Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Senafe Seafs
|daho Primaries
By The Associated Press
Idaho voters are choosing nomi
nees for two U. S. Senate seats to
day in primaries marked by local
bitterness and national interest.
Nationzl attention was drawn to
the race Senator Glen Taylor, run
ning mate on Henry Wallace's
progressive ticket in the 1948 pres
idential election, is making for
Democratic renominatioi.
Interest was heightened, too, by
the fact that both national poli
tical parties are hoping to pick
up strength in the Senate when
Idaho chooses between Republican
and Democratic nominees next
November.
There were also primaries today
in Arkansas and Nebraska, but
they drew comparatively little
out-of-state interest.
The two Senate seats involved
it the Idaho voting are those held
by Taylor and by Republican
sSenator Henry Dworshak. The
race for the latter is for four years,
as Dworshak is now serving by ap
pointment following a wvacancy
caused bv death,
Taylor's Democratic opponents
for the six year term are former
Senator D. Worth Clark and Rep.
Compton 1. White. & !
Running in the Republican pri
mary for the six-year term nomi
nation are Gov. C. A. Robins, Rep.
John Sanborn and State Senator
Herman Walker.
Republicans, as well as former
Senator Clark, have accused Tay
lor of hob-nobbing with Commu
nist front organizations. Taylor, a
former cowboy and tent-show ac
tor,” denied it. He declared him
self back in the Democratic party
after his 1948 outing with Wal
lace’s progressives.
For the four-year term Dwor
shak is opposed for Republican
nomination by former Rep. Abe
McGregor Goff and Fentress H.
Kuhn. Democrats running for
their party’s nomination are F. M.
Bistline, Claude J. Burtenshaw,
Edwin M. Holden, Robert L.
Summerfield, and Mrs, La Vera
Swope.
Idaho voters also are nomi
nating candidates for two U. S.
house seats and all state offices,
including the governorship.
In Nebraska, there is no Senate
contest this year, Val Peterson,
Republican governor, is trying for
a third ferm nomination. Running
for the Democratic governorship
nomination in a wide open race
are no fewer than five candidates.
There are also primary contests
for four house seats.
Most of Arkansas’ primary con
tests were decided in 2 first pri
mary July 25. Also, since Senator
J. Wiltiam Fulbright and six house
members are unopposed for Dem
ocratic renomination, it was left
gp{olocalnw to generate any
ea
(Continued from Page One)
was timed at 4:05 p. m. (10:05 a.
m., Eastern Standard time).
She had the triwmph, and Shir
ley May had the tears.
Shirley May's coach, Harry
Boudakian, and her manager, Ted
Worner, begged her te quit.
| “You'll have another try,” Bou
dakian said. “You can’t get in on
the tide now. It's too late.”
Shirley sobbed bitterly.
“Everyone is going to think I'm
g 2 flon” ghe cried.
Boudakian replied: “If I thought
you could do it I wouldn’t take
you out.”
Then the coach made it a com
mand. At last Shirley May took
kis hand. She collapsed.
OAK er SUMAC Science has discovered
i an excellent new treat
mmu ”’ ‘“’“ en.
mac poisomng. it's gen
i : tle and safe, quickly
dnies up the blisters — often within 24 hours.
al druggists,
S DR
Do You Enjoy Bacon& Eggs
As certain as bacon and eggs are a natural for breakfast, so is Geor
gis Eggs Inc., we must have a source of supply.
There are 204 thousand pullets in this vicinity cackeling for an
egg market come September. With ordinary production these
pullets will lay more than a miilion dollars worth of eggs in one
year.
Ask yourself is this marketing of eggs a needed sound business?
bs this an unusual opportunity for investment with unusual poss
| sbilities for profits and service? In our opinion it is the most needed
o With the soundest future of anything you have been offered in a
Jong time, It Is to your interest, it is worth your most careful at
tention, Go to your bank today, and fill out an application for your
self, your children or grand children,
If You Are Interested Come To Our Dinner
6:30 Ceorgian Hotel Thursday Evening.
Phone 4100 For Reservations Before Noon Wednesday
Athens Get It Done Club
"© %7 . W.H.BENSON, Chairman, i
i
~ (Continued from Page One)
sell. The growth of this business
exceeds the fondest hopes of those
whe are best informed about it.
There is every reason to believe
that this business will continue to
grow and expand. Perhaps it
will have a growth comparable to
Georgia’s broiler industry which
last year produced something like
a $35,000,000 income for farmers.
This great expansion, which has
placed Georgia in the forefront
among the states in broiler produc
tion, is making farmers in north
Georgia poultry conscious, and the
next logical development is that of
producing eggs in sufficient quan
tities to meet the demand of Gecr
gia's cities. ,
Top-Quality
The only possible limitation to
the further development of com
mercial egg production is the kind
and quality of market services pro
vided for farmers. In order to
succeed, it is necessary to market
only top-quality, Grade A eggs.
To produce such eggs and deliver
them in first-class condition re
quires cooler storage facilities at
the plant of Georgia Eggs, Inc.
During the first year’s operation,
the storage facilities for eggs were
limited to a capacity of 200 cases:
This capacity is entirely too small
to take care of the increased vol
ume that will be produced by pul
lets already located on farms with
in the trade territory. It is im
perative that cooler facilities be
increased immediately so that not
less than 700 cases can be held on
storage at all times.
In addition, in order to deliver
these eggs in first-class condition
in Atlanta and other Georgia cities,
it is imperative that Georgia Eggs
operate one or more refrigerated
trucks. During the hottest months
of the current summer, some €ggs
marketed in Atlanta have not met
market specifications because the
local marketing concern in Athens
did not have refrigerated trucks in
which to make deliveries.
Big Scale Plan 5
Also, any first-class big-scale
egg marketing business must have
freezing and storage facilities so
that the small and off-grade eggs
can be cracked and frozen. There
is an emmense market for such
eggs. They are used, for example,
by bakeries. The consumption of
such eggs in the city of Athens
would be beyond the expectations
of anyone who has given no
thought to the matter. With the
expansion in egg production that
is anticipated in northeast Georgia
during the next two or three years,
it will be necessary, if the Athens
concern, Georgia Eggs, Inc., does a
good job, that it have facilities for
freezing and storing eggs. Before
any large consumers of such eggs
can afford to buy from local pro
ducers, they must be assured of
an all-year adequate supply so
that there will never be the possi
bility of a shortage growing out
of a limited volume. To insure
such business it will be necessary
to continue to increase freezing
and storage facilities as the volume
of business grows.
If these requirements for mar
keting eggs are provided, there is
every reason to believe that eggs
will soon constitute one of the im~
portant sources of farm income in
northeast Georgia.
Georgia Egs was established on
the recommendation of the Rural
Development Committee of the
Athens Chamber of Commerce.
This committee is composed of
people who know conditions in
Northeast Georgia and are'in con
stant contact with the people of
the 20 counties embraced in the
area that is being served by the
local marketing concern. If this
business can get from the citizens
of Athens and its trade territory
the necessary capital to insure the
success of the business, there is no
doubt but that the enterprise will
succeed.
Farmers are eager today as nev
er before to extend their income
producing operations to a 12
months’ basis. Poultry consti
tutes one of the most favorable of
all enterprises for balancing the
crop production program of the
area.
OFT-CHANGED CLOTH
During the 1850’s, it was a usual
custom in Kentucky to change the
dining cloth three times during
dinner. One cloth was for the
main part of the meal, one for
dessert, and a third for nuts and
Allgood Rif
Funeral services for Charlie H.
Allgood, 86, will be conducted to
morrow afternoon at 4 o'clock
from Bridges Funeral Home Cha
pel with Dr, E. L. Hill, pastor
emeritus of First Presbyterian
Church, and Rev. C. C. Shafe,
pastor of Central Presbyterian
Church officiating.
ABurial will follow in Oconee
Hill Cemetery,
Mr. Allgood, for more than thir
ty years a member of the Athens
Police Department, died unex
pectedly in a local hospital Mon
day, following a heart attack.
Pall-bearers will be Police Chief
Clarence Roberts, Captain R. E.
Eidam, Captain J, L. Garvin, Cap
tain L. C. Carnelison, E. M. Wood
and Martin Nelms.
An honorary escort will include
Mayor Jack R. Wells and mem
bers of the City Council, members
of the Civil Service Commission,
and members of the Police Depart
ment,
Mr. Allgood is survived by two
daughters, Mrs. Hoyt Brown and
Mrs. W .E. Jones, both of Athens;
two sons, Charlie A, Allgood and
Marion Allgood, both of Athens;
three sisters, Mrs., Emma Winn,
and Mrs. Ralph Jackson, both of
Athens, and Mrs. Lillian Jarrett,
of Texarkana, Texas; two broth
e:s, Ab Allgood and Johnny All
good, both of Athens; a sister-in
law, Mrs. Maude Allgood; grand
children, Mrs. M. E. VanVleck,
Norfolk, Va., Bennie Jones, Jack
sonville, Fla., Winfred Brown, Los
Angeles, Calif., and Ned Brown,
Athens.
9,000
(Continued trom Page One)
We are confident about the situa
tion over here,” he told W. Averell
Harpiman, the president's special
assistant and adviser on foreign
affairs, as Harriman left for Wash
ington after a three-day visit that
took him to the warfront.
The front had exploded into
three major battles,
The big one was northwest of
Taegu.
Another flamed in the extreme
south,
The third was at a Red bridge
head across the Naktong near
Changnyong where fresh U. S.
troops were ordered to destroy the
rglelr-crossers by Tuesday night-
But after fighting part of the
way up a ridge, the fresh counter
attacking U. S. 24th Infantry Di
vision troops were stopped by stiit
Red resistance.
At 8:45 p:. m. Tuesday (5:45 a.
m, EST) Maj. Gen. John E.
Church told Associated Press Cor
respondent O. H. King the bridge
head could not be cleaned out that
night. The General insisted the
North Koreans there would be
wiped out Wednesday, however. '
g Close Watch
He said close watch would be
kept on the Chanknyong area to
prevent further Communist cross
ings of the river.
In the area northwest of Taegu
the Communists flung their lines
two or more miles beyond the riv
er line. Seven Red tanks, waiting
to cross the stream, were under
attack by Allied planes. L
One of General MacArthur’s In
telligence officers estimated North
Korean losses in six weeks were
44,500 men—an average of more
than 1,000 a day in the six-weeks
old war. g
When the fresh Army troops
were thrown at the remmnants of
two regiments near Chanknyong
two American Mustangs joined the
attack and strafed the U. S, dough
boys, hitting 19 of them.
Col. Charles E. Beauchamp,
commanding the 34th Infaniry
Regiment, ordered the Reds
cleaned out and said their destruc
tion would mean the #end of the
Fourth Division as an eunemy
force.”
Weaker Line
The Changnyong move had been
against the weakened U. 8. 25th
Infantry Division. Its 24th Regi
ment of negro troops had been di
verted to support the southern
thrust by Marines and the U. 8.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Fifth Regimental combat team.
This forced the U, 8. First Caval
ry Division to extend its line
southward 4 1-2 miles along the
Naktong.
In the extreme south the Ma
rines scaled wvalley walls and
fought over rugged hilltops to res
cue the Fifth Regimental unit
from the flanking attack.
(Continuzd from Page One)
school improvement.
First session of the conference
will be held tomorrow afternoon
at 2:30 in.the University Chapel.
John Atkinson, vice president of
the State Citizens Council on
Education, will speak. A panel
discussion on legal problems of
school boards will follow.
Final conference sessions will be
held Friday,
Sponsors of the conference are
the Georgia Association of Super
intendents, Board Members and
Trustees; Georgia County School
Superintendents Association; State
Department of Education; and the
University of Georgia’s College of
Education.
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Three Die |
Sh fng Spree
EMINENCE, Mo., Aug. B—(AP)
—Three persons were killed and
two others wounded in a wild
shooting spree in the Ozarks Hill
country last night,
The gunman fled into a heavily
wooded area near this south cen
tral Missouri town.
The dead include R. N. Fansler,
63-year-old farmer, his son, Ho
mer L. Fansler, and a four-year
old girl, Barbara Harris.
Capt. J. A. Tandy of the state
highway patrol identified the gun
man as William Harris, 39, father
of the slain child.
Officers set up road blocks and
began an extensive search of the
hills.
Captain Tandy said it was pos
sible for a man to elude capture
for, days in the rugged country.
Harris is well asquainted with the
area and was described as an ex
cellent shot.
Sheriff Hubert Wright said Har
ris’ wife had been living at the
Fansler home recently, although
it was not definitely known what
motivated the shooting.
Harris appeared at the Fansler
farm unexpectedly last night and
shortly afterwards began firing.
Russia’s
(Continued fzein Page One)
sia, since most of the world’s non~
Communist countries already are
doing everything they can to stop
the North Korean invasion of
South Korea.
The Soviet resolution, on the
other hand, was not even con
sidered seriously by the Council
majority, even though Soviet Dep
uty Foreign Minister Jakob Malik,
this month’s Council president,
filed it under the heading of
peaceful settlement of the Korean
question,
The Soviet proposal in effect
would have the Council call off its
efforts to drive the North Koreans
back to the 38th parallel and leave
the Communists in control of all
but the southern tip of Korea.
, Then, under the Soviet plan, peace
l talks would begin. ;
A giraffe has horns at birth,
Red Shore Guns
.
Fire At Vessel
HONG KONG, Aug. B—(AP)=—
Red China shore batteries early
today fired on but missed a Nor
wegian freighter carrying cargo
to Japan, main allied base for the
Korean war.
It was the third straight day
ships have been shelled in the sea
approaches to Hong Kong harbor.
The others were American and
British
Hong Kong reports said the Chi=-
nese Reds are building up “de
fense outposts” on the Larms and
Wansham islands near Hong Kong.
The British Crown colony is a
FOR THE BEST IN |
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE -
ALWAYS COME TO i
pesoto §|LVEY'S pLymourn
TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1950.
key harbor for funneling supplies
into all of southeast Asia,
Five shells were fired at the
4,951-ton Norweglan freighter
Pleasantville* The ship was 15
miles south of Hong Kong, in the
same area where the other vessels
were shelled,
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
CARITHERS, MRS. CARRIE—of
1374 West Hancock Avenue,
passed August 6, 1850, at a
local hospital, Funeral announ
ced later. Mutual Funeral
Home,