Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
News Of Fires,i
Accidents, And ,
Police Action |
l'——- BY TOM BROWN —-—-—-'
A youth, charged with disorder
1y conduct in connection with a
fight, involving the boy and a
high school student, which ocecur
red outside the Athens High school
gymnasium during the abpnual
Homecoming Dance, appeared be
fore Judge Olin Price of Recorder’s
Court this morning.
Testimony revealed that the
youth charged with disorderly
conduct had been drinking beer
and that he grabbed the high
school student’s hat and then tore
his jacket during the fray.
The youth was placed on proba
tion with the provision that he
pav for repairs to the jacket.
Judge Price stated that dealers
<Wwho sell beer to minors should not
e permitted to retain their beer
and wine licenses.
Local firemen answered a call
on the University campus lastl
night at 6:45 o’clock where a fur
nace was smoking. No damage
was reported and the cause was
not determined.
BIG DIFFERENCE !
In England and Germang', a
*billion” units is a million million,
but in the TUnited States and
France, #t is only a thousand
million.
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RSSO B SO IR, LRI St LB, S P 0 15 OIS SA ST RO TS
Get Our Offer
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Ed Rock Dan Dupree
Mae Mewborn Bill Swain
. Broad at Pulaski Phone 1097
}Daily, Weekly
[Papers To Merge
In Marietta
MARIETTA, Ga., Oct. 26-—(AP)—
A new afternoon daily newspaper,
the Times - Journal, will begin
publication here early in Decem
ber through merger of Marietta's
two publishing firms.
The announcement was made by
Otis A, Brumby, president of
Brumby Press, Inc., publisher of
the Cobb County Times, a weekly,
and by Brooks Smith, president of
the Marietta Journal Publishing
Company which publishes the
daily Marietta Journal.
The Cobb County Times will
continue publication as a weekly.
Brumby and Smith said the con~
solidation of the two firms will be
effective November 1. The new
corporation will be known as the
Times-Journal, Ine. It will pub~
lish both the weekly Cobb County
Times and the daily Times- Jour
nal.
Operation of the new corpora
tion will be directed by Chess
Abernathy, jr., president, and a
board of directors headed by Otis
A. Brumby, chairman, and Stanley
Whitaker, vice chairman.
Smith will head the Times-
Journal as publisher.
The Cobb County Times recent
ly announced it was planning to
publish a morning daily newspa
per, but officials said these plans
would be cancelled by the merger.
The origin of the harp is be
lieved to come from the tense
string of ancient warriors’ or
hunters’ bows.
‘:‘Tfi:
Service
Corporal James C. Cochran, 117
Grove street, Athens; and SFC.
Albert Eubanks, jr., 4 Jefferson
street, Commerce, arrived Wed
nesday, October 24th, from Korea
at the San Francisco Port of Em
barkation aboard a Military Sea
Transportation Service transport,
it 'was announced by Headquar
ters Georgia Military District.
Second lieutenant Charles E.
McMillan of this city, has been
assigned as company officer to H
Company, 13th Infantry, of the
Bth Infantry Division at Fort
Jackson, South Carolina.
A student at the University of
Georgia before being called to ac~
tive duty, Lieutenant McMillan is
married to the former Mable
Louise Johnson of Athens. He has
a two-year-old daughter and is
‘now making his home in Colum=-
bia, South Carolina. He is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. McMillan,
sr., of Gaines School Road, Ath- !
‘ens. '
P [
Robert Lewis Simmons, son of
Ernest and Louise Simmons, re
cently completed the eight-weeks
basic training course for the Air
Force at Lackland Air Base near
San Antonio, Texas. Simmons is a
graduate of Union Baptist In
stitute and went into service soon
after he received his diploma. f
He was recently promeoted to the
rank of private first class and is
now awaiting assignment! with the
Air Forces, His parents are widely
known in Athens to both white
and colored citizens. Ernest is an
employee of the Wally Butts Cafe
teria and Louise is a practical
nurse who maintains a full pro
gram looking after new born
babies in the community.
WITH THE IST CAV. DIV, IN
KOREA--Pvt. George Smith, jr.,
whose parents live on Route 1,
Athens, Ga., recently joined the
Ist Cavalry Division on the bat
tlefront in Korea,
A veteran unit of the Korean
war, the division led the U. N.'s
first large-scale offensive against
the Communists—the spectacular
breakthrough northward last
September from the N'aegu peri
meter.
Smith, who was employed by
the Colonial Poultry Company be
fore entering the Army in April
1951, is in the Ist Cavalry’s Tth
Regiment. He previously was sta=-
tioned at Fort Riley, Kan.
—— A
Victory
. (Continued From Page One)
candidates of its own this year.
Early Indications
Indications early in the second
day of counting were that he
would have a margin of 30 or
more votes in the House of Com-=
mons—far more comfortable than
the slim Labor margin which had
wavered between four and seven
in Labor’s last 18 months of rule.
Only tight party discipline had
kept the Labor government from
falling time after time under
steady Conservative attack, led by
the withering oratory of doughty
old warrior Churchill.
The Tories are pledged to carry
on much of the program which
Attlee’s Laborites .initiated, but
there likely will be a halt to much
of the Socialist experimenting.
The Conservatives have pronrised
to halt the nationalization of iron
and steel, already in its initial
stages under Labor direction.
Churchill himself won easily in
his own constituency, Woodford.
Prime Minister Attlee also won
his seat easily. So did the Liberal
party leader, Clement Davies.
The Tories, for the most part,
held the districts they captured in
1950, but Labor lost in many of
the ones it took in the last elec
tion. Most of the Conservative
candidates regained their seats by
larger majorities than they had in
1950. Shortly after the halfway
mark, the Conservatives had cap
tured 13 new constituencies at the
expenes of Labor,
(Continued From Page One)
of life; and
“WHEREAS, Joe Brown Conally
Chapter No. 2, Disabled American
Veterans, has chosen Saturday,
October 27, 1951 for its annual
Forget-Me-Mot Day in this com
munity, with the end of utilizing
all funds collected on that day
for disabled veterans and their de
pendents in this area;
“NOW, THEREFORE, I, Jack
R. Wells, Mayor of the City of
Athens, Georgia, do hereby pro
claim Saturday, October 27, 1951
as Disabled American Veterans
Forget-Me-Not Day and request all
citizens, interested groups and
societies to participate in that day.
“IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I
have hereunto set my hand and
caused the seal of the city to be
affixed.
JACK R. WELLS
Mayor City of Athens"”
(Continued From Page One)
about his choice for the National
Democratic chairmanship. He did
very little sepculation but Capitol
Hill sources said some considera
tion was being given to Senator
Sparkman (D-Ala) as a possible
choice.
Sparkman formerly served as
head of the National Bemocratic
gukerl bureau. He was one of
e few Dixie lawmakers who
stuck by Mr, Truman in the 1948
campaign, but has been suggesting
that the Democrats ought to iry
to get Eisenhower for their nomi
nee next year.
e t———
More than 728,000,00?9dyenniu
were minted in the Uni States
in 1950. This was more than three
ltimu the total of nickles, dimes,
quarters and half-dollars,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
(Continued ¥rom Page One)
of a mixture of wood aleohol and
water to negro Bootleggers here,
Webb disclosed.
Hardy, 44, was found yesterday
in an Atlanta hospital where he
was being treated for a fractured
arm suffered, he said, in a motor
car accident. He was immediate
ly placed under guard.
Since the wave of moonshine
deaths took its first toll Sunday
night, 29 negroes and two white
persons have died and 301 other
vietims have received hospital
treatment.
At mid-week, two white men
~died of wood alcohol poisoning at
nearby Winder, Ga., and a third
was reported in critical condition. |
These deaths brought the total fa
talities in the Atlanta area to 33. ‘
Commies
(Continued from Page One)
said the Allied position, as out
lined to the Reds by Hodges and
rear .Adm. Arteigh Burke, was
firm.
If the subcommittees agree on
a buffer zone, the full five-man
truce delegations would have to
ratify it. That would carry the
truce negotiations over their first
big hurdle.
The Alva B. Adams irrigation
tunnel in the Rocky Mountains is
the world’s longest.
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: 2600
BROAD
Jewelry Department
University
News Briefs
Dr. O. C. Aderhold, president of
the University of Georgia, will ad
dress a graduating glass at the Air
University, Maxwell Air Force
Base, Alabama, Oct. 26 at 10 a. m.
President Aderhold was invited
to make this address by Thomas
F. Station, Air University dir
ector of educational assistance.
Paintings and lithographs by
Francis Chapin, distinguished art
ist who is visiting the University
of Georgia art department this
year, are being shown in the Fine
Aarts Galleries from Oct. 25 to Nov.
13.
The public has been invited to
meet the artist in the Galleries on
Sunday, Oct, 28, from 4 to 6 p. m.,
or to visit the exhibit at another
time.
Mr. Chapin, who is represented
in the Metropolitan and other
museums, has travelled extensively
throughout Europe and has exhib
itec}d paintings in France and Eng
land.
Freshmen in the School of Jour
nalism at the University of Geor
gia will be honored late today by
three professional journalism
groups. They will assemble at the
School to meet the faculty and to
hear briefly from student leaders.
The following students, pres
idents of their groups, will be in
charge: Carter Daniel, Theta
Sigma Phi; Mike Edwards, Sigma
Delta Chi; and George Pettett,
Digamma Kappa. ;
(Continued From Page One)
Army said, U. N. Forces fought for
control of Hilly Terrain. Red de
fenders threw a heavy volume of
machinegun and automatic wea
pon fire at the Allied attackers
who closed to hand grenade range.
Allied armor again raided the
vicinity of Kumsong, former Com
munist strongpoint some 30 miles
north of parallel 38, and shot up
enemy positions. Tankers said re
sistance was light.
Ag Fair
(Continued from Page One)
one of the six Athens Garden
Clubs. The display and arrange
ments of flowers are to be seen on
the right of the entrance to the
Community Building.
Athens Students
Members 0f ROTC
Eleven University of Georgia
students from Athens are members
of the advanced Army ROTC unit
at the University.
They are George E. Florence,
Jule C. Spears, Sidney Franklin
Thomas jr., James Ollie Poulnot,
W. P. Ferguson, W. G. Moody, D.
B. Parr, E. E. Arnold, D. B Wood
ard, Ariel V. Conlin and James E.
Massey jr.
Upon graduation from the Uni
versity and satisfactory comple
tion of their ROTC training, they
will receive reserve commissions
in the Army.
The Army unit is one of two
ROTC units at the University, the
Air Force ROTC being the other.
According to University offici
als, ROTC units are increasing in
importance as the nation arms for
defense.
Tax On Prep
Contests Ends
November 1
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26— (AP)
—The 20 per cent federal tax on
tickets to High School Athletic
contests goes off next Thursday,
Nov. 1. But the tax still applies to
college games.
Elimination of the levy of High
School games was one of the rela
tively few tax reductions or re
movals in the $5,691,000,000 tax
increase bill signed Saturday by
President Truman,
A Treasury Department spokes
man said the date a ticket was
sold will determine whether a tax
has to be paid. If the ticket was
bought before Nov. 1, even though
ONLY 5 DAYS BEFORE
NEW TAX INCREASE
BUY NOW
AND SAVE!
DODGE
YOU SAVE
200.00
» J. SWANTON IYY, Inc. !
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1951,
the game is played after that date
a tax is due on it. y
___~“
TOURING FLEET
Navy Day is celebrated en {}a
27th of October, which is the bir(),
day of President Theodore Roose
velt, who sent the U. 8, fleet on a
triumphal tour in 1908, and ge),.
erally is credited with making the
Navy a formidable line of defense,
e ———————————————
Egyptian women and ythers
sometimes dye their fingernais
and other portions of hands and
feet with henna.
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... wWICKS