Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
4 s
Policemen’s Work
Fouh .
tade Attractive
TOKYO, Mmay 14—(AP)—Tokyo
officials have hit on a system to
make beat-walking attractive to
policemen.
Cops will patrol in pairs—one
policeman and one policewoman.
Linder
(Continued From Page One)
which the National I\'lnufn(‘tm‘ors‘
Association has chllenged validity
of the law.
Former Texas Agriculture Com
missioner J. E. McDonald, Ralph
W. Moore, Washington, D. C., Ro
bert M. Harris, New York, and the
National Farm Committee are ac
cused along with Linder of lobby=-
ing for farm prices without regis
tering as lobbyists as required by
the law.
Three Percent Treasury
Bonds of 1951-55
(Dated September 15, 1931)
Notice of Call
.
. for Redemption
To Holders of 3 percent Treasury
Bonds of 1951-55 (dated Sep
; tember 15, 1931), and Others
' Concerned:
1. Public notice is hereby given
that all outstanding 3 percent
Treasury Bonds of 1951-55, dated
September 15, 1931, due Septem
ber 15, 1955, are hereby called for
redemption on September 15, 1951,
on which date interest on such
bonds will cease. {
2. Holders of these bonds may,
in advance of the redemption date,
be ' offered the privilege of ex
changing all or any part of their!
called bonds for other .interest
bearing obligations of the United
States, in which event public no
tice will hereafter be given and an
official cireular governing the ex
change offering will be issued. |
3. Full information regarding
the presentation and surrender of
the bonds for cash redemption un
der this call will be found in De- |
partnrent Circular No. 666, dated
July 1, 1941.
John W. Snyder, X
{ Secretary of the Treasury.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT, i
Washington, May 14, 1951. |
“For. To cleanse ten-
Sl der parts, ease
.ChufEd red, smarting
) o skin and quick-
N KIN ly promote com=
L% fort, depend on
PESINDLOTE,
! AnD SOAP
{ ‘
. :
' With Plenty of Usefulness
; Every prospective used car- buyer
. hopes to find one better than his
Ouahi ——. own or he wouldn’t want to trade
: or buy. Your expectation of quality
will definitely be satisfied if you
cdrive one of our Goodwill Used
Cars. .
, Is it a two door, four door, or coupe
‘ vou are looking for? Is it a black,
S le S blue, green, or another color you
i desire? Do you want an automatic
cdrive or manual drive? We have
them all.
.
" This is the big factor. You have
‘ P probably said to yourself many
r'ce e times, if I could find the right car
‘ at the right price and the right
* terms—well you can now—Prices
‘ much below regulated Government
Ceiling Prices.
| OPS OUR .
CEILING PRICE
| 1948 PONTIAC 6 Streamliner
; Sedan. Coupe; black, hydra
: matic, heater and radio. ]57500 1295.00
| 1949 PONTIAC 8 Deluxe four
door, blue with white tires,
hydramatie, heater, radio,
other accessories. 209500 169500
1949 PONTIAC 8 Deluxe four
door, green with white tires,
hydramatic, heater, radio,
other accessories. ‘ 208500 168500
1948 PONTIAC € Sedan Coupe,
two-tone grey with hydrama
tic, heater, radio, low mile- /
age. 1535.00 1295.00
1948 PONTIAC 8 Deluxe Sedan £
Coupe, blue with hydramatic, e
radio, heater. ] 59)00 142500
1946 PONTIAC 8 four-door Sedan, o
black with radie. heater. .1 130.00 9)000
1950 PACKARD Deluxe four
door, blue with white tires,
keater, overdrive, low mile
age. 1815.00 1375.00
1949 PACKARD Deluxe four-door,
black with overdrive, heater, e
radio. . 1855.00 1365.00
1948 PACKARD four-door, blue
sith radio, heater, low mile- ok
age. . 1695.00 1250.00
1946 CHEVROLET Aero Sedan,
blue with radio, heater. > IOZOOO 89500
1949 FORD Custom Ciub Coupe,
blue with white tires, heater. . ] SOSOO 122500
1942 PONTIAC 6 Four-door; heat
er, radio. 555.00 265.00
W
238 W. Hancock Ave. : Phone 34
!Salvafon A
'Home Day s
|
I S
Set Tomorrow
Mayor Jack R. Wells has pro
claimed tomorrow as Salvation
Army Home League Day here,
The proclamation follows:
“On Tuesday, May 15th, Mrs.
Lieut.-Commissioner A. E. Ches
ham, Territorial Home League
president of the Salvation Army,
and delegates of The Salvation Ar
my Home League, from Athens,
Gainesville, Macon, Toccoa and
two Mountain Missions will meet
in Athens.
“In recognition of the work of
this organization in providing
Christian influence, fellowship,
guidance and instruction to women
of the communities served by The
Salvation Army Home League,
and in appreciation of its services
for community betterment, I, as
Mayor of the City of Athens, here
by proclaim and designate Tues
day, May 15th to be The Salvation
Army Home League Day in Ath
- ens; and, I extend to Mrs. Lietut.-
- Commissioner Chesham and to the
delegates from surrounding com
munities a most cordial welcome
to Athens.” |
(JACK R. WELLS)
Mayor of the City of Athens. |
CZECH-STYLE JUSTICE ‘
VIENNA— (AP) —The Aus
trian Socialist Party recently pub
lished a document it claimed prov
ed how East Europe’s Communist
governments send anti-Commun
ists to labor eamps without trial.
The document, which the social
ists said had fallen into their
hands, was alleged to be a letter
delivered to a certain Rudolf Vik,
living on Stalin street, in Brno,
Czechoslovakia. |
The quoted letter said in part: |
“District Commission Number |
13 in Brno for the Transfer of |
Persons in Corrective Labor
Camps, which was established in
compliance with paragraph three
of Law 247 of October, 1948, in
forms you of your enrollment into
a corrective labor camp, after in
vestigation and on the basis of the
above law, for two years because
you are a politically untrustwor
thy person and constitute a threat
to the security of the Peoples Dem-~
ocratic regime.
“You may appeal against this
decision to the Ministry of the
Interior within 15 days. Accord
ing to paragraph 5 of the above
law, such an appeal does not post
pone the term of enrollment.
Signed; Josef Rorak, Chairman.” l
:.. s @ Y
At Presentation of Peabody Awards for Radio and Television "
; | a 0 §.m
R SRS i L — : : )
v.;g _é.' ¥U: ‘f’ % . s N '.Ak P i t;« p g _‘ % ' .
G N 7 N : 5 e‘"“:;? i 1
.;--’ -/‘ . :‘{ 3 ¢ : i : sL : : ,j
A e e 5 on, . e 2 Blas, o 5 e e £
A.‘, ‘,O :: 5‘4 v«‘: . o‘, & : ‘i”’ ;£ ’ } 'A;& P
"‘ 0’ .?va ] ) ;“';{‘;":If.:;' 7 . !' W o ,&f .
f%v%’f* s 4 f'fif;;ir‘ghm L : : !
s e ’ .
‘;‘k:(;: y M”;\, B 2 I ¥ B W NN PSRS AR b o
NEW YORK.—._cme of the winners and program par
ticipants in the recent 11th annual presentation of the
George Foster Peabody Radio and Television Awards,
at a luncheon meeting of the Radio Executive Club of
New York at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Left to right
(front row) : Robert Saudek, vice-president of the Am
erican Broadcasting Company, who received special
award for resisting of organized pressure on the net
work; Edward Weeks, editor of The Atlantic Monthly
magazine and chairman of the Peabody Advisory Board,
who presented the awards; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Col
man, who received award for best radio entertainment
(drama) with program, ‘“Halls of Ivy”; and Ira Hirsch-
Chief ‘
(Continuea From Page One)
stationed at Fort Bragg, N. C. |
The officer said he shot the par
atroopers to protect his own life
when they attacked him sndl
threatened to kill him. Bragg re
ported he arrested the men Friday
night for being absent without
leave and was driving them from
Hawkinsville to Warner Robins
Air Force base when the shooting
occurred, The paratroopers were
unarmed and handcuffed together.
He said they jumped him as he!
drove across a narrow bridge.
A Houston county coroner’s jury
listed the shootings as self-defense.
The Hawkinsville City Commis
sion held a special meeting yester
day and gave Chief Bragg a vote
of confidence. The commissioners
commended him for his “outstand
ing record as a law enforcement
officer during his 12 years of serv
ice.”
Commission Chairman Bob
Massee said he made a complete
investigation of the case and “I
am convinced Chief Bragg acted
purely in self-defense and had no
other alternative under the exist
ing circumstances.”
Army authorities also are inves
tigating the slayings.
R ‘
(Continued from Page One.)
below the normal casualty expec
tations for an army, in the field.
There have been two ugly inei
dents since the stalemate began.
One was the mid-February Mas
sacre North of Hoengsong when
nearly half the 38th regiment was
trapped. But this too was partly
because of the quick death of the
South Korean Eighth Division and
partly because the regiment was
strung out over 17 miles.
The other unhappy event was
the almost total loss of the British
Glouscester Battalion April 23 to
25 with nearly 600 casualties.
Millions rely
DOUBLE | .t
FILTERED| bttt
zanfrxym QUAU“ bur’;is. ggaffoel:
S 10F MOROLINE
m PETROLEUM JELLY
B e e
- i
RWS T SRSV SR A !
— ‘ L\fi\ \! ~-v»‘ _ | N E'
S \ —('
= ol Constellations =
= apita onsfeliations =
= —
= e
= Non=Stop =
(LaGuardia Airport) o i . g
g o™ —th, =
= < NEW YORK =
o ron> 3 o=
= S LR, =
':;:‘, ATLANTA 3 WASHINGTON, D. G/ E
= flf 2 =
s R L) y eiat " o
— E °‘G|u 6\ =
Sa— Call Southern Alrways: 4437 aI a (f Fana
=‘_‘ or your travel agent P!Mh GAUX =
B, bk et SRS ey
¢ — AIRLINES —
.. Dependable Service for 24 Years e —
7 T 1R W e e AT SST TR
e . W SRSV B SRR
_———-—MW
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
AP |
(Continued From Page One)
immediate medical attention.”
Then there was that bullet hole
in the AP jeep, which Randolph
never completely explained to his
office.
This is the way Weyand ex
plained it:
Company B was stalled by the
heavy Chinese resistance it en-j
countered. But Company A, on the
left, took its objective. The Chi
nese had to commit a reserve bat
talion against it, and thereby took
pressure off of a trapped Belgian
battalion.
Then Company B was orderedl
to withdraw, f
“It was pitch black,” the colonel
wrote, “and the company was it
self virtually surrounded. Need
less to say, Mr. Randolph — busy
helping the wounded—was one of
the last out. While the company
immediately moved to the rear,
out of the assembly area, Mr. Ran
dolph remained behind with the |
covering force.
Account 1
“Shortly thereafter, Chinese in
filtrated into the immediate area
and began firing and throwing |
grenades from a distance of less |
than 100 yards. During this action, |
Sergeant Jay T. Bare (hometown
unavailable), one of my finest
platoon sergeants, was mortally
wounded. 5 i
~ %“Again, with no regard for his
own life, Mr, Randolph lifted the
sergeant into his own jeep and
drove through a hail of enemy fire
to get him to a covered position.
' His jeep was splattered with en
emy fire. Sergeant Bare did not
survive his wounds, but John Ran
dolph’s efforts to help him won
the admiration and respect of the
entire battalion.”
Weyand said his combat vet- l
erans recently saw clipipngs of
. Randolph’s story.
“Although his account was com=
petely factual, his modesty ap
parently forbade mention of his
I own contributions. I am taking ac
tion through Army channels to se
| cure official recognition of his
courageous actions under fire on
behalf of my men. I thought how
ever, that you would be personally
interested in knowing the type of
man that you have working for
you,
“He has won himself a place in
our hearts and he will always be
welcome in our mess as a guest, or
mann, president of WABF-FM, New York, cited for
entertainment in. music; (back row) Robert Lang, who
accepted award for “Radio Free Europe”; Charles Gug
genheim, honored for children’s program, “Saturday At
the Zoo”; Lynn Poole, who accepted citation to the
“Johns Hopkins Science Review,” television program for
best educational show; Jimmy Durante, honored as best
entertainer in television; Dean John E. Drewry of the
University of Georgia’s Henry W. Grady School of Jour
nalism, which administers the Peabody awards; and
Elmer Davis, winner of award for news reporting.—
(Photo courtesy New York Herald-Tribune.)
in the line, as our comrade.”
John Randolph, until a few
months ago, had never seen war,
although he had Army service in
the United States.
His sly humor told America
about the troubles of Grady the
Cow, when it was stuck in the
Oklahoma silo a couple of years
ago.
poan T N T %
L e
Y i
il , e i
IRM, M WHITE
Dr. M. M. White, dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences at the
University of Kentucky, will speak
at the University of Georgia May
16 on “The Place of the Liberal
Arts in the Land Grant Institu
tion.”
Dr. White is one of the Univers
ity’s special Sesquicentennial lec
turers and will be the guest of the
College of Arts and Sciences. He
will be heard in the University
Chapel at 10 a. m.
A native of Texas, Dr. White is
a graduate of the University of
Texas and the University of Chi
cago. Before going to the Uni
versity of Kentucky to teach psy
chology in 1928 he taught at the
Universities of Texas, Chicago, and
Oklahoma.
Dr. White worked his way up at
Kentucky from an assistant pro
fessorship and was made dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences in
1947. He is a member of several
national organizations including
the American Psychological Asso
ciation and Phi Beta Kappa. Dr.
White is also president of the Ken=
tucky Psychological Association.
He is co-author of “A Lab Manual
for Beginning Psychology.”
. . . Mo
Britain Readies
- v
Parachute Unit
LONDON, May 14—(AP)—DBri
tain told its trouble-shooting 16th
Independent Parachute Brigade
Group to day to bring itself at
once to a state of readiness.
Simultaneously Foreign Secre
tary Herbert Morrison—interrupt
ing his whitsun holiday on the Isle
of Wight—kepf in touch with the
foreign office by phone on the
latest developments in Iran.
There was speculation that the
two events were connected, and
that Britain was ready to make a
strong tsand, if necessary, to hold
its rich oil concession in Iran.
But this speculation was with
out official confirmation, A war
office spokesman stressed that the
parachute brigade was not under
‘sailing orders. He described the
‘alerting order as routine war of
fice business.
The origin of the cabbage Is not
known.
’ Rz g
P 2 NORRIS
Wefos | HARDWARE
A R | .
, bl 131 Clayton St.
%
Yesterday |
Today
| - Tomorrow
Choose lovely China and shimmering Crystal
to grace your home with pride. ;
Ask about our ‘Bridal Service—a permanent record of ;
your purchases for the convenience of
your friends. |
“
Calf Auction
I will sell 75 Holstein and Guern
sey Heifer Calves Wednesday
night, May 16th at 7:30 P. M.
These are highly bred calves from
the dairying states. &
Sale will be held at Northeast
Georgia Livestock Auction, Ath
ens, Georgia.
E. W. Woodward
: Carthage, Tennessee
MANTLE HAD PREDECESSORS
BY SID KRONISH
AP Newsfeatures Sports Writer
NEW YORK - Baseball fans
from coast to cats have been hear
ing the “Cinderella” story of
Mickey Mantel, the 19-year-old
switch hitter, who made the jump
from the Class C. Joplin, Mo.,
Miners to the New York Yankees.
But there have been other play
ers who have made the big I‘ump
from a low minor league to the
majors.
The first to jump from a Class
D league to the “big time” was
Miguel Gonzales. In 1914 he came
didectly from Long Branch, N. J.,
in the New York — New Jersey
League to the Cincinnati Reds.
Gonzales became the team’s reg
ular catcher.
Rogers Horrn.by bounced from
Denison, Tex., in Class D to the
St. Louis Cardinals in 1915. He
played 119 games at shortstop for
Denison that year and batted .277.
On Aug. 20 the Cards purchased
the Texan for a reported SSOO. He
then finished the ’ls season with
the Red Birds and hit a lowly .246
in 18 games. The next year, his
first full season with the Cards,
he batted .318. During his long
major league career the Rajah
MONDAY, MAY 14, 1951,
mark was 424 in 1925.
The pitcher to make the long
over 400 three times. His highest
haul from Class D to the major
leagues was Sid Hudson. He hurl
ed for Sanford in the Florida State
League in 1939, In 1940 Sid was
chucking for the Washington Sen
ators and is still a member of
that team’s mound staff. He won
17 games that first year in the
majors.
PASTURE SUPPLIES 4
LOW COST FEED
COLUMBUS, Ohio. = (AP) —
Pasture supplies dairy feed at
about half the cost of hay and
silage and one-fourth the cost of
grain, according to agricultural
specialists at Ohio State Univer
sity. For these reasons, farnrers
are being advised to provide pas«
ture all season.
Not only are pasture costs low,
the experts state, but cows gen
erally produce more when they
get good grazing. Loung pastura
plants, they say, such ag alfalfa
ladino-grass meadow, are high in
protein calcium and carotene con
tent.
Snappers are the largest fresh
water turtles in the United States,