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ATHENS BANNER < HERALD
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Published Every Evening Except Saturday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
For the preaching of the
) cross is to them that perish
¢ foolishness, but to us which
\ are saved it is the power of
God.
For it is wriiten, I will destroy the wisdom of
the wise, and will bring to nothing the under
standing es she prudent.—lst Corinthians 1:18-19.
Have you a favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel
o —— o oo ———
.
The Washington Notebook
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON.—(NEA)—IIt is almost traditional
that presidential election politics get hot and come
to a boil over a big Republican row in Pennsylvania.
This year is no exception. Anything can happen.
At this early date, a year ahead of the national
conventions, even a sure-shot, never-miss political
seer would be foolish to try predicting the outcome.
But here’s what's cooking in the Keystone state
politic?l stew:
Senator James H. Duff, ex-governor of Pennsyl
vania, is now openly plugging for General Dwight
D. Eisenhower as Republican noginee for the pres
idency.
Rep. Hugh D. Scott, jr., 1948 campaign ch’airman
of the Republican national committee, has gone to
Europe on Congressional business. But while in
Paris, Representative Scott hopes to sound out
Eisenhower.
Just whom Representative Scott speaks for is not
clear. As Governor Dewey’s campaign nranager in
tha 1948 presidential race, Scott could be scouting
for what's left of the Dewey forces in the GOP.
Governor Dewey is of course for Eisenhower.
Representative Scott got his job as Republican
national chairman, however, with the approval of
the Old Guard Grundy-Owlett machine in Penn
sylvania. So there has risen the interesting spec
ulation that perhaps Representative Scott is doing
a little advance sounding out for thoes tried and
true friends of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers
Association.
DUFF NOW OFFPOSES TAFT
Thus far, aging ex-Senator Joseph R. Grundy
and his faithful man Friday, G. Mason Owlett,
have made no official statement on whom they
were backing for the Republican presidential nom
ination. It has been generally assumed they were
for Chio Senator Robert A. Taft.
But in 1948 they were against Taft and for
Dewey. And in 1948 Senator Duif, after wvainly
backing the late Senator Arthur H. Vandenburg of
Michigan for the presidential nomination, switched
his delegates to Tait. Today Senator Duff is known
to be dead sei against Taft, believing that if the
Ohio senator is the nominee, the Republicans might
well lose Pennsylvania, -
What all this switching around seems to prove, if
anything, is that old saw about “politics making
strange bed-fellows.” But in Pennsylvania, to ball
up the metaphor completely, they seem to swap
horses in the middle of their political dreams.
As a second choice after Taft, it has been ru
mored that Grundy, Owlett and Company might
take ex-Governor Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota,
now president of University of Pennsylvania. But
at the 1948 Republican convention in Philadelphia,
Governor Stassen got just one vote out of the
Pennsylvania delegation, 5
ANCIENT FOES MAY MERGE FORCES
If the Grundy-Owlett leaders should decide that
General Eisenhower is the only candidate who can
win, Pennsylvania might be treated to a rare spec
table. It would be Grundy-Owlett joining forces
with §‘enator Duff for the same objective—Eisen
hower. That might come either through the scout
ing of Representative Scott, or the simple logic of
political developments,
There are at present no indications that any such
strange alliance Is In the making. Duff and the old
Guard are at war to the death.
The objectives are three: I—Election of a chair
man for the Pennsylvania delegation to the 1952
Republican convention in Chicago. 2—Control over
the 70 delegates themselves, to be elected next
April. 3—Dominance over Pennsylvania’s internal
affairs.
Normally the chairman of the Pennsylvania dele
gation is the governor. That would be John S. Fine.
He was backed by Duff as his successor for the
governorship last year.
With the departure of Senator Duff for Washing
ton, Grundy-Owlett forces have tried to regain
their position of power over state affairs. And they
have also been working to drive a wedge between
Governor Fine and Senator Duff,
Duff has now taken up this challenge. He has told
the Old Guard that if they want a fight, they can
have it. Since coming to Washington, he is said to
have kept his hands out of purely Pennsylvania
affairs. He has not interfered with Governor Fine's
administration.
Experienced Washington legislative representa
tives who have been operating on Capitol Hill for
many years now give credit to the American Farm
Bureau Federation for being the most powerful
lobby in Washington, This is as a result of the job
done on price and wage control-renewal legisla
tion. Formerly, top honors in the “lobbying field
were always given to the American Legion,
At the front we were all alike Lefore God. . . .
All prayed to our God in heaven.—Marine Chap
lain Garsop Goodman, Cleveland, Ohio, on leave
from Korea,
Anti-Communist Trade Bans
Can Tip Off Soviet Weakness
You may have noticed that Russia and the satel
lite countries are beginning to complain about some
of the economic measures we are taking against
them.
The Soviet Union had some rather bitter words
to say the other day about ‘unfair restrictions on
trade” imposed by the United States.
This is interesting information. Knowing the Rus
sians as we do, we can be sure they are very re
luctant to admit to the West that the current tactics
of econonric pressure have been effective in any
degree. Their acknowledgement can only mean we
are hurting them.
That damage must relate directly to parts of the
Soviet economy involved in military preparations.
Otherwise the Kremlin would hardly risk the em
barrassment of admitting we have inflicted pain.
The admission tells us even more. If any of us in
the free world harbored the idea that the Commmun
ist nations of Europe are self-sufficient economi
cally, that notion should now be dispelled. The like
lihood is great that they need us much more than
we need them. You do not complain about losing
something you do not really require.
There are in the United States and elsewhere in
the West a number of men amazingly well versed
in the details of the Soviet economy. They know
Russian history, they study the periodicals and
every available document, they seek out obscurely
published statistics, they read between the lines of
Moscow’s propaganda.
From them our nrilitary leaders and statesmen
may now gain fresh instruction, if they can be put
to work analyzing the Soviet reaction to U. S. trade
restrictions. In the list of materials whose flow to
Russia we have cut off, where is the pinch great
est? .
Careful scrutiny of the effects of our embargo
surely should afford us a sounder guide than we
now have to Russia’s potential for war. And that
knowledge is absolutely basic to many of the polit
ical and military decisions we shall make in the
months to come.
More than that, it gives us a cue as to how best to
apply heat to the countries in the Russian orbit,
Many Americans have been saying economic blows
would be the most telling—short of war—and now
we have evidence to support that contention.
A lot of the things proposed by our citizens to
annoy the Russians would either precipitate war or
produce laughter in the Kremlin, But apparéntly
Stalin and associates find nothing funny in these
trade nreasures. They have real bite.
If the need arises, let us h‘avé more of them, only
taking care that it is really the Russians we hurt—
and not ourselves.
Might Gum Up The Situation
An eastern manufacturer has announced what he
describes _as a “move to aid reconstruction efforts
on the part of the business community of the flood
stricken Kansas City area.”
He has offered to replace all wholesalers’ stocks
of bubble gum which were destroyed by flood
waters.
It is not clear just how this would work. Maybe
he figures the gum will keep bubble-popping
youngsters busy while Ma and Pa reconstruct. Or
perhaps the stuff could be used to plug some holes
in the dike.
Whatever it is, Kansas City is obviously on the
road back.
lllinois Judgeships
It never got out, but Illinois Democratic National
Committeeman Jacob M. Arvey was given serious
consideration for one of those three Illinois Fed
eral judgeships “nominated” by Senator Paul Doug
las. Boss Arvey had backed Senator Douglas for
Denrocratic primary nomination in 1948, against
Truman administration opposition. Douglas won.
Arvey was known to want the judgeship, though
he heads a flourishing law firm in Chicago. He re
signed his Cook County Democratic machine chair
manship after the 1950 elections. For Senator
Douglas to back Arvey for a judgeship would have
been natural. But id the end # was decided this
would look too much like politicai debt paying. He
compromised by picking Cook County Circuit Court
Judge Benjamin P. Epstein, brother of an Arvey
law partner.
The men Senator Douglas finally backed were a
Catholic, a Jew and a Protestant. This was to keep
all religious-political factions happy. The Illinois
Bar Association finally backed two of the Douglas
candidates, William H. King, jr., and Judge Epstein.
President Truman and Senator Douglas agreed on
the third man, Joseph F. Perry. Truman’s other
two nominees were Circuit Judge Cornelius J. Har
rington and City Judge Joseph H. Drucker.
This country stands for faith in mankind, in
man’s ability to govern himself through represen
tatives of his own choosing. Either we succeed in
governing ourselves or, if we fail, we invite others
to shackle us in ruthless subjection. — Bernard
Baruch.
The only answer to the current beef shortage is
more production and . . . under present price regu
lations more production is impossible—Charles W,
Bauer, president, National Association of Retail
Meat Dealers.
~ American capitalism has taken on a new quality
.. . the ‘social consciousness of business.”—Paul G.
Hoifman, Ford Foundation head.
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PRIVATE ORD GETS A BATH-—Private arrival from Japan aboard the S. S. Trade
Heiner Ord, mascot of Oklahoma’s 45th Wind. Private Ord is a Japanese bear and
Division on duty in Japan, gets prettied up is enroute to the Oklahoma City zoo for
by Crewman Wayne Hamilton, prepara- an indefinite stay.— (AP Wirephoto.)
tory to going ashore at San Francisco on
Weekly Bible Lesson
Thank God For This !
BY WILLIAM E. GILROY, D. D.
Thank God for what? Thank |
God, reader, that you live in a
democracy, in which you are free
to breathe, and think, and speak,‘
and act, in a State which is
pledged to accord you these liber- ‘
ties and protect them. |
In too many countries today,
and they are not all under Com
munist domination, no such liber
ties for the individual exist. One
of the world’s best and greatest
newspapers has been suppressed
in Argentina, and@® Protestants in
Spain have been subject to op
pressive restrictions. And across
the world, many Protestant and
Roman Catholic leaders are suf
fering grave persecution.
No such situation, thank God,
exists in the democracies in which
we live. When the doorbell rings
we may go of the door with no
fear that a totalitarian agent has
come to invade our home, or to
carry us off to a concentration
camp.
If we are living within the law,
and morally correct lives, we can
meet the day and the night with
freedom from fear. It is not easy
for us to comprehend that great
numbers of our fellowmen in
many parts of the world are liv
ing each day in the grip of fear
and danger.
The fact that in some of these
lands it was not always so, and
the story of how liberties were
suppressed, ought to make us zeal
ous to see that no such subversion
of liberty ever occurs in our land.
We mray conclude all too readily
’ that “it cannot happen here.”
All this emphasizes very strong
ly the question of the relation of
tthe individual to the State, the
rights and duties of citizens, and
the nature of the government that
they maintain, or allow to be in
power,
It is obvious that under present
world conditions great inequali
ties and great restrictions exist in
relation to freedom, that under
more normal conditions, such as
existed a generation or two ago,
would have been regarded as se
rious and unjustifiable invasions
of personal freedom.
If you are a young man, of the
right age, you may be drafted for
|military service in some faroff
land. If you would bave gone in
'any case, you might be said to be
free, but not if you went because
the State compelled you to go.
There is a matter of glaring, even
if justifitiable and unavoidable, in
equality. It is justifable and un
avoidable on the ground that oth
erwise there might soon be no
freedom for you or anybody else.
If you are a business man, you
are subject to linritations, re
strictions, and regulations, which
a few years ago would have been
regarded as an unwarranted in
vasion of your private affairs; and
if you are high-salaried, or weal
thy, the State takes a major por
tion of your income, in what would
certainly fifty years ago have
been regarded as sheer confica
tion.
In the midst of the charges and
counter-charges, warnings and
counter - warnings, propagandism
iand counter - propagandism, of
which our days are so rife, what
have Christian leaders to say?
What have they said? I propose
|to discuss this in my next com-
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditiched.
8:48 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
i eave for Elberton. Hamiet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local)
Leave for Atlanta, South ang
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:30 a. m.—(Local).
2:57 p. m.—Air Ccnditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
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 Coimerce
Arrive 9:00 a. in.
East and West
Leave Athens 900 a m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains
Week Day Only
Frain No 5! Arrives 900 a m
frain No 50 Departs 700 p m
ment.
Meanwhile, let us measure and
treasure the liberties that we pos
sess, and while we pray for others,
thank God for what we have.
AT THE
MOVIES
PALACE—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues.—“Half Angel,”
starring Loretta Young, Joseph
Cotten. March of Time. Tall Tim
ber Tales. News. :
Wed. - Thurs. — “Night _lnto
Morning,” starring Ray Milland,
John Hodiak, Nancy Davis. Eddie
Peabody and Orchestra. Air Hos
tess. News. .
Fri.-Sat. — “Mexican Hayride,”
starring Bud Abbott, Lou Costello.
Cruise Ship. Flying Padre.
GEORGIA—
Tues.-Wed.—“As Young As You
Feel,” starring Monty Woolley,
Thelma Ritter, David Wayne.
From Roguest to Riches. Screen
Snapshots. .
Thurs. — “Excuse My Dust,”
starring Red Skelton, Sally For
rest. Cold War. Slamming Sam
my Snead. News. .
Fri. — “Destry Rides Again,”
starring James Stewart, Marlene
Dietrich. Hawaiian Sports. Chow
Hound.
Sat. 18—“ Ghost Chasers,” star
ring Lec Goreey, Huntz Hall. Woo
Woo Blues. Stagefright.
STRAND—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Wed.—*“Fran
cis Goes To The Races,” starring
Donald O’Connor, Piper Laurie.
Kids and Pets. Pied Piper of Basin
Street. News.
Thurs.~-Fri.-Sat. — “Mr. Belve
dere Rings the Bell,” starring Clif
ton Webb, Joanne Dru. Follow the
Game Trails. Casper Comes to
Clown. News.
RITZ— ‘
Mond.-Tues.—*“Valentino,” star
ring Anthony Dexter, Eleanor Par
ker. Plutopia.
Wed. - Thurs. — “Appointment
With Danger,” starring Alan Ladd,
Phyllis Calvert. Anything for
Laughs. Childhood Days.
Fri.-Sat. — “Stagecoach Driver,”
starring Whip Wilson, Fuzzy
Knight. ‘lnsurance Investigator,”
starring Richard Denning, Audrey
Lang. Atom Man vs. Superman—
chapter 15.
DRIVE-IN THEATRE—
Mon.-Tues.—*“The Lemon Drop
Kid,” starring Bob Hope, Marilyn
Maxwell. Rainmakers. News.
Wed.-Thurs.—“The Thing From
Another World,” starring Marga
ret Sheridan, Kenneth Tobey,
Sleep Happy. News.
Fri.—“The Good Humor Man,”
starring Jack Carson, Lola Al
bright. Punchy Pancho, Double
Cross Country Race. -
Sat.—“ Hills of Home,” starring
Edmund Gwenn, Tom Drake, Ja
net Leigh. Room and Bird.
TWO AND ONE-QUARTER
PERCENT TREASURY BONDS
OF 1951-53
(DATED DECEMBER 22, 1939)
.
Notice of Call
.
for Redemption
To Holders of 2!'4 percent Treas
ury Bonds of 1351-53 (dated
December 22, 1939), and Others
Concerned:
1. Public notice is hereby given
that all outstanding 2V percent
Treasury Bonds of 1951-53, dated
December 22, 1939, due December
15, 1953, are hereby called for re
demption on December 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
valled bonds for other interest
bearing obligations of the United
States, in which event public no
tice will hereafter be given and
an official circular governing the
exchange 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
partment Circular No. 666, dated
July 21, 1941.
Jonn W. Snyder,
Secretary of the Treasury.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT,
Washington, August 14, 1951.
PURPLE HEARTS
The Order of the Purple Heart
decoration for military merit was
established by George Washington
on Aug. 7, 1782, when it first was
awarded. Only three men, all
non - commissioned officers, re
ceived the tribute at that time.
The medical examiner’s office of
New York City, which is con
cerned with the investigation of
deaths caused by violence, handles
an averge of 16,000 cases a year.
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X To BRiNG ATHENS ONy TWE BEST MOTION PIGTURES PRODUCED BY THE ENTIRE WOLLYWOOD INDUSTRY!
LAST TWO DAYS Open 12:45
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Pmce ol WEDNESDAY and
12:45 THURSDAY
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JOHN HODIAK - NANCY DAVIS- LEWIS STONE-JEAN GEN 4 25000
LAST TIMES TODAY:
Loreita Young & Joseph Cotten — “HALF ANGEL”
O ROe L S R NGRSt AT R S R S
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GEORGIA FEATURE STARTS 1:00. 2:31, 4217, 6:03, T:49, 9:35
iEXERCISE CAUTION TO AVOID
'HAZARDS OF SUMMER SUN
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
Written for NEA Service
Summer in the Northern Hemi
sphere is accompanied by a few
health hazards which are absent
at other times of the year or
which are at least much less im
portant, The sun is stronger, the
temperature is warmer, and more
people spend longer hours out of
doors workin gor amusing them
selves.
The most important added risk
of hot weather comes from the
sun itself — sunburn, sunstroke,
and heat exhaustion. Although
our greatest natural friend, the
sun should be treated with re
spect since it can be a terrible en~
emy as well. On the good side
sunshine acts on the skin to form
vitamin D, a substance which is
necessary to prevent rickets in
children, and helps to maintain
good health. But on the bad side,
too much sun burn damages
the skin; indeed skin cancer is
more common among those who
are heavily exposed to the sun for
years on end.
The skin has a remarkable abil
ity to adjust to the sun if it has
the time. The process of adjust
ment is called tanning and is the
result of gradual deposits in the
skin of pigment which protects
against burning. But this takes
time and consequently exposure
to the sun should be bit by bit,
thus avoiding burning which is
painful as well as risky. During
the tanning stage lotions or oint
ments may help, especially those
which filter some of the burning
rays. .
Many Hazards
The human body does not adjust
so well to the hazards of sunstroke
or heat exbaustion. These are the
result of too much sun or heat n 1
the brain or ether parts of
nervous system. Some can be se; .
ous and may even cause death,
Undue exposure to the too hot ~
should therefore be avoided at )
costs. If sunstroke or heat ..
baustion (the latter being usy.|,
less serious) do ocurc they call 1,
medical measures.
. The purpose of drawing attc.
tion to this matter is that eve,,
year a lot of people get so enthy;.
astic about good warm sunshij.
that they overdo it and harm
themselves more than they he,
Just a little caution pays off i,
comfort, improved health, ~
avoidance of risk.
The Russians have drilled wel;
and built a small oil refinery i,
Sinkiang province in western
China,
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LAST TIMES TONITE
Bob Hope .
“The Lemon Drop Kid
WEDNESDAY -~ THURSDAY
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LAST TIMES TODAY
Anthony Dexier
in “VALENTINO”