Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
_arke Counfy Cancer Drive
“aaches Within STOO Of Goal
The 1951 eancer drive is grad
ually drawing to a close as the
fund elimbs within S7OO of its
goal,
During the past two and one
half weeks, Clarke county volun
teer workers headed by John Bon
cdurant, have received a total of
$2600 to aid in the fight against
cancer,
This week’s campaign is being
directed principally at the Uni
versity. Direct solocitations have
been sent through the mail to
University students and faculty
members.
However, Athenians and Clarke |
(Continued From Page One)
Tech; Joe Bryan, Florida, Tom
Curbie, F. S. U,, all par 365; Stan
Mosel, North Texas State; Larry
Bentley, Rollins, both 375; Buster
Reed, North Texas State; Don Jan
uary, North Texas State; Karl
+=.Nessier, Rollins; and Tom Back
man, Georgia Tech, all 38s.
Reed barely missed a double
eagle on the number six hole when
his second shot stopped a quar
ter-inch short of the cup. He
made an eagle three on the hole,
Funeral Notice
DAVISON.—The friends and rel
atives of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E.
Davison, 320 University Drive;
Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Bowers, Jr.,
Washington, D. C.; Miss Ida
Davison, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
E. L. Ackess, Washington, D. C,,
are invited to attend the funeral
of Mr. Albert E. Davison, Sat~
urday afternoon, May 12th
(hour to be announced later)
from the graveside in Oconee
Hill cemetery. The following
gentlemen will serve as pall
bearers: Mr. Roy Bowden, Jr.,
Mr. Chappelle Matthews, Mr. |
Carlisle Cobb, Jr., Dr. Goodlow
Erwin, Mr. Howell Erwin, Jr,,l
Dr. Sam Talmadge, Mr., King '
Crawford and Mr. Joe Betts.-Dr. |
J. W. O. McKibben will om'-'
ciate, Interment will be in |
Oconee Hill cemetery. Friends |
are asked to please omit flow-‘
ers. Bernstein Funeral Home. i
SMITH. — The relatives and |
iriends of Mrs. Etta Mae Smith |
of Athens; Mr. and Mrs. R, L. |
Lundburg, Honolulu, Hawaii;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Belmont,’
Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs.
Grady T. Smith, Atlanta; Mrs. |
Etta Culberson, Clinton, S. (Y.;I
Mrs., Donie Smith and Mrs. x
Noah Brown of Hull, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Brown, Anderson, |
S. C.; ' Mr. and. Mrs. George
Brown, Pitts, Ga.: Mr. and Mrs. I
H. L. Brown, Plant City, Fla.;
Miss Linda Darlene Smith and
Mr. Thomas Wayne - Smith of
Atlanta, are invited to attend
the funeral of Mrs. Eita Mae
Smith, Saturday afternoon, May
12, 1951, from the ‘Pleasant
Grove Baptist Church at three
o'clock. Rev. C. J. Reed, pastor
of the Church of God, and Rev.
Poy Smith, pastor of the Pente
costal Holiness Church, will of
ficiate. Mr. George Petty, Mr.l
Norman Carty, Mr. - :Leroy l
IMoore, Mr. Heywood Strick
land, Mr. Herbert Bennett and
Mr. Lawrence Johnson will
serve as pallbearers. Interment
will be in Pleasant Grove cem
ctery. Bridges Funeral Home.
1950 Stude:raker Commander, radio, heater,
V. S. W. tires, overdrive.
1950 Studebaker Champion, 2 door sedan, over
drive, heater, good rubber.
1950 Studebaker Champion, starlight coupe,
overdrive, W. S. W, tires, heater.
1950 Plymouth Club Coupe, heater, W. S. W.
tires, seat covers.
1949 Studebaker Champion, 2 door, overdrive,
heater, low mileage.
1949 Chevrolet Club Coupe, good rubber, extra
clean. : .
1949 Lincoln, 4 door, radio, heater, W. S. W.
tires, overdrive, piastic seat covers.
1947 Packard, 4 door, radio, heater, overdrive,
electromatic drive, plastic seat covers.
1942 Dodge, 4 door, heater, good rubber.
1941 Studebaker Champion, 2 door, heater, over
drive.
1942 Studebaker Club Coupe, overdrive, heater,
plastic seat covers.
1936 Chevrolet, 2 door, runs gocd.
1949 International 12 son pick-up with high
wood sides, good rubber.
1947 Studebaker 12 ton, late model motor.
1946 Ford '2 ton, good rubber, motor in good
condition,
1942 Ford 2 ton, motor reconditioned, good
rubber.
1938 Chevrolet V 2 ton, new finish, good tires,
real good motor.
Broun Motor Co.
287 W. BROAD STREET
PHONE 4546
Countians are requested to con
tinue their contributions, Al dee
nations will be used in the best
possible way to combat cancer —
she second greatest killer in Amer
ca.
Cancer strikes one out of every
six persons—one out of every two
families. This means that the di
sease can strike right “close
home.” Approximately fifty peo
ple died in Clarke County last year
as a result of cancer.
Local residents now have the
opportunity to play a part in sav
ing similar cases next year. Dona
tions should be mailed to “Cancer-
Athens.”
|Former Athenia
Engineer G
The Georgia Section of the
American Society of Agricultural
Engineers held its annual meeting
at Panama City, Florida, May 4
and 5. Following a very interest
ing and instructional program a
slate of new officers were elected.
William D. Kenney, formerly of
Athens and now from Tifton, Ga.,
was elected Chairman. Mr. Ken
ney served two years as Secretary
and Treasurer of the Georgia Sec~
tion and one year as Vice-Chair
man previous to his election as
Chairman, Mr. Kenney received
his B. S. Degree in Agricultural
Engineering from the University
of Georgia in 1942,
After serving four years as an
lofficer in the U. S. Army, part of
| which was served in the European
| Theater, he returned to Athens
}:md accepted the position of In
structor with the University in the
Agricultural Engineering Depart- |
ment. Later he transferred his ac- |
tivities to Tifton, Ga., where he
has been conducting research on
peanut mechanization at the Geor
gia Coastal Plain Experiment Sta- |
tion for the University of Georgia |
and the U. S. Department of Agri- |
culture. |
John T. Phillips, jr., Vice-Pres
ident of the Lilliston Implement
Company, Albany, Ga., was elect
ed Vice-Chairman and James M.
Stanley, Agricultural Engineer,
Tifton, Ga., was elected as Secre
tary and Treasurer of the State
Agricultural Engineer Section.
Athemnians
(Continued Prom Page One)
Theo Dalton, John W, Foster, Jon
athon J. ‘Westfall, Robert J. Le
vit, Pauline M. Henry, Matthias
Stelley, Dagma L. Floyd, T. T.
Beck, Harold F. Morris, Arthur
Randolph Kelly, Joseph Paul La-
Rocea, Linville Laurentine Hen
dren, Tomlinson Fort, Herbert B.
Henderson, Ellis Merton Coulter,
Hubert .W. Owens, Elon Eugene
Byrd, Eugene Mather, John Alton
Hosch, Edith Langdale Stallings,
William Porter Kellam, Edd Win
field Parks, Merle Charles Prunty
jr., William Olin Collins, B. O.
Williams, Thomas M. McHatton.
The brittle star, which resem
bles the starfish, has been found
at the deepest ocean depths ex
plored by man.
Local Officials
‘ d Publ
Attend Public
3 5
Health Meeting
SAVANNAH — The following
Clarke County Health Department
personnel attended the recent
| meeting of the Georgia Public
' Health Association: Dr. Wedford
' W. Brown, health commissioner;
[Miss Ann R. Smith, public health
nurse; Mr. Curtis L. Proveaux,
Epub]n' health engineer; and Miss
Louise Story, bacteriologist.
| Health Work
[ Emphasis was on ‘“Local Health
Work”™ as more than 500 members
of the Georgia Public Health asso
ciation gathered in Savannah re
cently for its 22nd annual meeting.
Presiding was Dr. C. D. Bowdoin
of the Georgia Department of
Public Health.
Work of the local health units,
of the county health officer, of the
public health nurse, the sanitarfan
and other workers, wag first
stressed by the keynote speaker,
Dr. Roscoe Kandle, of the Amepi=
can Public Health association,
Civil defense, cancer, heart“@fs
sease, syphilis and diabetes, all
from the angle of actual health
work in the counties, were among
the topics of other speakers.
Speakers
Among prominent out-of-state
speakers were Dr. Evan W. Thom
as, of Bellevue Hospital, New
York; Dr. J. R. Heller, National
Cancer Institute, Public Health
Service; Dr. C. J. Van Slyke, Na
tional Heart Institute.
Dr. T. F. Sellers, Georgia health
officer cited Georgia’s recent pro
gress in the field of public health.
! (Continued From JPage One)
l operative arrangement with Chi
!na at this time, that would be a
| very great loss to them of some
thing they no possess.
! ‘:Here is a situation where the
lChmese can be brought to feel,
by continued highly destructive
losses, that the Soviets have let
them down. Therefore, the situa
tion is more dangerous.”
Hickenlooper View
Hickenlooper said he was un
aple to agree fully with Marshall's
view,
“It seems to me,” he said, “that
if the Soviet interest is so much
in accord with that of the Com
munist Chinese, that theat inter
est would dictate that they would
see the Communist Chinese
through to victory in spite of any
thing.
“And if we continue as we are
in Korea and the Communist Chi
nese face what may seem to be
certain defeat, under that policy,
that by that same argument the
Russians are going to come in any
way to-save them from that de
feat.”
Hickenlooper added that “we
might just as well take after them
back in Manchuria with our bom
bers and destroy their build-up
depots and so on, because the rea
soning would seem to dictate that
Russia would come in just as
quickly one way as the other.”
Marshall eommented that “of
course, that is bound to be a mat
ter of judgment.” Hickenl!o~per
agreed.
The secretary said that “there
‘are decided technical involvments
as to possibilities one way or thc
other.”
SELF-CONTROL URGED
ATLANTA, May 11—(AP)—A
woman official from Washington
said last night that self-control is
the way to stop “a fatal, ever wid
ening spiral of inflation.”
She is Miss Anna Lord Strauss,
executive vice president of Presi
dent Truman’s commission on In
ternal Security and Individuals
rights. She spoke at a meeting of
the Georgia League of Women
Voters’ Council.
MOROL|NE
/ TROLEUM JELLY
~PUR/TY WA
FUNERAL NOTICE
17 . (COLORED)
L LANE, CPL. HORACE A, — Died
May 7, 1951. The friends and
relatives of €Corporal Horace A.
Lane, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lane,
Mr. and Mrs. Tuther Winfrey,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Parrott,
Mr. Samuel Lane, Miss Marilyn
1. Lane! Miss Mattie L. Lane,
Master Popé Roy Lane, 111,
} Master Franklin M, Lane, Mr.
|- and Mrs. Llewellyn Hunt, all of
Athens, Ga.;: Mr. Roy Lane, Sr.,
Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs.
Will Andrews and family, Ath
ens, Ga.,, and New York City;
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Collins,
Mr. Eddie Hunt, Mr., and Mrs.
Harper Hunt, all of Athens, Ga.;
. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Flem
| ming and family, Detroit, Mich.;
Mr, and Mrs. Lamar Fortson,
Chicago, IH.; Mr. and Mrs.
| James Maddox, Toledo, Ohio;
{ “Mr. Cleveland Lane, Chicago,
{ Ill.; Mr, and Mrs. Frank Reid,
| * New York City; Mr. and Mrs.
| - Clifford Howard and {family,
i Chattanooga, Tenn.; Mr. and
{ Mrs. Llewellyn Hunt, Jr., Cleve
i land, Ohio; Mr, Pope Henderson,
i Chieago, Ill.; Mrs. Lucy Howard
{ and family, Athens and New
i York; Mr. and Hrs. Louie Bunk
! ley and family, Mr., and Mrs.
| Johnnie Jornes, Mrs. Eula Bar
| row, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jones,
all of Athens, Ga., and a host of
i other relatives and friends are
| invited to attend the funeral of
{ Corporal Horace A. Lane, Sun
’ day, May 13, 1951, at 3:00 ¢’clock
from the Friendship Baptist
Church. Rev. J. H. Geer will
officiate, assisted by Rev. C, C.
Hughes, Interment in the Spaul- |
y ding cemetery., Members of the
| V. F.W. Post 3910 will conduct
‘ ceremonies and will serve as
! pallbearers, and are asked to
meet at the funeral home at 2:30
' please. McWhorter Funeral
Home in charge, ;
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Smith Services
Services for Mrs. Etta Mae
Smith, widow of the late James T.
' Smith, will be eonducted Satur
day afternoon at 3 o'clock from
Pleasant Grove Baptist Church.
Officiating will be Rev. C. J.
Reed, of the Church of God, and
Rev. Roy Smith, pastor of the
Penticostal Holiness Church.
Burial will be in Pleasant Grove
Cemetery, Bridges Funeral Home
in charge of arrangements,
Pall-bearers will be George
Petty, Leroy Moore, Herbert
Bennett, Norman Cartey, Heywood
Strickland and Lawrence John
son.
Mrs. Smith died in a local hos
pital Thursday morning at 11:40
o’clock after an illness of three
months. She was 56 years old.
She is survived by two daugh
ters, Mrs. R. L. Lundburg, Hono
lulu, Hawaii, and Mrs. Frank
Belmont, Brooklyn, N. Y.; son,
Grady T. Smith, Atlanta; two sis
ters, Mrs. Ella Culberson, Clinton,
S. C., and Mrs. Donie Smith, Hull;
four brothers, Noah Brown, Hull,
Joe- Brown, Anderson, S. C.,
George Brown, Pitts, Ga., and H.
L. Brown, Plant City, Fla., and
two grand children, Linda Darlene
Smith and Thomas Wayne Smith,
both of Atlanta.
A native of Madison county,
Mrs. Smith had lived in Athens
for the past twenty-seven years,
residing at 367 Oconee street. She
was a member of the Church of
God and had many friends who
were saddened by her death.
(Continued From Page One)
Lonnie O’Quinn of Jesup, hurdles,
high jump, pole vault; Sophomores
—Jim Rackley of Thomasville,
broad jump, 100,220; Hal Weller
of Athens, hurdles, high jump,
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broad jump; Lauren Coile of Ath
ens, mile, two mile; manager—R.
C. Cunningham of Jacksonville,
Fa,
The freshmen follow: Otho
Dodd of Commerce, George Harri~
son of Marietta, Gene White of
Commerce, Red Miller of Marin
ette, Wis., Georic Dortch of Fort
Scott, Ark., 80l Young. jr., of
Macon, Pete Peterson of Tunnell
Hill, Ga.,, Hank Feldmann of
Nyack, N. Y., Jim Pyle of Auéul
ta, Lan Spndiflno of Jersey City,
N. J., Fred Haeussler of Cincin~
nati, and Art Benerofe of Port
Chester, N. Y.
One species of brittle star, an
inhabitant of the ocean bottoms,
can discard all of its body except
stomach, mouth and five arm roots
when disturbed.
1 GOOD, CLEAN USED CARS =
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. ’ .
Bishop’s Views
LAGRANGE, Ma{/I 11—(AP)—
Bishop Arthur J. Moore told a
joint meeting of civic clubs that
“it was a gnat blunder to rob us
of MacArthur’s leadership in the
Orient at this time.”
The Bishop spoke on “Turmoil
in Asla,” in his first public ag
pearance as president of the
Council of Bishops of the Metho
dist Church. He geads Methodism
in 52 countries.
MORAN SENTENCED
NEW YORK, May 11—(AP)—
James J, Moran, close associate of
former Mayor William O’Dwyer,
was sentenced today to a maxi
mum five years in prison and fined
$2,000 on a charge of giving per
jured testimony before the U, 8.
Senate Crime Committee.
PAY HIKES
MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga., May 11
~(AP)—All state hospital em
ployes who receive S2OO or less
per month have been given raises
ranging from $8 to sl9 monthly.
Workers in high income brackets
will get raises at the start of the
fiscal year, July 1.
The raise increased hospital pay
rolls by $260,000 annually .
THE RUGGED LIFE
MISSOULA, Mont.— (AP) —
When Louis Albert found a bob
cat in his woodshed, he didn't go
for a revolver or rifle. He just
picked up a handy club and dis
patched the animal with a solid
blow to the head.
.~ The retired rancher who lives
west of here, has the pelt, more
than trhee feet long, to show the
predator no longer exists.
FRIDAY, MAY 11,1951,
AA CARNIVAL
Strong squads from Lanicr of
Macon and Richmond Academy o
Augusta are expected at the siaic
Class AA track meet here this
week-end. Individual standoutg
from Jordan High, Albany, Colum
bus and Thomaston andg other
schools should make the compet;.
tion keen,
Athletes will compete in track,
swimming, riflery, and tennis.
s
Broadway has become a Syno
nym for the New York theatrieal
district, and yet there is not a leg
itimate theater on the street today,
They all are on side streets. The
only theaters on Broadway are
movie houses.
The ancient Babylonians ang
Egyptians were expert wool work
ers. i