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PAGE SIX
U.S. INDUSTRIAL STRENGTH
“GIRDS IN GLOBAL CRISIS
NEW YORK — America's in
dustrial might continues to rein
force the chorus of confidence
comm{ from the business and fi
nancial forces of a free economy.
Electric power, basic in gird
ing democracies to meet and mas
ter the threat of Communist ag
gression, is on the record now
with a strong promise,
% 04
fifl BIG REASONS
& TO GO TO
f\‘// g
N Y HAVANA
Z P
&5 VIAP&O
iU 1 L
S\“Pbou ;
Foreign Glamor
T o)
Lil i
Bas . 5
qain Fare
‘ Overnight from Miami to won
b derful Hovena by sea on the 5.5.
FLORIDA —the perfect climox of
. Yeny vocetion! Fare includes com
i Yortable kerth and meals at seo.
Children under five FREE —— under
[, 12 halffere,
i s Pius Toxes
t. only 40 pouno TR
j
. es e i - --— oy
y ! SCHEDULE |
1! Lv. MIAMI 6:00 p.m. I
i | Mondeys - Wednesdays - Fridays |
‘ Lv. HAVANA 600 p.m. |
1 1 Tuesdays « Thursdays - Sundays |
; Yu;o-y—o: :: P:C:;o—;l-l;w-; &—6 r;—ru
’S¢ you aVel t lor com
plete ir atio write The
Peninsu - O jental S. S.
i Company, P. O. Box 479, Jackson
ville 1, I a. Ask about sea-Air
Cruise T ¢ira cost!
/7 TN\ THE CAREFREE WAY
D 3{ 0 )ro GO TO CUBA!
¢; :.—’/fi 1 —*d‘ .." \l
» s -
THE PENINSULAR & OCCIDENTAL SLS.CO.
i JACKSONVILLE 1. FLORIDA .
WY EXTRA 5717
e FOR MOTH PROOFING, PAINT SPRAYING.
‘?\\ SHAMPOO RUGS, WAXES FLOORS, ETC,
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sy o st YD
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REBUILT BY ACE EXPERTS . AP “‘-\
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WITH ACE PARTS R
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) . ‘ %IS
‘ e IR e WITH
\ =P /M ATTACHMENTS
O (sl7 95
Va N\ 2 YEAR
. GUARANTEE
O\ PO NOT CONFUSE THIS
R\ f MODEL X! WITH ;
§ “tt¥ ;k- OLDER MODEL
%’,‘»& i HOSE -
* Greot hf"""‘f’“ RUG NOZZLE
UGS o FLOORS » MATTRESSES » UPHOLSTERY
CLOTHES » BLANKETS o MOULDINGS ¢ RADIATORS
!“E XTI
#lB "
s Write Dept. G — Send No Money *
® 406 Peachtree 5t., N. E., Atlanta, Ga, :
z | would like a frse home demonsttation of a rebuilt ELECTROLUX Vacuam :
! Cleaner, tomplote with 7 attachmants; plus sprayer, all for only $12.95. %
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| “Full cooperation in the pres
ent crisis” by the motion picture
industry, important training and
informational media, is pledged by
Ned E. Depinet, <fn'esident of the
newly formed Council of Motion
Picture Organizations, Inc.
Another recent encouraging eco
nomic development comes from
the American Cotton Manufactur
ers’ Institute, Inc., with formation
of the Cotton Textile Industry
Mobilization Committee.
Charles A. Cannon of Kanna
polis, N. C,, heads the group which
is to “clear the way for a speedy
orderly, and efficient adjustment
of the operations of the American
cotton textile industry to the emer
gency conditions resulting from
the Korean conflict and the ex
pansion of the nation’s defense
program.”
Leaders of Nine Industries
Leaders of nine industries mar
shaled by the National Association
of Manufacturers are to add their
voices in a radio roll call to this
ground-swell of pledges coming
from business. : ,
Morris Sayre, New York, presi
dent of Corn Products Refining
Company, spoke for food; David
Graham of the Weyerhauser Tim
ber Company, Tacoma, Wash.,
lumber; Clarence Randall, presi
dent Inland Steel, Chicago, steel;
Donald Comer, Sylacauga, Ala,,
chairman of the board for Avon
dale Mills, textiles; Charles J.
Stilwell, | Cleveland, president
Warner and Swasey Company,
machine tools.
Dr. Robert E. Wilson, Chicago,
chairman of the board Standard
Oil Company (Indiana), oil and
chemicals; Gwilym A. Price, Pitts
burgh, president of Westinghouse
Electric Company, electrical ap
pliances; Harry A. Humphreys,
jr., New York, president of Uni
ted States Rubber, rubber, and
Louis V. Sutton, Raleigh, N. C.,
president of Carolina Power and
Light Company, public utilities.
Mr. Sutton made the position of
the electric industry clear in a
report to W. Stuart Symington,
chairman of the National Security
Resources Board.
Better Shape Than in 1941
Acting in his role as president
of the Edison Electric Institute,
Mr. Sutton stated that “the elec
tric industry is in even better
shape to meet the present defense
emergency” than it was in 1941.
This year the electric industry
will have a total generating capa
bility of 67,500,000 kilowatts —
néazrly double that of January
1941,
Ability of the electric industry
to supply enough power to meet
“the needs of the country” is
contingent on no imposition of
government controls which
“would prevent completion of the
construction program under
way,” explained Mr. Sutton. New
construction will add another 12,-
000,000 kilowatts of generating
capacity by the end of 1952.
From the motion picture front.
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MOTOR-DRIVEN SWEEPER S—of these California-designed motor-driven sweepers,
one at left is for warehouses and schools while dual broom at right operates on streets.
Mr. Depinet’s pledge was con
tained in a letter to President Tru
man. COMPO is already organiz
ed and ready to work with the
government, said its president.
The council includes representa
tives of exhibition, distribution,
production, the Hollywood crafts
and guilds, the trade press, and
variety clubs. gliin
In many of these industry-gov
ernment developments, there runs
a strain of “what we learned in
World War II we’ll not forget
now.” Cooperation based on real
istic approaches is general,
Typical is the explanation that
came froin George P. Swift, presi
dent of the American Cotton
Manufacturers Institute, in com
menting on that industry’s mobi
lization committee.
Said Mr. Swift: “It will serve
as a link between the industry
and those charged with creating
and directing the nation’s prepar
edness program. It will strive to
avoid the mistakes and smooth out
the difficulties that have always
attended the transition from a
peacetime to an emergency eco
nomy.” S :
Such a concept, based on
knowledge from past experience
and present achievement, is the
pitch pipe which may well tune
the assembling chorus of indus
trial and government voices into
a paean of victory.
40 BOATS TO PARTICIPATE
"IN U. S. ATLANTIC TUNA TEST
| AP Newsfeatures
MONTAUK, N. Y.—The eighth
annual United States Atlantic
Tuna Tournament will be held off
the tip of Long Island on Sept. 6,
7 and 8, tournament director
Charles W. Strong announces.
. Tourngment chairman Walter F.
O'Malley, who is vice-president
and secretary of the Brooklyn
Dodgers, says that 40 boats will
participate in the event.
Seven trophies will be present
ed. Entries have been received by
some 25 tuna clubs, among them
Atlantic City, Babylon, Bay Shore,
Belmar, N. J., Brielle, N. J., Cape
May, N. J., Freepott, Long Island
Tuna Club, New York Athletic
Club, Ocean City, N. J, and
Sheepshead Bay.
The Brielle Marlin and Tuna
Club, winner of the event last year,
is the only team to have won the
tournament twice. Other win
ners have been from Forked River,
N. J., Freeport, Neptune, N. J,
Atlantic City and Sheepshead Bay.
Our Safety Education Division of
the Georgia State Patrol says that
estimates show more than half the
drivers involved in fatal acci
dents to be violating a traffic reg
ulation. They tell us that theere’s
reason for placing each traffic
sign you see. Obey them to the
letter and increase your chances
of survival. .
Free Book on Arthritis
And Rheumtism
EXCELSIOR Springs, Mo.—So
successful has a specialized system
proven for treating rheumatism
and arthritis that an amazing new
book will be sent free to any read
er of this paper who will write for
it.
The book entitled, “Rheuma
tism,” fully explains why drugs
and medicines give only temporary
relief and fail to remove the causes
of the trouble; explains how for
over 31 years The Ball Clinic has
helped thousands of rheumatic
sufferers.
You incur no obligation in send
ing for this instructive book. It
may be the means of saving you
years of untold misery. Adress
your letter to The Ball Clinic,
Dept. 3907, Excelsior Springs,
Missouri, but be sure to write to
day.
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-11:22 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:45 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
- East—
*l2:ls 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 Wesy
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. m.
Mixed Trains.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHEN&A GEORGIA
Oldest Cow Tester Cites
Improvement In Dairy Work
Georgia’s oldest cow tester, A.
H. Burns, Clarke county, who be
gan dairy herd improvement work
back in 1922, called attention this
week to some of the progress made
in improving dairy herds in’ this
state during the past 28 years.
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Its a Very Satisfying Feeling
Y;s, it's good to slip into a truly fine
automobile and sense its richness, its
comfort, its room.
And there’s a great thrill in touching off
the waiting power of a great-hearted
straight-eight and feeling its swift
response at any speed.
It’s fun to count the quick, admiring
glances thrown your way.
It’s nice to have a car that parks easily,
for all its inches. It's very pleasant to
do away with gedrshifting and clutch
pedal pushing, and know in its stead the
utter smoothness of Dynaflow Drive’s
silken transmission of power.
And still that doesn’t probe the depths
of a ROADMASTER owner’s secret
satisfaction.
For while he knows he has a fine car,
by its look, its feel, its appointments—
While he has performance at his com
mand that needs play second fiddle to
no other on the road—
While he enjoys a very special measure
of creature comfort in the quite match
less gentleness of ROADMASTER’s ever»
level ride—
He knows too that he has made an
Tune In HENRY J. TAYLOR, ABC Network, every Monday evening.
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When Mr. Burns began work
testing dairy herds to determine
milk and butter fat production in
comparison with feed costs and
feed consumed back in 1922, he
did all his traveling by train and
depended on the dairymen to meet
GEORGIA M OTORS INC.
Athens, Ca..
Broad and Lumpkin
Phone 3141
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM
him at the train station or ke had
to walk out to the farms, At that
time there were only seven dairy
herds in Georgia being tested and
among these seven herds were
those of Mrs. Robert Iverson and
William McPherson, Athens; A. O.
Blackmon and J. W. Wcodruff,
Columbus; J. H. Hooks, Warthen;
and Pebble Hill Plantation, Tho
masville. |
According to John E. McGowan,
assistant dairyman for the Georgia
Agricultural Extension Service,
188 Georgia herds are on test in
the state now,
More than a dozen testers are
needed to work with the owners
of these dairy herds, visiting each
heard once per month. On each
trip the tester weighs and records
the milk production of each cow,
the butter fat content of this milk
and the feed consumed by each
animal.
Mr. McGowan continued that
while this program has made a
great deal of progress during these
years, it still covers a very small
percentage of the dairy herds in
the state and could be expanded
to the benefit of farmers in many
instances.
He said that Dairy Herd Im
provement Association testing
work is a sure way to determnie
the cows that are producing the
profits in any herd, and a way to
eliminate those animals that don’t
pay_for their keep.
Motorists, our Safety Educa
tion Division of the eGorgia State
Patrol reminds you that the am
ber light is a caution sign, not a
GO sign. Don’t enter that inter
section unless you have the green
light. Amber is used only to give
people who are caught in it a
chance to get out. Enter on amber
and you can be dead wrong,
The National Geographic. So
ciety says half the known sunken
%reasure is aboard Spanish gal
eons.
exceptionally wise investment,
He has spent his money for the things
that make a fine car fine—and nothing
simply for show.
He has paid the lowest price per pound
in the fine-car field — he has the very
satisfying feeling of knowing his dollars
have given him solid merit, and solid
merit alone.
We'd like to have you try ROADMASTER
in honest comparison with the highest
priced cars to be found. We'd like to have
you try to match it for room, for com
fort, for finish, for handling ease and for
ability on the road.
Then check the prices—and see if your
own sense of value doesn’t advise sign
ing up right now with your Buick dealer
for a Buick ROADMASTER.
r g ; ‘ .
oadmaster
L ' W/Z‘/? D{/é}aflohf ‘ &//2/:3 >
Warren C. Thurmond — President Monroe, Ga.
“YOUR BUICK DEALER FOR 20 YEARs” * * Phone 4311
143 Spring St.
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FINE WORK~—Ted Bettendorf, .
who built a unique castle home
in Fox River Grove, 111, points
out the intricate work that wenj
into making the cement an
stone blocks for the walls, Mr,
Bittendorf spent 19 years com
pleting his home, modeled on a
castle in Vianden, Luxembourg,
where he was born.
el
_The ribbon-tailed bird of para
dise lives only in the high Mt,
Hagen district of east central New
Guinea,
. The principal export of Tibet
is wool,
FEirst of the Fine Cars in Value
LOOK ar THe
. .
Typical Delivered Prices
ON 1939 BUicks
MODEL 44p
Sl shacta B s 32030
danet with de lyxe trim,,,
MODEL 41D
Solek SMICIAL bass, i SZ, " 4
door Sedan with de luxe trim
MODEL 52 S
Buick SUPER 6.pqgs, 4-door 23 48
RivioraSedan........-u :
MODE( 72R (i"u;lruhd)
Buick ROADMASTER 6-pasg, )
4-door Rivierq Sedan, inclyd. 53000
tng-whifewa" firos..i.ic .o
Optional ©quipment, state and local taxes, if any, ad. .
ditiongl, Dynaflow Drive standard on IOADMASTIQ
~Mmodels, Optional gt Oxtra sost o, SPECIAL qnd SUPER
Mmodels, Prices may vary slightly in cdioinlng come 4
Munities due 4o shipping charges, Al Prices subjeep
to change without notice,
SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1950
Sugar Pine trees were first dig.
covered by David Douglas, a
Scotch botanical ca}&m. on Oge
tober 26, 1826, in ornia,
THINK
By DR, A, HARRY TIMM, JR. ‘
Think for yourself and reason
the proposition in your own mind,
What is the logical result when
the nerve supply {o any particular
organ is inter«
ferred with, op
5 when these vitay
T @ forces of health
: @%’ £| are unable to fol
1. W |low their normal
S j |channels?
.~ & 8 | Chiroprac.
g i dtic adjustments
Gy . not only restore
g . Ihealth; they alsg
. i build health, The
Bl wamiold adage: “An
ounce of prevention is worth a
pound of cure”—nray bg conside
ered trite, but it is sound truth,
The Chiropractic principal brief«
ly stated, is this; The cause of
disease is in the person afflicted,
Adjustments correct conditions
that produce illness.
The function of every organ in
the body is controlled through the
brain, by mental impulses, which
are transmitted over nerves, Any
impingement or pinching of tha
delicate nerve fibers, interfering
with the free flow of vital nerve
force causes impaird or abnormal
function, This is disease. Thig
nerve interference is produced by
a vertebral subluxation,
The Chiropractor—Expert in his
knowledge of the spine—locates
the point of nerve pressure, and,
by adjusting the subluxated verte
bra, releases the pressure. Nor
mal condition—health—is the ree
sult,
(No. 11 of a series of educational
articles published in the public
interest to explain and illustrate
the practice of Scientific Chiro
practic. Dr, A, Harry Timm, Jr.,
550 Cobb Street, Athens, Ga.,
Phone 4397.) (adv.)
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