
shipping and shipbuilding busi
ness.
Shipping circles here expect a
steady upward curve of activity
during the next few months. And
airwise, it is disclosed that Pan
St. Joseph
3 ASPIRIN .
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-11:22 a. mr.—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
Week Day Only
Train No. 50 Departs 7:00 p. m.
Train No. 51 Arrives 9:00 a. ng
Mixed Trains.
FOR THE BEST IN
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
ALWAYS COME TO
B oesoto S|LVEY'S eLvmoutH
l.
American Airways, one of six
lines involved, has recalled 144
pilots laid off six months ago to
increase the lift of troops and
cargo for Korea. Pan American
uses 918 men in all on its world
wide pilot roster, giving some in
dication of the sizeable impact of
Korean operations.
"Father Divine”
Of Africa, Eyes -
A Sudan Throne
AP Newsfeatures
KHARTOUM, The Sudan—A
tall and dignified Black man with
more following than Father Di
vine is one of the key figures in
the politics of this sprawling sec
tion of Africa.
He is Sir Sayed Abdel Rahman
El-Mahdi, a famous Moslem reli
gious leader and the son of the
man who led the Revolt of the
Dervishes — a fanatic Moslem
movement — in the 1880’s.
Sir Sayed (his title was be
stowed by the British) lives in a
palace in Khartoum at the junc
tion of the White and Blue Niles.
Lovely crested cranes strut and
dance on the green lawn around
the palace.
He owns a shiny new green
Rolls Royce. He is one of the
wealthiest natives in Africa.
His holdings include great
cotton lands, including a rich
island in the White Nile up
stream from Khartoum. Some
“say his income from cotton
last year was nearly $3,000,-
000
His religious followers through
out the Sudan number hundreds
of thousands. Some of them are
said to work on his cotion plan
tations without pay-for religious
reasons.
Sir Sayed, with a grey head and
grey beard, is the bibical pro
phet type in appearance. He is
an important man in Africa be
cause he is the recognized head
of the independence movement
in the Sudan.
His opponents and some neu
tral observers figure that his am
bition is to be the king of an in
dependent Sudan.
The Sudan is ome of the
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Mrs. Alma Kincaid, 2125 East
Adelaide St. Louis, Missouri, who
was suffering from deficiencies of
Vitamins 81, 82, Iron and Niacin,
has turned into a regular clock
watcher since she has been taking
HADACOL., Yes, she keeps her eye
on the clock all day long, just
waiting for breakfast, dinner and
supper time. Imagine how unbear
able life can be without enjoying
good, wholesome food.
Here is Mrs, Kincaid’s statement:
“I have been taking HADACOL
for over a year., Before taking
HADACOL, I had stomach distress
for quite sometime. Imagine how
awfully hard it isto live a normal
life when you can't eat such delic
ious things as tomatoes, oranges,
grapefruit, etc., or drink milk
without getting horrible cramps
and upsetting your stomach. One
day I took my husband’s advice
and got some HADACOL. A good
friend of his told hinr of the fine
results he had gotten from HAD
ACOL. And now, since I have been
taking HADACOL, T can eat any
thing I want and really enjoy it.
I have a wonderful appetite, too—
thanks to HADACOL. Naturally I
recommend HADACOL to all my
friends.”
Yes, HADACOL Is Truly
Wonderful
in the way it has helped countless
thousands of folks whose systems
were deficient in Vitamins 81, 82,
Iron, and Niacin. HADACOL can
help you, too, if you will just give
HADACOL a chance. If you suffer
from stomach distress, nervous
ness, insomnia, constipation, aches
and pains of neuritis, or a gen
eral run-down condition, caused by
such deficiencies, let HADACOL
help you as it has helped others all
over the country. Even hundreds
of doctors are now recommending
HADACOL to their patients suf
fering from such deficiencies.
. Give remarkable HADACOL a
chance to benefit you. Remember,
‘you have nothing to lose. HADA
COIL, will make you feel great
after the first few bottles you
take, or yeurr money will be re
funded. Only $1.25 for Trial Size;
Large Family or Hospital Size,
$3.50.
(c) 1950, The Leßlanc Corpora
tion. ’ (adv.)
. biggest ocountries in Africs,
|, eovering 1,000,000,000 square
|} miles, | X haki ap estimated
7,506,000 people—a mixture
of Hamite (Caucasian) and
negro blood. gl
The Sudan now is technically
ruled by British and Egypt, under
condominium, This is an agree
ment reached in 1899 after an
Anglo-Egyptian army led by Lord
Kitchener recovered the Sudan
after the Dervish revolt.
The British position seems to
be that they're sticking around
only long enough to get the Su
danese people on their feet ready
to govern themselves. Egypt, how
ever, demands union of the Sudan
with itself, under the crown of
King Farouk.
The Sudanese people have
never given any decisive in
dication on how they feel
about this. Less than one per
cent are literate. Their lead
ers are divided.
Sir Sayed says he's for inde
pendence. Another big religious
leader-Sir Sayed Ali Merghani«
is said to be lined up with the pro-
Egyptian group.
EIFFEL TOWER
DRAWS CROWD
PARIS —(AP)— More people
than ever are visiting the Eiffel
Tower, Paris’ famed landmark.
The big steel cloud-scraper at
tracted 1,143,000 visitors last year.
This beat the 1948 total by 185,000
and the previous post-inaugura
tion record of 1,025,000 visitors set
in 1900. The 985-foot tower was
inaugurated in 1889 during the
Paris International Exposition
when a total of 1,968,000 visitors
were counted.
All Paris grammar school chil
dren can take a free ride to the
tower’s observation platform —
provided they bring along a certi
ficate showing they passed their
yearly examinations.
The largest titanium mine in the
world is located near Sanford
Lake, New York.
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AT THE
o e L A A AT WAS— .TS T—
PALACE— ~ -
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.—“No Sad
Songs For Me,” starring Margaret
Sullivan, Wendell Corey, Viveca
Lindfors. Riviera Days. Cuckoo
Clock. News.
GEORGIA—
Thurs. -Fri. — %“Adam’s Rib,,
starring Spencer Tracy, Katherine
Hepburn, News,
Sat. — “Beauty on Parade,”
starring Robert Hutton, Ruth War
wick. House Aabout It. Uninvited
Pest,
STRAND—
Fri.-Sat. — “Riders of the Race,”
starring Tim Holt, Richard Mar
tin, Brooklyn Buckaroos. Undersea
Kingdom — Chapter 3.
RITZ —
Fri.-Sat. -— “The Arizona Cow
boy,” starring Rex Allen, Gordon
Jones, Bashful Romeo, King of the
Jungleland — Chapter 1.
DRIVE-IN—
Fri. — “Sergeant York,” starr
ing Gary Cooper, Joan Leslie, Lit
tle Moth's Big Flame,
Sat. — “Stage to Messa City,”
starring Lash Laßue, Fuzzy St.
John, Jennifer Holt. High & Diz
zy. Caribbean Capers. Timid up.
Ceramic art reached a high de
gree of development in Egypt as
early as the 16th Century B. C.
Notice
Notice is hereby given that im
compliance with ordinances of the
Mayor and Council, passed on
March 7, 1950, I am going to make
application for a beer license and
a wine license for the priviledge
of selling the same at the Prince
Avenue Soda Co., 497 Prince
Avenue, Athens, Georgia.
The owners of this business are
Carlton. S. Bell and Sam J. Dea
vours. jy2le
FREDAY, JULY 21, 1956,
Tl}.h‘.flluhcau*
Rt 10 ‘better .'.‘&“J‘;Tg
what was then considereq an “une
known quantity.”
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Cluk facilivies,
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especially so:
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g 2 PRESIDENT AND 68N, Mon. . |
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