Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Police &%
s e,
Blotter Y 9% &%
: BY ED THILENIUS
¢ RECORDER'S COURT
: An aged negro defendant being
placed on eight years of probation
highlighted action in Recorder’s
Court this morning as Judge Olin
- Price heard a total of nine cases.
“ The defendant ealled ‘Four-Spot’
.~ for some unknown reason, grate
- fully accepted the probation sen
- tence ‘and promised the court they
- wouldn’t see him In the next eight
. ¥years. It had been exactly that
. long since he was before Record
- er's Court on a drunkenness
charge. . On that occasion he re
% ceived a suspended sentence but‘
not that long a probation.
. Ancther negro defendant, who |
gave his girl friend a $lO bill to
get &nged so he could lend herl
a dollar, wound up in court this
morning charged with disorderly
<o ?% i |
e told the court that when his |
girl friend returned she had spent |
all of the $lO and they became in
volved in argument. The dispute
reached such an intensity that
colored neighbors summoned the
police,
Although no case had been made
this mrwrning against the girl
oLI
TN \T:- il
= 4 % /
Y=
e - ,‘/
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Many other Used Cars
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Credit and Terms
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(. A TRUSSEL
~ Molor Co.
“Established 1918”
at BrozAi Phone 1087
friend, one was docketed and she
’ will be tried tomorrow., The boy
friend was stuck with a $12.75
fine.
Another disorderly conduct case
,‘involved three aged negroes—a
i brother, a sister and an uncle, The
| uncle was charged with disorderly
conduct for ripping the lock off
the door to his room.
When he promised the court to
‘replace the lock, the case was dis
missed.
Two cases of drunkenness and
disorderly conduct against two ne- [
gro women were postponed until|
tomorrow, and another defendant
was cited in contempt of court for
failing to appear for trial on a
charge of meter violation,
| A STRANGE DOG
The city dog pound has a strange
critter on its hands today and
would like for someone to call for
same,
- Dr., H. B. Hodgson said today
‘that his department was holding a |
huge white mongrel, wire-haired |
dog with lemon spots over the
eyes, |
Dr. Hodgson said the dog’s ears
had been clipped to a sharp point
and his face resembled that of a
Ku Klux Klan mask.
The animal wore an out of date
Atlanta health tag. Dr. Hodgson
said that if no one claimed the
animal by Thursday it would be
destroyed.
Carson
(Continued from Page One)
resentative of the Associated Mas
ter Barbers and Beauticians of
America. In his address to the
meeting, Mr. Wagner said, that
“the purpose in organizing na
tionally is to obtain that strength
and intelligent unity necessary in
thes accomplishment of Nation
wide needs and reforms. To ele
vate the barbers’ professional
ideals, and to implant in all mem
bers of the barber prcfession a
higher appreciation of themselves
and their work:”
The new organization has been
formed for the betterment of bar
ber service in Athens and is not
a labor union nor is it affiliated
with a union, it was pointed out.
Elected to serve with Mr. Car
son, were W. W, Hilley, vice-pres
ident, Emory B. Coile, secretary
treasurer, Marion E. Carson, re
cording secretary, Augustus B.
Bryant, guide, Curtis L. Lovern,
sergeant-at-arms, and William J.
Culberston, chaplain.
William E. Parten was appointed
chairmen of the sick committee
and secretary-treasurer of the
benevolent fund.
The Master Barber Chapter 997
of Athens will hold regular
monthly meetings.
e i
Indic »
(Continued fron. Page One)
here as a cover,” the Russian
added.
Malik said he came back to the
security council not as Soviet de
legate but. because council rules
provided that Russia should take
its alphabetical turn as council
president. Malik said he met a
“deaf wall of resistance to his
proposals.”
“But you couldn’t expect any
thing. else from a country like
France which has been carrying on
a dirty war against Vietnam,”
Malik said in another statement
obviously aimed for propagan
da use in another quarter of the
far east.
Property damage from torna
does averages about $12,000,000 a
year in the U, 8.
Forty-two old habitation sites of
Nunatagmiut Eskimos have been
found in Alaska.
L‘IEAMN I
All Summer Dresses
Regardless of Price—All Summer Dresses must
be moved to make way for Fall merchandise.
$1095 to $22.95 Values. 1
Only $5.00
ALL SALES FINAL PLEASE i
The Fashion Shop |
Athens DeMolays
To Attend State
Conclave Friday
A delegation of twenty DeMo
lays from the Frank Hardeman
Chapter of DeMoley will leave
Athens Friday morning for the
State Conclave in Columbus, Geor
gia, August 18-20.
. The delegation will be acconr
panied by Weaver “Dad” Bridges,
chapter adviser, and C. O. Baker.
~ Represented at the state affair
will be chapters from throughout
Georgia. One of the largest turn
outs in conclave history is antici
pated by the Columbus chapter
sponsoring the event this year.
More than $5,000 has been allotted
that chapter by the city council of
Columbus toward providing the
best state gathering of DeMolays
ever attended in Georgia,
Abit Nix, Athens, will be the
featured speaker to the convention,
He will address the gathering in a
public ceremony on Saturday.
Further business will include the
performance of degrees and the
election of new state officers for
the next year.
An entertainment packed pro
gram has been planned for the
three day session, Friday will be
spent at one of the country estates
near Columbus. A banquet will be
held Friday night followed by a
mid-night show at one of the Co
lumbus theaters.
Saturday will be spent at Fort
Benning where the delegates will
witness a demonstration of the
power of the infantry school. Sat
urday night will feature the open
meeting and address of Mr. Nix.
The Conclave will adjourn Sun
day after the installation of the
state officers and the selection of
the site of next year’s convention.
The Athens delegation will return
Sunday afternoon and leave Mon
day morning for the annual house
party at Tallulah Falls.
Tax
(Continued from Page One)
to preserve peopte with fixed and
limited incomes who would be
crushed by making regular income
tax rates higher and higher.”
“If we're to save our whole sy
stem we've got to preserve the
middle income people,” George
said. “We can’t crush them”.
George did' not eloborate on
what is contemplated in the way
of an excess profits levy on in
dividuals. There were indications
the study would cover the pos
sibilities of putting a super-tax
on increases in income since the
Korean war commenced or from
some other fixed date.
Higher Rates :
The idea might be to put high
er rates on that part of a per
son’s income that is above the
pre-Korean war income, so that
it may not be necessary to im
pose highest rates on persons
whose income is not increased.
However, George and other
committee members said they did
not regard the order for the stud
ies as in any way a commitment
for later approval of sales taxes,
transcion taxes and excess pro
fits levies for individuals and
partnerships.
The finance committee move
to explode new possible sources
of federal revenue came as it vir
tually completed action on the
President’s “quickie” $5,000,000,-
000 tax boost.
The committee already has ap
proved unanimously a boost of
about $3,000,000,000 a year in in
dividual income taxes, and sl,-
500,000 additional for corporations,
Congress may put it on Mr. Tru
man’s desk by September 1.
. .
Major Fickett
On Reserve Duty
THIRD ARMY HEADQUAR
TERS, Fort M¢ Pherson, Ga., Aug.
—Maj Richard N. Fickett 111, of
1237 Prince avenue, Athens, a
member of the Army’s Organied
Reserve Corps, is now on a short
tour of training duty in the Third
Army Adjutant General’s section,
Maj. Fickett, who wvolunteered
for the tour, reported for duty here
Sunday, August 13, and will com
plete the tour in time to return
to his Athens home by August 27,
S T ST AT ~"': \-b‘,
THE BANNER-MERALD, ATUENS, GEORGIA
| (Continued from Page One)
| the full support of our citizens.”
The Governor issued the fol
} lowir’lig proclamation:
| raffic Safety Campaign
A Proclamation
BY THE GOVERNOR:
WHEREAS: Georgia traffic
deaths are up approximately 18
percent over 1949, To date we have
counted 458 of our citizens dead
compared with 399 during the
same period last year, and
WHEREAS: 18,320 persons have
been injured, many of them per
manently crippled, during the first
seven months of the year. The
economic loss is enormous, and
WHEREAS: Most of the deaths
and injuries are occurring on the
open highways, on the outskirts of
our cities, and witkin our smaller
municipalities, and most of them
are caused by callous and irre
sponsible actions by drivers who
should, and who do, know better,
and
WHEREAS: This disastrous
trend is not only a threat to the
life of all who use the highways,
but a blight on the morals of our
tinres; and I am sure all thinking
citizens and all conscientious of
ficials share with me the desire
and the determination to curb the
disgraceful slaughter of our citi
zens, now
THEREFORE: I, Herman E, Tal
madge, Governor of Georgia, call
upon all men of good will in Geor=
gia, and upon their public ser
vants in the counties and the cities
and the subdivisions thereof, to
join in immediate and specific ac
tions in the promotion of traffic
safety; :
That they use every opportuni
ty to impress upon our citizens the
seriousness of violating the traffic
laws, which were enacted for the
protection of life and property, and
join in this campaign of education
against reckless and dangerous
driving,
I ask all citizens, and especially
our young people whose future
holds so much promise, voluntarily
to comply with the law, and to
vigorously support the actions of
their officials against those who
consider themselves beyond the
law and beyond any concern for
their fellow men,
In Witness Whereof I have here
unto set my hand and caused the
seal of the Executive Department
to be affixed, this August Ist, 1950.
(signed)
HERMAN E. TALMADGE
Governor
By The Governor:
(signed) William H. Kimbrough
Secretary, Executive Department.
Triple-Slayer
Awaiting Trial
GAINESVILLE, Ga., Aug. 15—
(AP)—A 30-year-old former con
vict faces trial in North Carolina
for a day of killing that brought
an angry mob of 4,000 to the door
oflthe jail where he was being
held. Ly
Curtis Shedd of Walhalla, 8. C.,
a confessed triple-slayer, was
turned over to North Carolina au
thorities last night, He wag charg
ed with murder.
Agent Woody Wilson of the
Georgia Bureau of I[nvestigation
said Shedd told officers he shot
John Boyter to death with a shot
gun in the mountainous Georgia-
Carolina border country near
Clayton, Ga., and later kilied the
dead man's two daughters near
Highlands, N. C.
Shedd implicated Mrs. Boyter
in the slayings, Wilson said, and
the woman was held for question
ing, but was released last night.
Wilson said he was convinced that
Mrs. Boyter was not with Shedd
the day of the slayings.
Veteran Newsman
Leaves For Korea
ATLANTA, Aug. 15—(AP)—
Bem Price, 33-year-old veteran
Associated Press writer in the At~
lanta Bureau, has been assigned
to coverage of the war in Korea.
Price will leave Thursday for
New York City. After briefing in
the general offices of the As
sociated Press there, he will be
flown to war coverage Leadquart
ers at Tokyo—probably early next
week,
Price joined the AP at Atlanta
in 1941 after working as 2 re‘gorter
for the Birmingham Age-Herald
for four years, He joined the U. 8.
Marines early in 1942 and won
promotion to lieutenant before the
war ended,
The name Mexico is derived
from the Aztec word “Mexitli,”
title of their national war god.
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GOP Senafors *
Call Huddle On
Mobilization -
WASHINGTON, Aug. 15—(AP)
~—Senate Republicans, divided over
how far to go in mobilization on
the home front, ‘called a confer
ence today to discuss the issue.
In advance of the closed meet
ing Senator Ives, (R-NY)#told a
reporter the session probably
would change few opinions and
come nowhere near achievin(f GOP
unanimity. Any recommendations
by a majority in the party pow
wow would not bind the minority.
The Republicans arranged their
huddle as the Senate itself headed
for another round of voting on
proposed amendments to an ad
ministration - blessed economic
controls bill which prompted the
meeting of GOP senators.
The bill, similar to one already
approved by the House, would
give President Truman an almost
free hand to invoke wage-price
rationing controls whenever he
saw fit. It also would authorize
credit controls allocation of scarce
industrial materials, and other
production controls.
The senate approved by voice
vote late yesterday an amendment
which would guarantee the meat
packing industry a “reasonable
margin of profit” if Mr. Truman
decided to put price ceilings on
meat,
Senator Maybank (D-SC), spon
sor of the amendment, . said its
“one and only purpose” is to pre
vent a revival of World War II
meat shortages and black markets.
What effect the provision would
have on any retail meat price
ceilings could not be forecast with
any accuracy. }
The amendment is almost iden=
tical to one which Congress wrote
into the OPA law in'l94s. May
bank told newsmen it didn’t wipe
out shortages and black markets
then because “it never had a fair
test—controls on meat were re
moved in 1946 before the amend
ment had a chanece to work.”
At today’s Republican confer
ence one group of GOP senators
was headed by Ives and another
by Senator Taft of Ohio.
The Ives group is backing the
essential provisions of the pend
ing economic controls bill. The
Taft group wants to narrow the
powers ~ the measure would con
fer on Mr. Truman.
Taft himself has an amendment
which would reserve to Congress
the right to say whether and when
wage - price - rationing controls
should be put into effect. In the
same group, Senator Capehart (R-
Ind) has introduced an amend
ment which would knock out of
thelsbill all authority for such con
trols.
Andrews Sets Fall
Hearing On Linder
ATLANTA, Aug. 15 —(AP)—
U. S. District Court Judge Neil
Andrews has set Sept. 5 as the
date for the hearing of a suit
against Georgia Agriculture Com
missioner Tom Linder.
Linder was accused yesterday
by George E. Darlington of Charl
ton county of having blueing pour
ed in a shipment of Florida milk
to ruin it. Darlington asked for an
injunction to prevent further de
struction of milk in interstate
commerce.
In the suit Darlington said he
buys milk and milk products from
Southern Dairies in Jacksonville,
Fla., and sells them in Georgia
territory which is not under the
jurisdiction of the state milk con
trol board. He said he applied to
Linder in June of 1949, for a li
cense to import Florida milk,
heard nothing from the applica
tion. 1
Darlington said he again asked
for action on his application in
July of 1950, but still heard noth
ing from Linder.
(Continued From Page One)
29-year-old naval officer hushand
probably wen’t be named official-~
1y until the christening. That cere~
mony, if eustom is followed, will
take place at Buckingham Palace
in four to six weeks,
There's been speculation, but
nothing authoritative on the choice
of & girl’s name. :
Those E)rebably in the running
are the old royal family names of
Xilcntoria, Mary, Elizabeth and
e,
KNo-Reds
(Continued from Page One.)
of the peninsula,
Close-In Combat
The fight went Into hand-to
hand combat with bayonets and
rifle stocks used as clubs. Thé ne
groes, capturing the craggy
heights, freed some 200 wounded
U. S. artillerymen who had been
pinned down by the Communists
in last week’s westward drive to
Chinju by Marines and army in
fantrymen.
In the northeast American troops
captured Yuktong, nine miles west
of Pohang air base on the sea of
Japan coast.
South Korea’s capitol division
smashed down from the north and
took the town of Imam nearby.
Combined allied forces moved to
within half a mile of Pohang, sec
ond most important port on the
east coast until the Communists
overran it last week.
But the hardest fighting Tues
day night was centered below
Changnyong. There 12,000 Reds
were trying to break out from a
narrow bridgehead, bought at a
heavy cost in lives. A breakthrough
there would imperil the Taegu-
Pusan supply line to the east.
Hold High Ridge ol
Americans held their ground in
the center and northern end of the
battle for the Changnyong ridge.
They concentrated on retaking the
southern end.
AP Correspondent Jack Mac-
Beth reported one U. S. battalion
fell back more than a mile in the
day-long fighting Tuesday, One
U. S. company of about 200 men
was forced back 2,500 yards, Mac-
Beth added in a field dispatch.
The correspondent quoted a
staff officer as saying reverses on
the ridge were not major setbacks.
All could be retaken, the officer
said.
Strong evidence that stubborn
allied resistance had jammed the
Red war timetable came in a
command from North Korean’s
Premier Kim I 1 Sung, the com
mander-in-chief who sent his
forces to war June 25. Kim order
er his men to wipe out American
and South Korean troops by the
end of August—within 16 days.
Quick End
In an order of the day broadcast
from Pyonglang, the northern
capital, Kim #old his men to end
the war swiftly because the U. S.
and South Korean defenses would
gain in strength if Reds failed to
force a quick decision.
Prisoners said the northerners
had set Tuesday —the V-J Day
anniversary of liberation from Ja
panese rule — as the day for the
capture of Taegu.
Allied intelligence officers had
expected 60,000 troops massed in
the Waegwan sector to jump off
in a drive for Taegu. But the at
tack did not materialize when ex
pected. However, portions of the
Waegwan Reds managed to force
a crossing at Tuksong, 14 miles
southwest of Taegu.
Allied intelligence officers said
the Reds apparently were waiting
for a tank column to spearhead the
Waegwan drive toward Taegu.
First Cavalry foot troopers there
stopped the Reds atthe river’s
edge, killing 1,000.
Along the curling 140-mile front
the Communists have assembled
150,000 troops, a numerically far
superior force to anything the Al
lies have to throw against them.
Many Indians on the 16-million
acre Navajo reservation in New
Mexico and Arizona still resort to
ancient ceremonies to cure illness.
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‘Bl f,{?%\’ blue, and black.
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Raolaat f‘lé&w}%’ Sizes 12 - 20 & 38 - 44
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Deewry
(Continued from Pagé One)
of the principal phases and tech
niques of journalism—newspapers,
press services, radio, television,
magazines, pictures and photo
graphy, column-writing, and cri
tics and criticism of all these.
Many of the most controversial
subjects of the day, as they re
late to communications media, are
treated in this book, Wide as is
the scope of the subject-matter,
no less so is the variety of the
talent which comments on these
important facets of democracy in
action, Herein speaking are the
president of the American Society
of Newspaper Editors and the di
rector of the American Press In
stitute. Here are a high official of
a broadcasting network and the
editor of the leading trade journal
in the field of radio and television.
Here are editors of two of Ameri
ca’s oldest and best magazines—one
a literary periodical and the other
a popular weekly with an enorm
ous circulation. Here is the repre
sentative of a great financial daily,
the very name of which symbolizes
capitalism "and its jeopardy
through a cold war that at this
writing is much warmer because
of the Korean incident. Here is
the spokesman of a great camera
making house which has been so
successful, both with its product
and its advertising, that its trade
name has largely become a syn
onym for the word camera itself.
Here are others, all equally ex
pert and all very readable. And
here too is much practical advice,
most of which may be readily ap
plied on various levels and in all
the fields embraced in the word
journalism . . .”
Other Books
#Journalism at the Mid-Cen
tury” will be similar to “Contem
porary Journalism,” published last
year, and also edited by Dean
Drewry.
Other books by Dean Drewry:
“Contemrporary American Maga=
zines,” “Concerning The Fourth
Estate,” ‘Post Biographies of Fam
ous Journalists,” “More Post Bio
graphies of Famous Journalists,”
“Book Reviewing,” “New Yorker
Profiles of Famous Journalists,”
“Magazine Journalism: A Selected
Biography” and “Facts About
Magazines From The American
Observer.”
CHARLES FACES
BESHORE TONITE
BUFFALO, N. Y. Aug. 15—
(AP)—Ring-rusty but confident
Ezzard Charles returns to action
tonight an almost prohibitive fa
vorite to blast longshot Freddie
Beshore out of his path to a
lucrative crack at Joe Louis.
Ezzard is rated at least 1 to 5
to belt the day lights out of Be
shore and hold on to his NBA
heavyweight championship. The
15-round title fight starts at 9 p.
m. (EST)
Mirrors won’t streak when you
clean them if you use a solution
of vinegar and warm water, ap
plied with a clean cloth and then
wipe off with an ordinary news
paper to dry.
Large quantities of cryolite,
necessary in refining aluminum,
are found only in Greenland.
The “Vanishing Indian” now is
a myth, and New Mexico’'s Indian
population is increasing slowly but
steadily.
3 e T R T R T
TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1950
(Continued From Page One)
have been added to the University
faculty are Dr. J. H. Burkhalter
who will work With microwave
spectroscopy, and Dr. €, D. Cogper
and Dr. W. C. Sears who will work
with ultra wviolet and infrd gped
spectroscopy.
Nearly every state in the Union
has had a tornado at some time.
ePI 5 E k
et s o
de o e
Mrs. Hilton Shuff, Route 1, Box
42, Ville Platte, Louisiana, has a
son, a daughter, a hus%and, &
small garden and her housework
to keep her busy from morning un
til night. She says she isn’t a bit
tired after such a day now that
she is taking HADACOL+«to give
her system those precious Vita~
mins B-1, B-2, Niacin, and Iron.
Before taking HADACOL her sys
tem suffered a deficiency of these,
Here is Mrs. Shuff’s statement:
“I have been sick and weak for
some time. When you are a house
wife on the farm you have lots of
work that is tiring, specially when
you are sick. At night I couldn’t
rest and food, no matter what I
ate, didn’t agree with mre. Then my
sister told me about HADACOL—
she said HADACOL would really
make me feel better. I took her
advice and began taking HADA-~
COL. 1 felt better after the third
bottle. So far I have taken 15
bottles of HADACOL, I eat any
thing I want to, I sleep well every
night and my housework doesn’t
tire me at all. Anything I say
about HADACOL would be an
under-statement. I think HAD
ACOL is wonderful.”
You, Too, Can Be Helped
as have thousands of other fine
folks if you, too, suffer a deficien
cy of Vitamins B-1, B-2, Niacin,
and Iron, which HADACOL cen
tains. HADACOL helps build up
the hemoglobin consent of your
blood (when Iron is needed) to
carry these precious Vitamins and
Minerals to every organ, and every
part of your body—to the hear.,
liver, kidneys and lungs, even to
the eyes, hair and nails.
Give HADACOL' a chance to
day. Refuse substitutes. Don’t let
anyone tell you something else is
“just as good.” Insist on the
genuine HADACOL. No risk is
involved . . . because HADACOL
is sold only on a strict meney
back guarantee. You'll feel great
with the first few bottles you take
or, your money will be refundec.
Trial size, only $1,25; Large Fami=~
ly or Hospital size, $3.50.
(c) 1950, The Leßlanc Corporation.