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PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER - HERALD
ESTABLISHED 1832
Published Every Evening Except Satarday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Again the kingdom of hea-
I ven is like unto a merchant
{ man, seeking goodly pearls.
| Who when he had found
one pearl of great price, went
and sold all that he had, and bought it —St. Mat
thew 13:45-4¢
Have you a faverite Bibie verse? Mail o
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel
The Washington Notebook
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON.—(NEA)—A show-down on the
alleged Communist connections of Prof, Owen Lat
timore is now in the making. Prof. Lattimore will
get a chance to testify in his own defense in open
hearings before Nevada Senator Pat McCarran's
Judiciary subcommittee. He has already testified in
closed session.
In March, 1950, Wisconsin Senator Joseph R. Mc-
Carthy called Lattimore “the top Soviet espionage
agent in America.” At that time Prof. Lattimore
was in Afghanistan for the United Nations. He
cabled back his denials of the charge. His Wash
ington attorneys threatened to sue McCarthy for
libel.
Sult has never been filed, however, because
Sermator McCarthy has never repeated his charges
oft the floor of the Senate, or outside of official
hearings where such remarks are “privileged.”
This means that such statements cannot be used as
avidence in a law suit.
Senator McCarthy is a daily attendant at the new
hearings, however, so he and Prof. Lattimore may
again come face to face for further fireworks. Sen
ator McCarthy is not a member of the McCarran
committee, but a most interested observer. Some of
the testimony that McCarthy wanted brought out
before last year's Tydings committee investigation
is now being presented before the McCarran group.
PROBE INSTITUTE OF PACIFIC RELATIONS
Real purpose of the McCarran subcommittee is
to investigate the Institute of Pacific Relations,
following seizure of the IPR files in Massachusetts
last February.
The business at hand is an attempt to show that
the Institute of Public Relations was in a position
so exercise an undue amount of influence in shap
ing U. S. State Department policy on the Far East.
That IPR actually exercised this influence has yet
to be proved.
But the direction which the hearing has taken is
towards building up a case that IPR was not just a
Commie front organization, but a full-fledged Com
munist apparatus, designed for the specific job of
directing American foreign policy along desired
Russian lines. While a number of the backers of
IPR were admittedly perfectly loyal American cit
izens, it is inferred that they were the innocent
dupes of Communist conspirators.
. This is where Owen Lattimore comes into the
case.” Toward the end of 1033, Lattimore became
editor of IPR’s magazine, “Pacific Affairs,” and
held that job till 1941. In 1934-35 he did field work
in Mongolia for IPR.
In 1941-42 he was President Roosevelt’s adviser
to Chiang Kai-shek. For two years he was director
of overseas operations for Office of War Informa
tion. He returned to China with Henry Wallace in
1944, and after the war was on the U, S. Repara
tions Mission to Manchuria,
OFF STATE DEPARTMENT PAYROLL
He addressed State Department employes once in
1946 and hasn't been on the State Department pay
roll since. He has been director of the Walter
Hines Page school of international relations at
Johns Hopkins University since 1938, and this is
his present job. Incidentally, he has written a
dozen books on the Far East.
The still unanswered question is how this nrade
him “the architect of American foreign policy,” as
Senator McCarthy charged. Evidence before the
McCarran committee has thus far been pretty thin,
Alexander Barmine — ex-Russian general now
head of the U. S. State Department’s Russian desk
for Voice of. America—says another Russian gen
eral, Walter Krivitzky (later found dead in a Wash
ington hotel) told him in Paris in 1933 that Latti
more was “one of our men.” But Barmine did not
know Lattimore personally, :
Mrs. Hede Massing, former wife of Gerhard
Eisler, recruited State Department employees Law
rence Duggan (now dead) and Noel Field (now
missing, presumably behind the Iron Curtain) into
- her Communist apparatus, She says she met Latti
more only once,
Two of Owen Lattimore's letters, found in the
IPR files, were wtitten to Pacific Affairs contribu
torg James S. Allen and Max Granich, who were
identified by Mrs. Massing as being Copymunists,
Final judgment on all such matters, however, has
so be held up till Prof. Lattimore hinrself has testi
tied, and all the evidence has been presented to the
committee,
America’s number one need is for the uncommon
man . . . (who has) the capacity to think, the ca
pacity for inragination and the capacity for faith.—
Grove Patterson, editor, Toledo Blade.
Don’t try to conquer the world, Remember the
more you earn, the more you pay in taxes. You
can’t become wealthy today. — Arthur Godfrey,
radio-TV comic. e
We have been concentrating on means and ignor
ing ends, believing that whatever worked was
right. Moral relativism has entered into our minds,
~—Harold C. Case, president, Boston University.
Geqrgia's Income From lis
Forest Crop Amazing
B. M. Lufburrow, executive secretary of the
Georgia Forestry Association, announces that this
state's timber crop is more valuable than the in
come from its cottgn and tobacco crops combined,
This is an amazing revelation. And if the timber
crop in this state is already producing such a stu
pendous income there is no telling what our income
would be from that source were all available acre
age planted with trees,
Much of the credit for the increase in income
fromr forestry products is due to the work of the
Univeristy of Georgia College of Agriculture. It has
been continuously urging that farmers and other
land owners put out pine seedlings on unused land
and its Forestry School is one of the most advanced
in the United States. In recent months many of the
state’s banks have bought tree-planting machines
for the purpose of encouraging tree-planting on
unused land. These machines are for use without
charge. They should help further increase tree
planting. 8
Mr. Lufburrow sounds a warning with his report
on timber crop income in Georgia. He says “the
ever-increasing importance of the annual yield of
Georgia’s forest products makes it necessary that
the problem of costly wood fires can be solved
without delay. When the forest fire situation is
adequately controlled, Georgian’s may look for
even greater economie stimulus from the state’s
timber resources.”
Mr. Lufburrow pointed ou that the “recently
announced ‘Keep Georgia Forests Green County
Contest’ is receiving widespread support, Through
this contest the Georgia Forestry Association is
offering a SI,OOO prize to the county showing the
greatest forest fire preventipn progress and we feel
this project merits the active support of every man,
woman and child.”
Mr. Lufburrow said his organization has just
completed a survey setting up eleven major items
in chart form, which reveals that landowners re
ceived an estimated $167,021,734 for forest pro
ducts harvested in 1950. Of this amount saw logs
contributed over $59,000,000, while pulpwood
ranked second with over $30,000,000. He estimated
the jrocessed value at $594,568,791 of which pulp
wood contributed over $212,000,000 and saw logs
over $156,000,000. Forest products accounted for
166,212 full-time jobs, he said, besides providing
part-tinre employment for many thousands morg.
“Georgia’s 25,000,000 acres of forest lands afford
real values that are not included in this chart but
which contribute millions of dollars to the welfare
of the state,” Mr. Lufburrow continued. "They are
wildlife, recreation of all kinds, water shed protec
tion, and both surface and underground water level
control.” Y &
Wouldn't Mind Salary Cut
Democratic big shots recently gave a dinner in
honor of Rep. James P. Richards of South Carolina,
new chairman of the House Committee on Foreign
Affairs, Secretary of State Dean Acheson was
there, too, and after the dinner he was called on for
a few remarks.
He said he had had a fien time. They were all
nice people and the dinner had been wonderful. “In
fact,” he said, “if I could get as good a dinner as
this every night, I wouldn’t mind if they did cut
off my salary.”
Queer Coincidence
In the House Ways and Means Committee hear
ings on the new tax bill (page 870, February 23,
1951) William E. Webb of Statesville, N. C., gave
testimony in favor of increasing the taxes on nru
tual insurance companies. Mr. Webb testified on
behalf of the non-mutual insurance business.
$n the same hearings on July 15, 1951 (not yet
printed) O. Glenn Saxon, professor of economics at
Yale, testified on behalf of the National Tax Equal
ity Association. It has now been discovered that the
testimony of Mr. Webb and Professor Saxon is ex
actly alike, word for word, comma for comma, and
period for period.
Rep. Daniel A. Reed of New York, in a statement
inserted in.the Congressional Record Appendix for
July 20, presents evidence that this National Tax
Equality Association “is now trying to raise colos
sal lobby funds totaling more than s3l million for
use in attempting to high pressure and intinridate
the United States Senate in connection with the
pending tax legislation.”
It is only a gag, but one Democratic congressman,
Winfield K. Denton of Evansville, Ind,, says he has
considered introducing a bill to change the name of
Washington's “MacArthur Boulevard” to “Ridgway
Drive.” . . . Representative Denton also speaks
glowingly of “those two great Indiana Republican
senators—l mean Beveridge and Watson.”
Miners’ wives are kicking because the paid-vaca
tion John L. Lewis won for their hushands comes
at the end of June. One wife of a Kentucky miner
wrote to Mr, Lewis, saying: “I wish you would
change this vacation period to the last week in De-
cember, It's very inconvenient for us wonren folks
now. The men all go fishing and we like to go with
them. But we have to stay home and do our can
ning in June.”
Mothers and fathers in the United States and
Canada, stop your children from taking lessons in
music until such time as the government will guar
antee they can make a living in music. — James C.
Petrillo, president, Musicians Union.
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E OVEY:
By
Waltie
Coburn
Copyright 1950 by NEA Service, Inc. >
THE STORY: Just as John Sand,
M. D, arrives at Wolf Point, Mont.,
there is a shooting in which Dusty
Rhodes, a cowboy shoots a gam
bler. Dusty finds a place for Sand
to open an office and while the
doctor is finishing dressing the
wound Kit Carson, named after
the famous trapper, appears. Kit
is a pretty red-head and she is
apparently grieved because Dusty
killed a man. After Dusty leaves,
Kit offers to take Woe a break
fast and the doctor tells her that
he came west because “something
happened’ to interfere with his
plans to practice in the East.
* % *
v
KIT CARSON smiled at Doc and
her hand smothed the guilt let
tering on his medical bag.
“Then something happened,” she
repeated Doc’s words in a low
toned voice. “It must've been a
girl.,” She made it sound like a
flat statement. Her gray eyes
watched him flinch.
Then the girl named Kit Car
son did a strange thing. She found
a harness awl among the litter of
odds and ends that cluttered the
table. She scratched out the gilt
lettering with almost savage haste
until there was nathing left of it.
And where the lettering had been
she slowly and painstaking carved
with the pointed awl the words
“LITTLE DOC”
“That’s what Wolf Point wili
call you before the moon changes.
You can mark the words of a
prophet—a she-prophet.”
She tossed the awl on the table
and walked slowly over to where
John Sand stood. Both her hands
reached out and she held his face
between them as she kissed him.
“Put on your hat and coat and
rubbers and we’ll eat. I'm due
back in the hotel kitchen to start
breakfast. The cook’s in jail and
I'm it. How do you like your
steak?”
He helped her into the saddle
slicker and she pulled her hat
down on her red head.
“I know only a greenhorn ten
derfoot asks questions. But who
is the big cowboy I just patched
up?” He put on his hat and looked
around for his mackintosh.
“Oh, he’s Dusty Rhodes, a cat
tleman. Brands the Rocking R.
ONE NAME changed
buying habit of millions
\BT | T
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT 10&
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Traime
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:48 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
eave for Atlanta. South and
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:30 a. m.—(Local).
2:57 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEFORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily Except
Sunday) 12:35 p. m. .
Leaves Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 4:15 p. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
From Lula and Cotimerce
Arrive 9:00 a. i
East and West
Leave Athens 900 a m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains
Week Day Only
"rain No 51 Arrives YOO a m
irain No 50 Departs 700 p m
The Diplomatic Class of ‘sl
| He has the idea I'm going to marry
him—one of those gents that claims
what he wants, and usually gets
what he goes after. The man he
killed was a tinhorn gambler
called Blackjack Lambert.”
“Blackjack Lambert was a slimy
customer and a tinhorn sport like
his cronie Toad, that he ran
around with,” the girl said. “I
cried because Dusty Rhodes had
no business getting his hands dirty
with a killing. But when that big
cowhand gets an idea, there’s no
stopping him. He’s gotten the no
tion he had to protect me. You
didn’t speak out of turn. John.
Anything else you want to know?”
“Dusty said to tell anybody who
asked how I got hold of the cabin
he called the Whitehouse, that I
was to tell them it was given to me
by one of the Johnson Boys. Who
are the Johnson Boys?” John
asked.
* * *
The girl laughed. “Outlaws. It's
!a name used by any outlaw.
| When a train is held up or a bank
; robbed or somebody gets killed
and they don’t know who did the
holdups or killingj_ they lay the
blame on the ohnson Boys.
There’s even a song about them.
They are the Paul Bunyons of the
cow country.”
Kit stepped to the door, motion
ing him to silence. She slid the
bar back cautiously and perked
Ithe door inward. The shaft of
! lamplight revealed a crouched fig
ure, rain sodden, hat pulled down.
“Jump him, Little Doc.”
Without thinking John Sand
dove at the man, tackling him like
a football player. They fought des
perately and for a few miutes
John Sand had his hands full.
The he got his arm hooked under
the man'’s chin and he bent his arm
back in a hammerlock and pulled
him into the cabin, snarling and
kicking.
It wag the little ex-jockey Toad.
John Sand turned him loose and
yvanked him to his feet. Blood
flowed from the doctor’s nose and
his brown eyes glinted.
A knife suddenly appeared in
Toad’s hand when he rushed. John
» Sand chopped down at his wrist
. with the fiat of his hand and the
. knife went spinning. The Doctor
sidestepped and his short uppercut
caught Toad under the jaw and
lifted him up and off his feet and
landed him on his back. He lay
spread eagled and his eyes rolled
back until the whites showed like
dirty white marbles.
John Sand stepped back,
brething hard through his nose,
head forward and a little down,
blowing the blood from his nos
ils.
~ “You sure pack a wallop, Doc,”
said Kit Carson.
John Sand wiped the blood from
his nose with the back of his hand
and grinned. “I boxed a little in
school.”
Kit kept watching the man on
the floor. She had picked up the
Knife, a pearl-handled knife with
a four-inch blade that sprang open
when she pressed a button.
® * *
JOHN SAND took his first good
look at Toad when he moaned
and sat up. He saw the flat nose,
the wicked little pale eyes and
the thin-lipped, wide froglike
mouth.
“Just in case you commence
spreading a lot of filthy lies,
Toad.” said the girl. I'm keeping
this plaything of yours. It'll come
in handy when I'm sewing, tQ rip
out the basting. Or it could be
used to shed a little light on one
or two stabbings” that are still a
v) e |
BURNS - SCRAPES |
gL SCALDS - SIMPLE CUTS |
“JISIFA Minor SKIN RRITATIONS
/N 2 CHAFED SKIN ’
MOROLINE ]
#GRLO'S LARCEST SELLING PETROLEUM JELLY AT 104 |
mystery to Constable Butch Bell, if
any gossip bounces back to me
Yop’d better get out now.”
After he had gone, John Sand
pulled on his mackintosh. “Evil
little germ, isn’t he?” He hesitated
about calling her name. “Miss—"
“Kit's the name,” she reminded
him. “He’s wicked as sin. I hope
he hasn’t spoiled your appetite.”
“I like my steak rare, Kit,” said
Little Doc.
(To Be Continued)
OLDEST DANISH
TOMBSTONE UNEARTHED
COPENHAGEN —(AP)— Exca
vations on a grassy islet in the
north of Denmark have provided
evidence for archaeologists that
human sacrifices took place at a
distinguished lady’s funeral there
3,000 to 4,000 years ago.
The finds date from between the
stone and the bronze age. About
1800 B. C. the islet was used as a
burial ground. It was found that
an adult woman and a 12 or 14-
year-old girl were buried together.
Many bronze bracelets and rings
indicated that the woman was of
high birth. Across the feet of the
two lay, in a cramped position,
the body of a murdered male
slave, killed as a propitiary sacri
fice to ward off disease from the
remaining members of the com
munity,
One of the stones, forming the
lid of the “coffin,” bore the so
called sun sign—a wheel with four
spokes. This is the oldest tomb
stone ever found in Denmark.
The Yukon River is navigable
by shallow draft steamer for 1,777
miles.
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Athens Truck & Tractor Co.
600 N. Thomas St. Phone 451
New York Tourists Do Not
Faze "Big Town's' Nafives
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK — (NEA) — New
York in mid-summer is exactly
like Hollywood in mid-summer—
a mecca for tourists.
But there’s a colossal difference.
New York'’s canyons and sub
ways and theaters and restaurants
swallow up the tourist-horde of
lowa farmers, Texas stenograph
ers, southern cotton kings and
Montana cowboys.
They're shuffled like a handful
of cards into New York’s pack of
8,000,000 natives and, like all good
children, they're not seen or heard
as New York goes on as usual.
In Hollywood, in mid-summer,
the tourists take over the town—
snarling traffic, disrupting night
clubs, chasing movie celebrities
around palm trees, galloping across
Lana Turner’s lawn and tripping
over movie sound stage cables.
There are sighs of genuine re
lief all around in Hollywood when
the summer tourist seasen ends.
In New York, it’s only the depart
ing tourists who sigh with relief
as ascaping from the sea of hu
manity in which they have been
engulfed. Manhattan’s ecliff-dwell
ers don’t even give them a parting
glance or thought., -
New Yorkers, I've discovered,
seldom if ever even give New
York a glance or a thought. It's
the starry-eyed tourists who put
the “Island-of-glamour-surround
ed-by-romance” label on Manhat
tan.
I've been one of those starry
eyed tourists for a few days.
“Never Been There”
Native New Yorkers will make
strange sounds and will tap their
temples when they hear that I've
l;een thrilled into goose pimples
Y
Climbing the 168 stairs to the
crown of the Stature of Liberty. I
asked 10 New Yorkers if they’d
ever been up there and all said,
“No, but I'm planning to, some
day.”
* ¢ =
Taking a 35-mile sight-seeing boat
ride around Manhattan Island. It
is a irip always recommended by
New Yorkers who in the same par
agraph say, “I've never made it,
but I hear it’s a great trip.”
It is. Among other “sights”
were five teen-age boys swimming
in the nude in the Harlem River
and the towers of th Waldorf-As
toria hotel, to which the ship’s
barker pointed and said: 1
“That’s where General MacAr
thur is fading away.” |
. Then, with perfect stage tim
ing, he added: “It’s a nice placel
to fade away in.” l
®* » @ s
The day or night view of Man
hattan from the top of the Empire
State building is another junket
New Yorkers never get around to
doing. '
A guide, it should be recorded, |
remembered seeing only one ce
lebrity, Frank Sinatra, among the
R A et .
FOR PROMPTNESS, EFFICIENCY & COURTESY £
el e
WRECKER SERVICE i
ALWAYS CALL <
SILVEY MOTOR COMPANY
Phone 246 Day Phone 3932 Night
Feße e R R T
thousands of tourisés who ann. .
ly peer, and spit, over its
guard rails,
. ® .
The spectacle of dazzling, .
mated lights, plus an honest.: .
gosh waterfall, at Times Squ. .
where, so the legend goes, 3
dn doomed to die in three mo,
leased a Hotel Astor room g
Broadway,
It was her last request, arra,
by the hotel's president, 1,
Christenbery, to ‘“die with 1/,
lights of Broadway in my eye
The woman didn’t die in th, e
months. She lived in that 1
room for 11 years and just bef,ro
she finally passed on, she grate
fully explained: “The lights ¢
Times Square were the sunsh, .
that gave me life.”
Unforgettable Memories
And, among my unforgettahla
New York memories:
The real heroes of televisiop
the steeplejacks working on i}.
140-foot video tower atop the .
pire State Building.
The 6200-seat Radio City M.
cal hall—Hollywood Bowl wit}
room—with the Rockettes on {},.
stage still the greatest precisio,
dancers of them all . ~ The ror
of the baseball mob at Yanie-
Stadium.
The cliffs of the Hudson at qy.):
. « « Ann Crowley, the heroine o*
the gay musical, “Seventeen,” 4,
her way of saying “Yes.” It comes
out “S” and, no doubt, will becoma
a standard teen-age expression |,
October . , . A Siamese balle:-
version of ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’
getting cheers from the audience
The roar of the subway trains
under-foot and the reflection ¢
the Great White Way on darkene |
office buildings at night , , . T}.
squalor and filth and the swan;
of Park and Fifth Avenues.
Speeding taxis at night with on
ly parking lights turned on ang ,
hack’s explanation: “The stree:s
are well lighted. We don’t bling
people in New York with head
lights.”
But it’s such a pity so many
New Yorkers are blind—to ;-
wonders of Manhattan.
Sl
No tools or heat are required
open oyster shells in a new pro
cess which might be called th»
vacuum way. t also works with
clams and other bivalves.
LFHER”
666"