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PAGE SIX
ATHENS BANNER HERALD
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
And I besought thy disci
) . ®LN ples to cast him out, and they
\ could not,
! And Jesus answering said,
O faithless and perverse gen
eration how long shall I be with you, and suffer
you? Bring thy son hither,
" And as he was yet coming, the devil threw him
down, and tare him, And Jesus rebuked the un
clean spirit, and healed the child, and delivered
him again to his father,—St. Luke %0:41-42.
~—Mrs. W. G, Hansford, 357 Peter Street, City.
Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel.
The Washington Notebook
BY PETER EDSON
} NEA Washington Correspondent
| WASHINGTON.—(NEA)—In & fireside chat on
{ May 26, 1940, the late President Franklin D. Roose=
velt made his sensatiorial suggestion that the United
Stateg should harness the machinery of this coun=
try to build 50,000 airplanes a year,
He got panned all over the country for that,
| you'll remember, and a lot of people thought he was
: ¢razy, The way it turned out, the TUnited States
?vbuilt. 75,000 planes in one year of the war and more
i than 100,000 in another,
Whether the President knew it was going to turn
| out that way or not is now immaterial. The main
~function of his 50,000 plane statement, was that it
served to dramatize tne fact that the United States
ould have to perform bigger miracles of produc
tion than it had ever performed before, Today you
can only hope that President Truman’s fireside
chat will have the same effect.
Though $25 billion have been appropriated by
“the present Congress for military procurement, the
armed services are talking only in terms of about
8,000 new planes this year. True, the U, S. Air Force
ds bigger and far better than it wasg in 1840, True
also that procurement plans for the sl6 billion sup~
plemental military appropriation now before Con«
gress have not been announced.
! It’s probably just as well that these figures on
plana and tank and gun procurement aren’t made
üblie. The potential enemies have been told too
much already about American defenses or laek of
them, Still there is a need to dranvatize the needs of
the hour.
FTIME TO STEP ON THE STARTER
~ There are still too many people standing around
moaning, “Tell us what to do.” There is still too
“much business as usual, Somehow, the war orders
haven't been coming through as fast as they should.
“4And members of cengressional military and ap=
propriations committees — saying that they have
ivem the armed services everything they've asked
for—are wondering why. .
Military requirements still aren't known, Only
{ now is the National Security Resources Board mak=
.H!}‘g its estinrates of how much steel, aluminum,
| copper and manpower the country will need. These
are the basic requirements of any defense effort,
Yet six months after the shooting starts, the coun=
try still does not know what is to be required of it
' except in the most general terms,
Maybe President Truman’s new budget message,
to be sent to the 82nd Congress when it convenes
in January, will shed more specific light.
Looking back on the history of the last war now
provides the best clue as to what's ahead. Almost
exactly 10 years ago, on December 20, 1940, Presi
dent Roosevelt made another fireside chat. That
was when he uncorked his phrase about the United
States having to become “the arsenal of democracy.”
No peace move would be possible, said Roose=
velt, “until the unholy alliance of Gernrany, Italy
and Japan had abandoned its plan for world con
quest,
“Never before since Jamestown and Plymouth
Rock has our American civilization been in such
danger as now,” the President went on, “The Nazi
masters of Germany have made it clear that they
intend to enslave the whole of Europe, and then to
use the resources of Europe to dominate the rest of
the world. , .5, ;
“The experience of the past two years has proven
bevond doubt that no nation ean appease the Nazis,
No nation can tame a tiger into a kitten by stroking
" ¥
THE MELODY LINGERS ON
Does all this have a familiar ring! Substitute
“Communist” for “Nazi” and substitute “Russia
and its satellites” for “the wunholy alliance” and
President Truman would have had his fireside chat
already written for him.
The country is perhaps a little bit ahead of where
it was 10 years ago. Some of the lessons have been
learned, though not many. i
Lend-lease was still a year away in 1940, Today
there is a foreign arms aid program on the books,
and operating!
Inflation is much more of a menace now than it
was then. There was no manpower shortage then,
but a surplus to draw on.
1t seems that political dissension is always in sur=
plus supply, Then it was Senator Burton K. Wheel
er warning against involvement in foreign wars and
pleading for peace offers. Today it is the new iso
lationists who would have the United States get out
¢+ European entanglements, and who seem unwill
ine even to make the sacrifices at home necessary
for the country's defense.
Tien want youth and too many of them think that
a woman oer 30 has lost her arches and her
glands: — Mrs, Nelle Brooke Stull, founder of the
Widow and Widowers’ Club of America.
Arguments Against A-Bomb
Would Tie Our Hands in War
In their widely circulated ‘Stockholm appeal”
for the outlawing of the A-bomb, the Russians did
their work well. A good part of Europe already is
acting as if the bomb were indeed outlawed.
Even among those who understand the A-bomb
is no more immoral than any other weapon of war,
there are urgings against its use by the U. S, unless
it has been dropped on us first.
This is strange reasoning from allegedly mature
men. Europe’s keenest observers, including some
satellite diplomats, believe firmly that our posses
sion of the atomic bomb is the one great deterrent
to a Russian effort to conquer western Europe.
There's not the slightest doubt that at this stage
of our military preparedness the bomb is the only
weapon we have which could inflict real damage
on the Soviet Union should it march tomorrow. To
be barred from using it is to be robbed of an effec
tive club against Russian aggression, .
Furthermore, Air Force officials believe there
would be grave risk in waiting to employ the A
bomb, Though doubters continue to turn up, our
experts believe the Russiang have the bomb them
selves, Certainly, to play it safe, we must assume
they have and can make at least a dozen or a
score a year,
What would it mean to allow the Russians to
drop the bomrb first? Not only colossal damage to
key cities, but possibly the immobilizing, right at
the start, of our own A-bomb effort.
The Russians know where our strategic air force
is based, where our oil is, where A-bombs are pro
duced, If we're lucky, they don’t know where fin
ished bombs are stored.
It is probable, too, that we know a great deal
more about their strategic areas than we are giving
out. There is an unfortunate tendency in this coun=
try to minimize our strength, actual and potential,
and magnify the enemy’‘s strength and resources.
But it is evident the enemy might, with suicide
squadrons carrying either the A-bomb or even just
old-fashioned block-busters, do irreparable harm to
our key striking force before it could make itself
felt, To riskthat is to risk total defeat.
Strategic air officers are wholly aware of this
peril and it worries them greatly. So, incidentally,
does the prospect of internal sabotage which might
ground many bombers we'd need to carry the A
bomb to Russia, :
Should a war come, our hands must not be tied
as to the use of the one great weapon in our arse
nal. Those who argue that we should wait are,
perhaps unconsciousty, arguing a counsel of defeat,
Get in Line, Tovarish
The Communists are the party of the people, re
member? And we in America are wicked capitalists,
remember?
Then note this: General Wu and his Chinese Red
delegation at the UN decided the other night to visit
New York's fanred Radio City Music Hall. Accord
ing to newspaper accounts, they demanded the best
seats in the house, immediately.
" Told all seats were filled and they’d have to wait,
Wu demanded to see the manager. The latter said
that in America nobody was tossed out of a seat,
no matter how impressive the dignitary who wants
it,
Wu said he'd pay for the seats, which diplomats
usually don’t have so do at the Music Hall. But the
manager pointed out that everyone inside had also
paid and was entitled to stay. !
By this time, the theater manager was so dis~
turbed that he insisted Wu and party pay anyway.
So--the Chinese Reds waited AND paid. It was be
lieved to be the first time a diplomat didn’t get in
free, .
Undoubtedly this incident will be ignored in
Moscow and Peiping, But if it were reported, can't
you see the headlines? ‘“Another Defeat for the
People.” “Chinese Discrinrinated Against by Am
erican Imperialists.” “Red Entry Into Theater De
layed While Americans Conceal Vital Radar Equip
ment.”
From the capital we learn that the mighty Pen
tagon, one of the world’s largest buildings, is filled
to overflowing. The armed forces are taking over a
nearby whisky distillery and two paper mills in
northwest Washington to house their growing staffs.
It might be a good security plan for Secretary of
Defense Marshall and other top officials to move
into the distillery as soon as it’s fitted out. From
what we've heard of the Russians and their mara
thon drinking, any place that either is or could be
conterted into a distillery is an*unlikely target for
their bombers,
The UN road to peace requires universal collec
tive security agairfst armed aggression, That we
must achieve and I believe we shall achieve it. The
member nations have been taking historic strides
in that direction before and during this session of
the General Assembly, —UN Secretary General
Trygve Lie,
The greatest dilemma facing teachers in a dem
ocracy is ot develop Americans’ ability to distin
guish and act between gullibility that makes us
easy prey to propaganda, on the one hand, while
avoiding cynical skepticism that makes “us believe
everything is false and all men are liars.—Los An=
geles school superintendent Dr. J. A. Stoddard.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
From Little Haberdasher to Big Haberdasher
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Woman Doctor Vetoes Mixing
Of Oil and Water Personalities
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]Dr. Adele Streeseman: “The onl‘fl ]
way to make everyone you know
{like you is to be a hypocrite” |
BY GAILE DUGAS
NEA Staff Writer
NEW YORK— (NEA)—You are
a neurotic. Everyone is, without
exception. This is the expert opin-.
ion of Dr. Adele Streeseman, who
As a pioneer in the field of psycho
somatic medicine.
“Everyone is a little neurotic
around the edges,” Dr. Streeseman
says: “It’s only when your emo
tions start giving you trouble that
there’s cause for worry, As long
as youre adjusted to the world
with a reasonable degree of hap
pinesg, a tinge of neuroticism does
you no harm.”
Most people don’t wunderstand,
Dr. Streeseman points out, that
neurosis does not mean nerve
trouble; it means trouble with the
emotions. And emotions are ai
ways deeper and more powerful
than ideas.
Dr. Streeseman is a tall, hand
some woman with taffy colored
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Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:35 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:45 p. m.—Air Conditioned,
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South aund
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:30 a, m.—(Local).
4:00 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
An‘ivses .:the)nsi 2(Daily, Excapt
unday 35 p.
Leaves Athens (Dafly,&nfl
Sunday) 4:15 p. m,
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
From Lula and Commeros
Arrive 9:00 a. m.
East and West '
Leave Athens $:00 a. sk,
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains.
Week Day Only
Train No, 51 Arrives 9:08 & :
Train No. 50 Departs T:00 §.
hair and a smile which lights up
her eyes. As a graduate of the
Womens Medical Coilege in Phil«
adelphia, she was the first woman
interne admitted to St. John’s
Episcopal Hospital in Brooklyn.
An expert on chest disorders,
she’s been medi®al advisor to the
Woman’s Prison Association of
New York City for 15 years. As
a Fellow of the American Psycho
somatic Society, she spends most
of her time and energy in the
practice of psychosomatic medi
cine. .
“That term,” she says, “is a big
one for a simple idea. It means
that the mind and body are one
and cannot be separated. What
ever affects one, affects the other.
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Thus, we can cure an ulcer but
unless we cure the cause of the
ulcer—anxiety—it will come back.
Literally, your feelings can make
you sick.”
People generally are troubled
these days and they have reason
to be, Dr. Streeseman believes. But
inner fears can cripple the ability
to cope successfully with real
problems.
It’s been said that neurosis is
the price we pay for civilization.
This means,. Dr. Streeseman points
out, that everyone has problems.
One road to a happy emotionally
healthy life is to understand that
other people really do have prob
lems, problems in every respect
like yours. You are not alone; you
are not unique.
Dr. Streeseman tends to become
stern when the happiness boys,
who advocate that you can be
/ 7 77
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NEW
1951
well adjusted and get along with
everyoné by joining a compliment
club, ‘are merioted: <)
“The only possible way for you
to make eve%ne like you is to be
a hvnocrite, There are some people
you'll never get on with, in the
same sense that oil and water
never mix. The best thing to do is
not to attempt to mix in such
“Dare to be yourself; yvou're not
80 bad. The traits you have that
you think are so awful are uni
versal. It’s only that false sense o*
gmiq,ueness which is so frighten
ing.’
“In her book, “You're Human,
Too!” psychoanalysis is a young
science, just beginning to move.
“It can only be,” she says, “a
matter of time before a full-blown
neurosis will carry the reproach
of a proved typhoid case—and that
reproach not one directed to the
patient.”
BORDER ROAD PLANNED
SRINAGAR, Kashmir— (AP~ —
Pakistani-held Gilgie Agency, in
northern Kashmir, and the north
west frontier province of Pakis
tan will be linked by a 375-mile
motor road, according to informa
tion received here.
The road will start in Hunza
state, Gilgit Agency, and end at
Pashawar, capital of the frontier
province. A jeep road between
Gilgit and Balakot, north-vrest
frontier province, was constructed
by the Pakistan army two years
ago, but is blocked most of the
year by snow.
Gilgit Agency is strategically
important because it borders the
U. S. S. R., Afghanistan and China
as well Pakiston.
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: OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8 P. M.
Notice
Our offices and warehouses will be closed
from December 23 until January 2 for
Christmas Holidays.
Rowe Warchouse and Fertilizer Co.
Hulme Fertilizer. and Warehouse Co.
Farmers Mutual Warehouse Association.
(Cotton Warehouse)
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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1950,
Georgia 4-H club members at
tending the 29th National 4-H
Club Congress in Chicago this
year brought back with them scv
en national championships,
DAY MUNEY FOR MILLIONS
St. Joseph aspirin
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT 10¢
ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN |
Sold in Athens At i
CROW’S DRUG STORE |
Athens’ Most Complete ]
Drug Store.
Athens Lodge
No. 790
7
B.P. 0. Elks. °
1260 South Milledge Ave.
Meets on 2nd and 4th Thurs
days at 8:00 P. M. each month,
Free suppers for members in
good standing from 6 to 7:45
on meeting nights.
Our dining room is open every
day except Monday, for Elks,
their ladies and guests,
P. 8. JOHNSON,
SECRETARY
Phone 790.
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