Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
IPerCent Vote
State Election
ATLANTA, Aug 11 — (AP) —
Less than one per cent of Georgia’s
population voted in last Tuesday’s
“ghost election” to name three
Solicitors General.
Reports to Secretary of State
Ben W. Fortson, jr., today show a
total of 19,932 votes in 141 coun
ties.
Four other counties reported
they did not hold an election
and no votes were cast in another.
Fortson has heard nothing from
the other 23 counties.
Off-Year Election
The first off-year August Gen
eral election in many years was
held under a ruling by Attorney
General Eugene Cook. He held that
the act creating such elections was
not entirely replaced by the 1945
constitution, as had been generally
believed, and that one was re
quired to fill vacancies in the office
of Solicitor General.
The ruling was issued after the
lezal deadline for candidates to
file, but the Democratic Executive
Committee nominated John Davis
Dykes in the Southwestern Circuit,
and William West in the Macon
Circuit.
Al three had been holding of
fice by appointment from the Gov
ernor,
Returns received by Fortson to
date show only two votes against
Davis and Dykes and three aginst
West. John Anderson, Rome, Hol
lie Fort, Southwestern, and Oscar
L. Long, Macon, Each received
two writen votes in Bibb County,
and Henry A. McCarney, Macon,
got one write-in vote in Fayette
county.
Appling, Habersham, Lanier and
Rabun have notified Fortson that
no election was held. McDuffie
opened a box, but not even the
election official bothered to vote.
Smallest Votes
Bleckley and Newton counties
had the smallest vortes, six each,
and Floyd county (Rome, where
a wine referendum created local
interest, reported the largest total
3,365.
. Fulton, the state’s largest county
with a population of 467,354, cast
only 443 votes.”
Of the counties which had re
ported today, only 50 had as many
as 100 votes. Only four of that
number showed more than 1,000
votes.
Oconee St. Cjrcle To Meet
Circle No. 2 of the Oconee St.
Methodist Church is to hold its
regular meeting Tuesday afternoon
at 3:30 at the home of Mrs. Joe
Poss at her home, 1242 South
Lumpkin Street.
Co-hostesses for the afternoon
will be Mrs, Goldie McCommom
and Mrs, Hazel Mealor.
Texas
(Continued from Page One)
from the heat.
All of Texas still needs rain.
Many cities still are rationing wa
ter for lawn sprinkling and ban
3:"[ car washing. Streams are
bw, or completely dry, and water
must be hauled for livestock.
. . .
, 8
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Stephen
(Continued from Page One)
contribution toward the unifica~-
tion of the armed services” when
he was the No. 2 man in the de
fense department.
In recent years Early had been
Vice President of the Pullman
Standard Car Manufacturing Com
pany. Gl R e
Worked Hard
' He had worked hard all his life
and under what he called the
“Hellish pressure” of his White
House job during the crisis years
of depression and war, he gave
outward appearances of being
hard-boiled.
However, his friends—and he
had many among leaders of the
world as well as working newspa~
permen—knew him as warm
hearted, cooperative, and effi
cient. He loved to hunt and fish,
play poker and golf.
In pre-world war I days, Early
was one of a quartet of Associated
Press men who covered the State-
War-Navy beat. The others were
the late Edwin M. Hood, Kirke L.
Simpson, now retired, and Hjal
mar Baukhage, radio commenta
tor.
It was then that Early became
acquainted with Mr. Roosevelt,
who was assistant Secretary of
the Navy. Their friendship, in
32 years, never lessened, although
Farly wa. one of the few men
known to stand up against the
President when he thought he
should.
In World War I
The first Washington newspa
per correspondent to enter the ser
vice in the first World War, Early
became an expert machine gun
ner and was a captain when the
war ended. He also served for a
time on the staff of General John
J. Pershing and helped edit the
Army newspaper Stars and
Stripes .
Later, after he had rejoined the
Associated Press, Early scored a
notable beat on the death of Pre
sident Harding at San Francisco.
Another of his big assignments
was the court martial of General
“Billy” Mitchell, advocate of air
power.
In 1927, early became Washing
ton representative of Paramount
News Reel and he went from this
job to the White House in 1933.
It fell to him to announce the
bank closing of the Early Roose
velt days, various big new deal
projects, the attack on Pearl Har
bor, Winston Churchill’s visit to
America in 1941 and Mr. Roose
velt’s death.
Funeral plans have not been
made,
Early had lived in Washington
since boyhood. He was born Aug.
217, 1889, at Crozet, Va,, and was a
distant kinsman of Confederate
General Jubal A. Early who raided
almost to Washington in 1864.
30
(Continued From Page One)
Leonard Hitcheock, jr., Lexington;
Carolyn Langford Martin, Mays
ville: Bertha Gunter Meredith,
Elberton:; Lucile E. Roberts, Ila;
Alice Ayers Sanders, Hartwell;
Mattie Belle Steed, Statham; Mary
Lee Nunn Stone, Commerce.
Bachelor of Business Adminis
tration: Floy Fontana Fowler Bis
son, Donald McCarty Brown, Gir
ard Normah Campbell, Richard
Mauldin Cofer, Samuel Clarence
Griffith, jr., Jimmie Talmadge
Hardy, Paul B. Mangold, Ginther
Albert ‘Spranger, Bmmett ‘Nelson
Wier, George Dobbs Willianis, all
of Athens; and Thomas Guy Bow
lan, jr., Commerce; John Beryl
Kelley, Winterville; Henry Enoch
Porterfield, Winterville.
Bachelor of Science in Home
Economics: Nancy Dean Bowman,
Stathamr; and Jewel Thomas
Mauldin, Lavonia.
E. L. Dunaway
Taken By Death
Funeral services for Ellison L.
Dunaway, sr., 63, who died in a
local hospital early Saturday
morning following an illness of
several weeks, will be conducted
from Princeton Methodist Church
this afternoon at 4 o'cock, Rev.
Ray Donahue, pastor, and Rev.
Newt Saye, of Edwards Baptist
Church, officiating.
Interment will follow in Prince
ton Cemetery, George Hulsey, C.
M. Waters, J. S. Shackleford, Hen
ry Couch, J. B. Hanson and W, T.
Stephens serving as pall-bearers,
Mr. Dunaway is survived by
his wife, Mrs. Willie Joe Melton
Dunaway; three daughters, Mrs.
W. J. Ford, Savannah, Mrs. Elmer
Miller, Athens and Miss Kathryn
Dunaway, Athens; one son, Elli
son L. Dunaway, jr., Atlanta; three
sisters, Mesdames W. M. Mclntyre,
Hugh Justice and Jessie Sluder,
all of Atlanta; two brothers, H. B.
and T. E. Dunaway, both of Ath
ens. .
A native of Athens, Mr. Duna
way had resided here all his life.
He was a member of Princeton
Methodist Church and resided on
Princeton road. He was well
known, and his many friends here
were saddened by news of his
death.
Taft Favors Cut
In Foreign Aid
About One Half
WASHINGTON, Aug. 11—(AP)
Senator Taft (R.-Ohio) said today
he doesn’t beieve military aid to
Western Europe can be cut any
Isizablc amount by Congress un-
der present world conditions.
However, the chairman of the
Senate Republican Policy Com
mittee called for a reduction of
about one half in the proposed
$2,200,000,000 foreign economic
aid.
Taft told a reporter he thinks it
will be necessary to authorize most
of the $6,300,000‘,000 in foreign
military assistance asked by the
administration in a pending SB,-
500,000,000 bill.
“It may be cheaper for us to
spend our money in providing
arms for Western Europe than to
spend it on our own defenses,” he
! said.
+ Administration witnesses stress
ed this point in testimony before
the Senate Foreign Relations and
Armed Services Committees, say
ing that European ccsts are lower
than those in the United States.
Taft, a potential candidate for
the 1952 Republican presidential
nomination, said he doesn’t want
to be party to any action which
would make it more difficult for
i Gen, Dwight D. Eisenhower to
make a success of his efforts to
bring North Atlantic Pact defenses
into being.
Military leaders, including Gen.
Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, have testi
fied any cut in the funds request
ed will be directly reflected in the
number of European divisions
which can be brought into exis
tence.
Taft’s attitude apparently is that,
' having undertaken the task, Eisen
hower must be given full support.
Friends said the Ohioan resents
{ charges that he would try to ham
! string the general’s efforts because
lEisenhower also might becorne a
Republican presidential candidate.
| Taft’s call for a cut in foreign
economic assistance funds seems
| likely to get support within the
Senate committees dealing with a
bill the House Foreign Affairs
Committee already has cut back
to $7,850,000,000. The House may
vote on the measure by midweek.
Chairman Connally (D.-Tex.) of
the combined Senate committees
said he doesn’t see how military
funds can be reduced much while
strenuous efforts are being made
'to build up the free world’s de
fensive strength.
Conally left the door open,
however, for some cuts in eco
namic assistance.
- OLDEST BRITISH ADMIRAL
SINGAPORE—(AP)—The old
est Admiral afloat with the Bri
tish Royal Navy is “looking for a
place to make my home.”
Sir Ralph Crooke, 75, arrived
here on the eve of his fifth retire
. ment from the Royal Navy. Ac
companied by Lady Crooke, Sir
Ralph is making a round trip from
Capetown to Japan and back to
see “if the climate agrees with a
[ retiring couple” in the Far East.
An expert on gunnery and coas
_ tal defense, the Admiral was called
| back to duty by the Admiralty
four times since his initial retire
ment in 1928. He joined the Bri
tish Navy in 1888 as a 14-year-old
' midshipman.
Georgia ranks second in the
United States in the total tonnage
of fertilizer used, and atout seven
th in the amount used per acre.
Read
The Banner-Herald
Want Ade.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
'FAST ACTION
| AVERTS FIRE
|ON CARRIER
Mix a flame-spewing, million
candlepower flare among a batch
of Navy planes loaded with
high-octane gasoline on a car
rier deck and you have the in
gredients for a first-class disaster.
These dramatic photos show how
just such an emergency arose on
deck of the USS Bon Homme Rich
ard, operating in Korean waters,
and how it was met. At right,
smoke pours around a Douglas
Skyraider fighter plane after the
high-powered flare was acciden
tally dropped from another plane
during takeoff, Below, as smoke
blots out one craft and blankets
others, Aviation Boatswain’s Mate
James L. Seig, of Compton, Calif.,
(white-shirted figure indicated by
arrow) runs with the flaming flare
to throw it over the carrier’s side.
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70 killed!—More than 8,000 injured! You didn’t read of this disaster in your local paper.
/
It wasn’t there. These killed and injured were working men and women all across the 4
nation who were accident victims on their jobs yesterday. Today they are statistics!i i
The toll goes on—every hour, every day and at year’s end some 16,000 workers have ol
been killed and more than 2,000,000 injured. Time lost by disabling injuries would equal ;
the working time of a million men for a whole year. For the dead there is no time. fl "
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About 3 out of every 4 occupational accident victims are workers in smaller plants,
firms and businesses. In fact, in every job there is some hazard. Slipping on a floor, trip- .
ping on a stair or falling from a truck can incapacitate you as surely as some situation 4
which would seem more dangerous. Know your job—know the hazards connected with s
it—and be prepared to avoid them. & "
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it . . . "
;o Think before you act—before you expose yourself to danger and accident. Think »
E\“ 3 sately. It’s better to be a worker than a statistic!
& ‘ Prepared in co-operation with the President’s Conference om
‘ A Indwiivial Safety and comivibuisd im the public mierest by
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(Continued From Page One)
Atlanta and Northeast Georgila
will be invited to attend Mum
blow’s address.
Mr. Mumblow has been associat
ed with General Motors since
1938 in their employee public re
lations division. He helped or
ganize “GM Folks”, which he still
edits, and a number of other spec
ial employee publications.
Before joining General Motors,
he held a number of positions in
cluding that of handling the press
photographic coverage of Gov. Al
fred Landon's presidential cam
paign.
Photographer
An expert photographer, Mr.
Mumblow has worked as a news
paper photographer, an enter
tainment and news-reel camera
man, and as the owner of a photo
graphic illustration studio in Kan
sas City.
At General Motors he supervises
publications which are distributed
to more than a half million em
ployees and dealers.
FREE
HEARING CLINIC
Holman Hotel, Athens, Ga., Tuesday, August 14th
Hours 9 A. M. — 6 P. M.
Mr. Geo. Kint and Mr. Mose Smith, Jr., will be
here to consult with you on your hearing prob
lems. Test and consultation absolutely FREE and
you are under no obligation.
Fresh Batteries For Any Make Hearing Aid
If you are wearing a hearing aid, come in. We will
clean and adjust it for you at no charge.
See And Try The New Telex Cordless Aid
TELEX HEARING CENTER
KNIT HEARING AID SERVICE
324 Mtg. Guar. Bldg., Atlanta, Ca.
. SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1951,
T A¥rahdn’ LlndOl's “estate wae
valued at $110,295.
e e -———-———'—-—-—-—‘
Funeral Notice
DUNAWAY. — The friends ang
relatives of Mr, and Mrs, Ejlj.
son L. Dunaway, sr., Princeton
Road; Mr, and Mrs, W. J. Ford
Savannah; Mr. and Mrs, Elme,
Miller, Miss Kathryn Dunaway
Athens; Mr. and Mrs, Ellison 1,
Dunaway, jr., Mr. and Mrs, w
M. Mclntyre, Mr. and Mg
Hugh Justice, Mr. and WMuys
Jessie Sluder, Atlanta; Mr, ang
Mrs. H. B. Dunaway, Mr. ang
Mrs. T. E. Dunaway, Athens, ar¢
invited to attend the funeral of
Mr. Ellison L. Dunaway, sr., this
Sunday afternoon, August 12th.
at four o’clock from the Prince
ton Methodist Church. The fol
lowing gentlemen will serve as
pallbearers: Mr. George Hulsey,
Mr. C. M. Waters, Mr, J. S.
Shackelford, Mr. Henry Couch.
Mr. J. B. Hanson and Mr, W, 1.
Stephens, Rev. Ray Donahye
and Rev. Newt Saye will offi
ciate. Remains will lie in state
in Princeton Methodist Church
from three o’clock until the
hour of the service. Interment
will be in Princeton cemretery. -
Bernstein Funeral Home,